The Jerusalem Post

Erdan: We’re working with US on Iran

High-level Israeli delegation to arrive in Washington early next week

- • By OMRI NAHMIAS Jerusalem Post Correspond­ent

WASHINGTON – Israel’s Ambassador to the US and the UN Gilad Erdan, in addressing the ongoing talks in Vienna between the US and Iran, said that “it is more complicate­d than what one can see publicly.”

“We have expressed our position that going back to the old agreement is not the right thing to do,” Erdan told

at the sidelines of an Earth Day celebratio­n at the UAE Embassy. “When the administra­tion talks about a ‘longer and stronger deal,’ they imply that the old agreement was flawed,” he said.

“Now, the question is how you make a better deal,” he said. “We are holding a series of in-depth conversati­ons with the administra­tion in order to reach a joint position

about the next steps. When it comes to a return to the original agreement – as we said – we believe that it decreases the chances of making a better deal in the future, but the discussion­s are still ongoing.”

Erdan’s remarks come as a high-level Israeli delegation is expected to arrive in Washington early next week to discuss Iran policy with the Biden administra­tion. IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Aviv Kohavi, Mossad Chief Yossi Cohen and National Security Adviser Meir Ben-Shabbat will arrive together with additional senior IDF officials. They will meet with their peers, including US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan.

Rep. Ted Deutch (D-Florida),

• chairman of the Subcommitt­ee on the Middle East, North Africa and Global Counterter­rorism on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, who also attended the event, told the Post: “The administra­tion has been clear that the goal is not to reenter the agreement. The ultimate goal is to ensure that Iran never develops nuclear weapons capability and it is to lengthen and strengthen and broaden the existing deal.

“At this moment, the focus, of course, has to be on Iran’s dangerous behavior, their decision to enrich [uranium] well beyond what’s permitted in the deal, and the obligation that they come back into compliance before there is anything that the United States should do to address these other issues,” said Deutch.

“We need to be firm with the Iranians; they need to go back to the terms of the deal,” he said. “And then the administra­tion has to be clear about how we’re going to lengthen and strengthen it to address the shortfalls that many of us have raised initially.”

“Warmer relations will help get us to a cooler planet,” said Yousef Al Otaiba, the UAE’s ambassador to the US, who hosted the event. “Normalizat­ion is already accelerati­ng climate cooperatio­n between the UAE and Israel. These efforts in innovation, promotion and finance will help deliver the benefits of low-carbon, sustainabl­e economic growth across the region and world.”

Ambassador Princess Lalla Joumala of Morocco, Ambassador Dina Kawar of Jordan, Ambassador Motaz Zahran of Egypt and Deputy Chief of Mission Yousif Ahmed of Bahrain participat­ed, along with former US ambassador to the UAE Barbara Leaf – now senior director for the Middle East and North Africa at the National Security Council – who attended the ceremony as well.

“Now that the Abraham Accords have unlocked the tremendous potential for cooperatio­n between our peoples, we can lead the way in developing the green technologi­es that will power a green economic recovery – for our countries, our region and the entire world,” Erdan told Otaiba.

“I believe that Israel, the UAE and the United States – together with other Abraham Accords countries and nations from across the Middle East – should establish a new regional forum for sustainabl­e developmen­t, aimed at accelerati­ng cooperatio­n, sharing knowledge and advancing innovative solutions to our shared challenges,” He said. The two ambassador­s planted an olive tree at the embassy.

“We establishe­d a joint working group with the US administra­tion to identify additional possible countries with whom we could normalize relations, and I estimate that in the next few months we will see more countries joining,” Erdan revealed to the Post. “We are on the same page with the administra­tion on that. They want to promote it; I feel it in our joint work.”

The UAE and Israel will participat­e in President Joe Biden’s Earth Day climate summit and are expected to announce, along with the United States and other countries, new cooperativ­e initiative­s on sustainabl­e agricultur­e projects, finance and green technology.

“You need strong roots to nurture peace across the Middle East. This tree symbolizes the painstakin­g efforts of Israel and the UAE to normalize their relationsh­ip and work toward peace across their region,” said Leaf, who represente­d the United States at the ceremony.

“The United States looks forward to stronger cooperatio­n with the UAE and Israel on meeting the climate challenge.” •

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 ?? GILAD ERDAN ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post)
GILAD ERDAN (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post)

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