Arab News

How Biden can strike Iran deal

- DR. DANIA KOLEILAT KHATIB www.arabnews.com/opinion

Mohsen Fakhrizade­h, Iran’s chief nuclear scientist, was assassinat­ed in Tehran on Friday. Fingers are subsequent­ly being pointed at Israel. The

US allies in the region are quite worried about a potential Joe Biden overture toward Iran. For many in the region, the main concern is not Iran’s nuclear portfolio as much as it is the malignant activities of Tehran’s proxies, added to its ballistic missile capabiliti­es.

Fakhrizade­h’s assassinat­ion shows that America’s allies are preparing for a potential US detente with Iran. Today, as President- elect Joe Biden plans to return to the negotiatin­g table with Iran, which is one of his campaign promises, he faces a dilemma. He wants to go back to the 2015 nuclear treaty but he does not want to repeat the mistakes of the past. He has also promised to work with allies and adopt a multilater­al approach. How can he convince Iran to accept a deal that will include its ballistic missile program and its proxies? He cannot expect

Iran to cut all its connection­s to its proxies in the region. This is because, since its inception, the Iranian regime has positioned itself as the protector of Shiite communitie­s across the Muslim world. It has been nurturing them ideologica­lly, militarily and economical­ly for decades. It will not give up on them just to have the US sanctions lifted. In addition to the emotional attachment between Iran and its proxies, Tehran sees them as a deterrent. Since politics is the art of the possible, rather than asking Iran to cut its connection­s with its proxies, it would be more realistic to ask it to pacify them. In this respect, Hezbollah offers a good example. The group is suffering from Israeli strikes in Syria, while there is talk of a possible overture toward its backer Bashar Assad on Israel. Hence, the Syrian regime’s support for the group seems shaky. Meanwhile, at home in Lebanon, US sanctions are starting to exhaust the group. Hezbollah is also facing popular wrath, as it is seen as being part of the corrupt political class that has led the country down the drain.

In this scenario, Hezbollah might be able to compromise if it is offered guarantees that will secure its survival, while giving it a graceful exit. So the Biden administra­tion has a chance to score a win in Lebanon by striking a deal with Hezbollah and Iran. The US can give Hezbollah guarantees that Israel will not strike its facilities or target its personnel. Israel could also commit to defining its borders with Lebanon and withdrawin­g from the Shebaa Farms. In return, Hezbollah could put its arsenal under the supervisio­n of the Lebanese Army and the Lebanese state could, in turn, sign a non-aggression pact with Israel that would not include a normalizat­ion of relations but would release the two countries from mutual aggression. This would be an easy win for the Biden administra­tion. It would stabilize Lebanon and could pave the way for a larger deal with Iran.

Dr. Dania Koleilat Khatib is a specialist in US-Arab relations with a focus on lobbying. She is co-founder of the Research Center for Cooperatio­n and Peace Building, a Lebanese NGO focused on Track II. She is also an affiliate scholar with the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and Internatio­nal Affairs at the American University of Beirut.

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