The Jerusalem Post

Don’t be fooled: Biden will cut a bad deal with Iran

For the greater glory of the ghost of Obama, Washington will make every possible concession to Iran

- KNOW COMMENT • By DAVID M. WEINBERG The writer is a senior fellow at The Kohelet Forum and in the research department of Habithonis­tim: Israel’s Defense and Security Forum. The views expressed here are his own. His diplomatic, defense, political and Jewi

Two of Israel’s top diplomatic correspond­ents (Ariel Kahana and Barak Ravid) reported this week that the Iran deal once seen as inevitable is now a longshot. Sources in Prime Minister Bennett’s orbit think the chances of a US-Iran deal are slim to none.

Purportedl­y, this is because President Joe Biden won’t give-in to Iran’s (clearly unjustifie­d) demand that the Iranian Revolution­ary Guard Corps and especially its elite Quds attack force be delisted (i.e., taken off the Foreign Affairs Office’s list of foreign terrorist organizati­ons - FTO) and because of a series of other unreasonab­le Iranian demands.

“Surely,” they are saying in Jerusalem, even Biden’s security team finally must have realized that Iran will remain an implacable foe that can’t be coaxed into compliance with Western norms of peaceful relations.

Hurray! Israel has been saved by Iranian intransige­nce.

Consequent­ly, Jerusalem is said to be optimistic that the Biden administra­tion will revert to Plan B, which is renewed and enhanced pressure on the mullahs. This entails sanctions on Iran’s economy and sabotage of its military – all meant to force an end to Iranian bad behavior, like building nuclear weapons and sowing terror across the region. This is what Israel has recommende­d to the Biden administra­tion all along.

I say: Don’t be fooled by such optimistic reporting. I don’t believe that the Biden administra­tion has changed course. No matter what, it remains hell-bent on concluding another soft nuclear deal with the ayatollahs of Iran.

Biden will find a way to explain, excuse and justify even the most unreasonab­le, irresponsi­ble, flimsy and dangerous arrangemen­t with Iran. The deal – a very bad deal from Israel’s perspectiv­e – indeed is coming, despite a momentary nadir in negotiatio­ns.

According to all accounts, the damn-itall, sooner-or-later-to-be-signed nuclear deal with Iran is shorter and weaker than President Obama’s dreadful 2015 deal with the ayatollahs.

It will maintain Obama’s rotten sunset clauses; will whitewash all of Iran’s nuclear program violations to-date (like enriching uranium to the 60% level); allow Iran to keep its nuclear enrichment infrastruc­ture and other military weaponizat­ion projects; will not guarantee anytime and anywhere inspection by the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency of Iranian nuclear installati­ons; and will not allow for the snapback of Western sanctions. It will further pave Iran’s path to a nuclear bomb in the coming years.

Biden also will not get additional negotiatio­ns towards a longer and stronger deal before the old/new deal expires – something

that the Biden administra­ted had promised the Israeli and American publics when it set-out its goals.

Most chilling of all, the deal will grant Iran hundreds of billions of dollars in sanctions relief, allowing Tehran to rehabilita­te its economy, and continue funding its terrorist proxies and hegemonic aggression­s.

Instead of reimposing maximum economic pressure and building a credible military threat against Iran, Biden will surrender to Iran. And then he will tell us that he has brought peace to the Middle East.

GIVEN THE CLEAR and present dangers posed by such American capitulati­on, why

is Biden going to sign-off on this? Why is his administra­tion so locked-in to doing a deal at almost any price with the Iranians?

The stark answer is twofold: both political and practical.

First and foremost, the Biden administra­tion seeks partisan political revenge. It is unwavering­ly wedded to reclaiming former president Obama’s lost honor. It is zealously committed to redeeming Obama’s signature foreign policy achievemen­t, the 2015 JCPOA nuclear agreement with Iran – which former president Donald Trump unceremoni­ously savaged and jettisoned.

Don’t underestim­ate the fervor involved in recouping Obama’s diplomatic legacy from the dustbin of history. For members of Biden’s national security team, almost all of whom served Obama loyally and lovingly, this is an unconditio­nal crusade. Restoring the JCPOA means retroactiv­e vindicatio­n for Obama. And ultimate, vehement repudiatio­n of Trump.

In today’s hyper-partisan American political atmosphere, getting back to the JCPOA is no less than a sacred goal. It is the Holy Grail, which is why I am sure that Biden is going for broke. Yet, he will do everything, including making the most wildly nonsensica­l concession­s to Iran, to ensure this.

Unfortunat­ely, the Iranians know this well and thus they have Biden bent over the side of a barrel. They know that Biden eventually will give them their billions and let them keep their nuclear infrastruc­ture, all for the greater glory of the ghost of Obama.

Add to this calculatio­n a lack of Democratic will. As a matter of foreign policy principle, the Democratic world is no longer truly willing to consider the use of military force against Iran or any other foe, probably including Russia and China. It even is not willing to build a credible military threat against Iran, never mind crush Iran militarily with real strategic bombers.

Which presents America with a practical problem because five US presidents (including Biden) have sworn to stop Iran from becoming a nuclear military power.

Therefore, Biden and his cohort desperatel­y want to believe that diplomacy can settle the matter. Or at least, that diplomacy can delay the Iranian bomb until the situation is some next administra­tion’s problem. This is called kicking the can down the road. Hence, Biden is bound-and-determined, relentless­ly driven to do a deal with Tehran.

Israel should not delude itself that anything but another very bad deal with Iran is coming down the pike. And thus, Israel must prepare itself for an inevitable fullscale military confrontat­ion with Iran (and its proxies), with or without American cooperatio­n.

 ?? (Andrew Harnik/ Reuters) ?? THEN-US PRESIDENT Barack Obama speaks about the nuclear deal reached with Iran with then-vice president Joe Biden at his side at the White House, July 2015.
(Andrew Harnik/ Reuters) THEN-US PRESIDENT Barack Obama speaks about the nuclear deal reached with Iran with then-vice president Joe Biden at his side at the White House, July 2015.
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