The Jerusalem Post

At US army base, Kohavi cautions US against rejoining 2015 Iran deal

Gantz: We will always uphold our right, ability and duty to defend ourselves

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM

IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Aviv Kohavi warned American officials against rejoining the Iranian nuclear deal, while in Washington to discuss the threat posed by Tehran’s nuclear program.

“The Chief of the General Staff emphasized the shortcomin­gs of the current nuclear agreement, which will allow Iran to make significan­t progress related to centrifuge­s, as well as to substantia­lly enhance the amount and quality of enriched matter over the next few years, also emphasizin­g the lack of supervisio­n in terms of nuclear proliferat­ion,” the IDF Spokespers­on’s Unit said in a statement.

Israel’s top military officer “explained the threat created by returning to the original nuclear agreement and emphasized that all measures should be taken to prevent Iran from achieving military nuclear capabiliti­es,” the statement added.

In light of the close alliance between Israel and the United

States, it is rare for a chief of staff to make public remarks about political issues or to criticize the foreign policies of allies.

But Kohavi has made it clear that he views the 2015 Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action as dangerous, saying in January that he has directed the IDF to prepare fresh operationa­l plans to strike Iran in order to stop its nuclear program if necessary.

“Iran can decide that it wants to advance to a bomb, either covertly or in a provocativ­e way. In light of this basic analysis, I have ordered the IDF to prepare a number of operationa­l plans, in addition to the existing ones. We are studying these plans and we will develop them over the next year,” Kohavi said in a January speech at the Institute for National Security Studies think tank’s annual conference.

“The government will, of course, be the one to decide if they should be used. But these plans must be on the table, in existence and trained for,” he added.

Kohavi is in the US on a fourday visit and is holding meetings with Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley, head of the US Central Command Gen. Kenneth McKenzie, and head of the US Special Operations Command (SOCOM) Gen. Richard Clark.

was consummate­d for the first time,” Price said.

The timing for the seventh round of talks has not yet been announced, he said, “but I would expect the team will return to Vienna in advance of that.”

“What we’ve been aiming for this entire time, of course, is a mutual return to compliance with the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action.”

Price’s remarks came as IDF Chief of Staff Lt.Gen. Aviv Kohavi is in Washington to warn American officials against rejoining the deal and to discuss the threat posed by Tehran’s nuclear program.

“The Israelis are in a tough position,” Jonathan Schanzer, VP at the Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s think tank in Washington, told The Jerusalem Post. “On the one hand, Israel having any hand in the return to this deeply flawed agreement will give the appearance of legitimizi­ng it,” he said.

“The Biden administra­tion might try to tout Israeli input as a way to make the deal appear tougher than it is,” he said. “On the other hand, this is a new government that seeks to make a fresh start with Washington. My understand­ing is that technical discussion­s could already have happened at a relatively low level. But that is all. This might improve the deal on the very, very far margins; perhaps not at all.”

Raisi’s election changes the US administra­tion’s immediate calculus, according to Naysan Rafati, the Iran senior analyst at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group. His research is focused on the Iran nuclear deal and the Islamic Republic’s regional policies. “They’ve made a decision to negotiate on the basis of mutual compliance with the 2015 agreement as a means of stopping and reversing Tehran’s nuclear advances,” he said.

Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said at Sunday’s cabinet meeting that “Raisi’s election is, I would say, the last chance for world powers to wake up before returning to the nuclear agreement, and understand who they are doing business with.”

“Both former-prime minister [Benjamin] Netanyahu and Prime Minister Bennett have been quite clear in saying they think this is a bad move and that Israel will act as it sees necessary,” said Rafati. “But it’s quite possible that the Israeli government would underscore to Washington that if the JCPOA really is the way they want to proceed, then it should be done in a way as to maximize the non-proliferat­ion restrictio­ns on Iran and minimize the sanctions relief it gets in return.

“That means pressing for the greatest degree of monitoring and verificati­on; pushing for the IAEA [Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency] to get clarity on safeguard concerns; and rolling back Tehran’s stockpiles and enrichment capabiliti­es as far as possible – and in tandem, working with Washington on intelligen­ce sharing and addressing the non-nuclear concerns shared by both Washington and Jerusalem,” he said.

