Israel has "completely" rejected a mooted world powers deal with Iran aimed at ending a long-running row over its nuclear ambitions.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said it will not be bound by such an accord.
A senior Israeli official quoted Mr Netanyahu as saying that the agreement under consideration would bury "the possibility of having a peaceful resolution".
Israel has called for sanctions to remain in place until Iran has dismantled its entire enrichment programme.
"I understand that the Iranians are walking around very satisfied in Geneva as well they should be because they got everything and paid nothing," Mr Netanyahu said.
"They wanted relief of sanctions after years of a gruelling sanctions regime, they got that. They are paying nothing because they are not reducing in any way their nuclear enrichment capability," he said.
An Israeli official declined to say what deal was brewing, or how Israel knew the details.
Mr Netanyahu met US Secretary of State John Kerry for the third time in two days yesterday, with Iran once more high on the agenda.
Mr Kerry is committed to doing "anything he can" to narrow differences with Iran over its nuclear programme, a senior State Department official said shortly before Mr Kerry headed to Geneva for talks.
"This is a complex process," the official said in Tel Aviv where Mr Kerry was meeting Mr Netanyahu, who has concerns about any deal with Iran.
"As a member of the P5+1, he is committed to doing anything he can (to) help narrow these differences," the official added.
The P5+1 group consists of the US, Russia, China, the UK, France plus Germany.
The official said Mr Kerry had decided to break from a Middle East visit to go to Geneva at the invitation of Catherine Ashton, the European Union's foreign policy chief.
An agreement appears to be near as British Foreign Secretary William Hague and German Foreign Minister Guido Westervelle are joining the talks, and French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius is also due to travel to Geneva.
"An interim text is under discussion and the minister believed that it was an important step," a French diplomatic source said, adding that a ministerial meeting would be held in Geneva to discuss developments.
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