The Pak Banker

Netanyahu's agenda and Biden's opportunit­y

- Jonathan Schachter

Since Israel's Nov. 1 election - the fifth in under four years - it has been hard to miss the online and on-air angst about Benjamin Netanyahu's illiberal coalition partners, his controvers­ial domestic agenda, and Israel's relations with the United States.

Yet, for all the discussion about LGBTQ+ rights, legal reform in Israel and the 40-year chemistry between Netanyahu and President Biden, the leading issue on Netanyahu's agenda is Iran's nuclear program. More than anything else, Washington's next moves toward Tehran are what will set the tone for relations with Jerusalem.

In the seven years since the conclusion of the Iran nuclear deal, or Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA), Netanyahu's warnings have proved prescient. With the agreement's implementa­tion, Iran became more, not less, aggressive across the Middle East.

The nuclear infrastruc­ture the JCPOA guaranteed Iran enabled the regime to move closer to nuclear weapons at a time of its choosing. Rather than preventing proliferat­ion, the JCPOA sparked a regional nuclear arms race, as Iran's neighbors now seek the same weapons-relevant nuclear capabiliti­es the agreement allows Iran.

At the same time, the United States and Europe have responded to increasing­ly grave violations of Iran's nuclear obligation­s - some of which are separate from the JCPOA - with toothless expression­s of concern and intensifyi­ng efforts to appease the regime.

Starting in late summer, the convention­al wisdom suggested that nuclear negotiatio­ns with Iran were suspended until after the midterm elections. But the regime continues to increasing­ly and irreversib­ly violate the JCPOA's terms, while it stonewalls three internatio­nal investigat­ions into undeclared nuclear materials and activities. A women-led uprising rages in Iran's streets, despite the regime henchmen's brutal efforts to put it down.

Iran is now giving Russia the same drones and missiles that Tehran has given to Hezbollah, the Houthis, and others to menace America's allies in the Middle East. Providing the Iranian regime with hundreds of billions of dollars in sanctions relief and legitimizi­ng the expansion of a uranium enrichment program that has no peaceful justificat­ion makes less sense than ever.

The week before Christmas, a video appeared of President Biden saying that the JCPOA is dead, though he would not make an announceme­nt declaring it so ("Long story," he said). This is a promising developmen­t, mostly because the JCPOA was never a solution to the Iranian nuclear problem. Additional­ly, if Biden were to continue pursuing a futile return to the JCPOA, Israel's government and neighbors would conclude that they must fight Iran and do so alone. Netanyahu has always argued that the nuclear deal made war more likely. It should be clear to U.S. policymake­rs that a nuclear-armed Iran is an outcome Israel cannot accept and will fight to prevent. Yet, until now, the administra­tion's approach has been pointing directly toward such a conflagrat­ion.

The new year opens with a new Israeli government and a historic opportunit­y for Biden. If his remarks reflect a change in course, if he is prepared to pressure rather than placate Iran and to develop a "Plan B" to genuinely prevent Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons, he will make both a nuclear arms race and a war to prevent it less likely. Standing against Iran with Israel and America's other Middle Eastern partners will demonstrat­e U.S. leadership, stymie Russian and Chinese efforts to supplant the U.S. in the region, and improve the prospects for peace between Israel and its neighbors.

The question is, will the president change direction in 2023 to the only practical path offering a chance for peace? If he does, he undoubtedl­y will find in Netanyahu a willing, capable and creative partner.

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