Japan’s Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba has urged Israel to exercise “patience” on Iran’s nuclear programme and give sanctions a chance to work, his spokesman said on Wednesday. Gemba, who arrived in Israel on Tuesday, met Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, and on Wednesday held talks with Palestinian prime minister Salam Fayyad in the West Bank city of Ramallah. A statement from spokesman Masaru Sato said Gemba had told Netanyahu that “patience would be necessary to deal with the Iranian nuclear issue, to which Mr Netanyahu responded by saying that Israel does not want war.” In talks with Lieberman, Gemba said Japan shared the international community’s concern over Iran’s nuclear programme and that an “unprecedented level of pressure” was being exerted on Tehran that was beginning to take effect. “It is important to continue to put effective pressure on Iran as the pressure began to show its effect, to some extent,” Gemba told Lieberman. “Regarding a military option against Iran, Foreign Minister Gemba urged his counterpart to be patient” and suggested that the Jewish state “restrain itself,” the statement said. “Such an option would create new political confusion and tensions in the region as well as giving Iran new excuses to pursue their nuclear programme,” he told Lieberman.