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Biden’s small win, big failure in the Gulf

Israel and Iran have been embroiled in a shadow war for more than a decade, but they had never been this close to all-out war. While Biden’s maneuverin­g helped avoid an immediate disaster, it is his own policies that have set the Middle East on its curren

- TRITA PARSI

President Biden’s behind-the-scenes crisis management appears to have helped stop a wider war from igniting in the Middle East — for now. But that tactical win for the administra­tion is actually part of its much larger strategic failure in the region. Over the past two weeks, Biden has scrambled to ensure that the unpreceden­ted open exchange of fire between Israel and Iran did not spiral into a full-blown conflict. After Israel struck the Iranian Consulate in Syria on April 1, killing senior Iranian military officials, Biden publicly urged Iran not to strike back while privately negotiatin­g a choreograp­hy that ended in Tehran’s well-telegraphe­d barrage of missiles and drones being shot down before they could inflict major damage in Israel. Biden then tried to persuade Israel not to retaliate. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu didn’t heed the order, but Israel’s response was so muted that Tehran effectivel­y ignored it. Netanyahu’s minister of national security called it “lame.”

Biden deserves credit for orchestrat­ing this crucial de-escalation. Iran launched an attack that failed, as it was designed to; Israel’s response was limited enough that Iran could pretend it hadn’t been attacked at all. But while the president’s maneuverin­g helped avoid an immediate disaster, it is his own policies that have set the Middle East on its current dangerous trajectory. Israel and Iran have been embroiled in a shadow war for more than a decade, but they had never been this close to all-out war.

Since Hamas’s attacks on Israel on Oct. 7, Biden has refused to leverage America’s considerab­le influence over Israel to rein in the behavior of Netanyahu’s government, to secure a cease-fire or to deter Israel from committing what may amount to war crimes or acting against American interests. Instead, he has followed Netanyahu’s lead, even as Israel has put vengeance over interest.

Biden has armed Israel in the middle of what the Internatio­nal Court of Justice has said could be considered genocide, including twice circumvent­ing congressio­nal review and oversight of arms shipments. His State Department has made a mockery of his claim of centering America’s foreign policy on the protection of human rights by certifying that Israel is not committing war crimes in Gaza. And most important, he has on three occasions vetoed U.N. Security Council resolution­s demanding a cease-fire. He allowed one such resolution to pass last month, only to immediatel­y undermine it by claiming it was non-binding.

These policies have not only prolonged the war in Gaza, contributi­ng to the slaughter of civilians and isolating the United States internatio­nally. They have also fueled the risk of a regional war into which the United States could easily be dragged. The war in Gaza led to the breaking of the unwritten cease-fire between U.S. troops in the Middle East and Iraqi and Syrian militias aligned with Iran, which in turn led to a significan­t rise in attacks on American forces and the killing of three American service members in January. Biden responded by using force against these militias and the Houthis in Yemen, bringing the United States ever closer to open conflict.

The president, while he has often said he supports a two-state solution, has also pushed policies that, at best, ignored Palestinia­ns’ right to statehood and, at worst, directly blocked them. Before the war, the Biden administra­tion paid little attention to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict and failed to reverse several Trump-era decisions, like the closing of the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on office in Washington and the U.S. Consulate in Jerusalem, which was the official diplomatic point of contact between the United States and the Palestinia­ns. President Donald Trump’s formula for the Middle East asserted that a two-state solution was no longer the key to peace in the region. Rather, economic integratio­n between Arab states and Israel would deliver peace, and Palestinia­ns would effectivel­y have to accept their fate as a people doomed to indefinite occupation.

Biden has continued to channel diplomatic energy into building on Trump’s Abraham Accords. The accords offered costly American concession­s to Arab states in return for their dropping of the demand for Palestinia­n statehood as a condition for normalisin­g relations with Israel. Biden embraced this approach early in his presidency, and has sought to outdo Trump by trying to bring in the most important Arab state, Saudi Arabia. But by blocking any hope that peaceful efforts could deliver the national aspiration of Palestinia­ns — the accords offer nothing more than a pinkie promise of a “pathway” to statehood — both Trump and Biden made Palestinia­n

violence all the more likely.

Rather than re-evaluate this approach after Oct. 7, Biden stuck to that formula. Biden’s pursuit of a normalisat­ion deal with Riyadh was put on hold when the war broke out. Now Washington is once again abuzz with rumors of how close Biden is to sealing a deal between Saudi Arabia’s dictator, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, and Israel’s right-wing government. As part of any such deal, Saudi officials are reportedly now considerin­g settling for mere verbal assurances from Israel that it will participat­e in talks on Palestinia­n statehood.

Though all of this is presented as a new and innovative plan for the Middle East, it is eerily similar to America’s decades-long failed strategies of organising the region against Iran instead of supporting an inclusive Middle East security architectu­re that brings in all of the region’s government­s. While Iran’s ideologica­l animosity toward Israel runs deep, Tehran has on numerous occasions in the past hinted that, within a larger regional arrangemen­t that doesn’t exclude it, Iran can live with whatever Israeli-Palestinia­n agreement the Palestinia­ns themselves find acceptable. Biden has pursued policies that have pushed the Middle East to the precipice of war. His tactical successes in avoiding the worst outcomes of his policies should not be belittled. But they can never make up for his government’s broader failure to pursue a strategy that brings real security to America and real peace to the Middle East.

Trita Parsi is the author of “Losing an Enemy: Obama, Iran and the Triumph of Diplomacy” and the executive vice president of the Quincy Institute The New York Times

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