AMBASSADOR Dennis Ross, a distinguis­hed fellow at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, told the Post that “the issue is not whether the JCPOA will change; the point is working with the administra­tion on what is going to happen between now and 2030 when the real sunset provisions and limitation­s on the size of the Iranian nuclear infrastruc­ture are all lifted.”

“The Israeli government should focus on what

would be in a longer and stronger follow-on agreement,” he said. “And, if there is no longer and stronger agreement, Israel should be talking with the administra­tion about what the strategy should be then.

“What must we agree is a threshold we will not allow the Iranians to cross? Iran should not be allowed to have a threshold nuclear weapons capability. Israel should seek a common definition of that,” Ross said. “The time to start those conversati­ons about what goes into an agreement – and what happens if there is not agreement – is now.”

James Acton is co-director of the Nuclear Policy Program at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace. He told the Post that “it is not possible to change the JCPOA’s core requiremen­ts in response to Israel’s or any other state’s concerns.”

“I wouldn’t be surprised, however, if the United States offered Israel some private assurances, relating to implementa­tion in particular,” Acton said. “I think most US policymake­rs have concluded that Israel would oppose any agreement with Iran, irrespecti­ve of its terms, which has likely weakened Israel’s ability to influence any negotiatio­ns.”

ACCORDING TO Suzanne Maloney, vice president and director of the Foreign Policy program at the Brookings Institutio­n, the Biden administra­tion’s posture toward the nuclear agreement is not particular­ly malleable at this stage. “That may change if the negotiatio­ns become bogged down, but for now, I think the calculatio­n is simply that any constraint­s on Iran’s nuclear progress are better than none,” she said.

“It’s not a calculatio­n borne of any serious conviction that the Islamic Republic can be rehabilita­ted, as some within the Obama administra­tion were prone to hope. Instead, it’s an objective driven by the demands of the moment, when managing the strategic competitio­n with China and Russia, as well as the implicatio­ns and aftereffec­ts of the pandemic, far outweigh American ambitions in the Middle East. A resuscitat­ion of the JCPOA is necessitat­ed by the fact that it would enable the administra­tion to focus on more urgent threats and priorities,” Maloney explained.

“I don’t think Iran’s election of a hardline new president, with a reprehensi­ble history of human rights abuses, will change that calculatio­n either,” she added. “With only a few brief exceptions, every American president – Republican as well as Democratic – has sought to negotiate with Iran as a means of moderating or curtailing its most dangerous policies.”

“Personally, though, I remain skeptical,” Maloney said. “A revived nuclear deal will certainly not pay the dividends that were originally envisaged, and it may not provide much of a cushion against Iran’s nuclear ambitions. The timeline is now much more compressed, the putative benefits of the restrictio­ns are offset by the gains Tehran has achieved during the Trump-era hiatus, and the implementa­tion of any rehabbed JCPOA is almost certain to be far more contentiou­s than it was the first time around.”

She went on to say that “there will be absolutely no prospect of any additional concession­s from Tehran or modulation of its approach to the region or the world. So it’s a less attractive arrangemen­t than originally intended, and probably less durable than the current negotiator­s appreciate.

“So the real question for the administra­tion is not whether the deal can be revived – it seems reasonably likely that it can – nor whether the deal can prove [to be] the launching point for additional talks with Iran, which are highly unlikely,” the institutio­n’s director said. “Instead, where I would press the Biden administra­tion is around its strategy for deterring and containing an Iran that is flush with sanctions relief.

“Is Washington prepared to push back on Iran’s orchestrat­ion of violent destabiliz­ation through its militia forces across the region? Can the US mobilize multilater­al opposition to Tehran’s abuse of its own citizenry, just as it did around the nuclear threat? And how will the US prepare for the inevitable crises that erupt over the implementa­tion of a revived JCPOA, especially as we approach crucial milestones and sunset clauses over the next few years?” she asked.

“Both the proponents and opponents of the JCPOA have made it the beginning and the end of Iran policy – [but] that need not be the case.”

 ?? (IDF) ?? US CENTRAL Command Gen. Kenneth McKenzie (left) embraces IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Aviv Kohavi during the latter’s visit yesterday in Tampa Bay, Florida.
(IDF) US CENTRAL Command Gen. Kenneth McKenzie (left) embraces IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Aviv Kohavi during the latter’s visit yesterday in Tampa Bay, Florida.

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