Showing posts with label nuclear negotiations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nuclear negotiations. Show all posts

Saturday, 14 June 2025

Israeli war against Iran governed by ten factors

Former Iranian diplomat and current Princeton University researcher Seyyed Hossein Mousavian has posted 10 points behind Israel’s war against Iran on his X account which are:

1. Israel's military aggression against Iran began exactly one day after Trump's two-month deadline to Iran regarding nuclear negotiations.

2. This aggression is a clear violation of the United Nations Charter and all international norms and laws, and cannot be compensated for merely by condemnation statements from UN member states.

3. Israel coordinated its plan to attack Iran in advance with NATO leaders and, with the green light from the United States and NATO, launched the war against Iran. Therefore, NATO has taken on the role of defending Israel against Iran’s military retaliation. In this war, NATO is effectively engaged with Iran, directly or indirectly.

4. Since the beginning of nuclear negotiations with Iran in 2003, Israel has sought to sabotage these talks, destroy Iran’s nuclear facilities, and drag the US and NATO into a war with Iran.

5. At a 2011 seminar, one of the former heads of Israeli intelligence Organization, Mossad told Iran’s then-ambassador to the IAEA, “Your main counterpart in the nuclear negotiations is Israel, not the P5+1 countries.” Israel’s success in derailing the negotiations has discredited the P5+1 group.

6. Israel’s military attack is the largest military operation against Iran since World War II and Saddam’s invasion of Iranian territory. Saddam was supported by NATO, Eastern bloc powers, and Arab countries—yet he was ultimately defeated. In the current war, Eastern bloc powers and Arab countries are not aligned with Israel and NATO.

7. Israel’s attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities is an attack by a nuclear-armed state on a non-nuclear-armed state. This reality exposes the ineffectiveness of the NPT treaty and the IAEA—especially since the Israeli military attack revealed the true motive and nature behind the recent illegal IAEA’s resolution against Iran.

8. The attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities will undoubtedly impact Iran’s future nuclear strategy. In fact, NATO, Israel, and the IAEA have laid the groundwork for this strategic shift.

9. Israel’s main objective in this new hybrid war against Iran is regime change, creating instability and chaos, and even the disintegration of Iran. The outcome of this war will have a significant impact on the future balance of power in the Middle East.

10. The US and NATO, by giving the green light to Israel, have made a major strategic mistake. The outcome of this war will greatly influence the regional dynamics and the role of Eastern and Western powers in the Middle East.

 

 

Friday, 13 June 2025

Israeli attack on Iran disturbs emerging balance of power in Middle East

During his visit to the Middle East in May, US President Donald Trump did several things that few would have predicted months or even weeks earlier. One was his surprise meeting with Syria’s new leader, Ahmed al-Shara, and the subsequent lifting of US sanctions on Syria, notwithstanding Shara’s history as a leader of a militant Islamist group.

Another was his decision not to include Israel on the itinerary, despite his administration’s ongoing efforts to end the war in Gaza. The trip followed the administration’s decision in early May to sign a bilateral cease-fire with the Houthis in Yemen, without consulting or including Israel.

Along with Trump’s initiation of direct talks with Iran—a step that Israel adamantly opposes but Arab leaders in the Persian Gulf welcomed and even helped facilitate—these developments suggest how much the regional balance of power has changed since Hamas’s October 07, 2023, attack on Israel.

The war in Gaza has altered the geopolitical landscape of the Middle East. In the years before the October 07 attack, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and other Gulf states shared with Israel the perception that Iran and its alliance of proxy forces were the region’s overriding threat. They supported the first Trump administration’s “maximum pressure” campaign on Tehran, and they began to normalize relations with Israel. Today, the situation has dramatically shifted. Twenty months into the war, Tehran appears far less of a threat to the Arab world. Meanwhile, Israel looks increasingly like a regional hegemon. 

Amid these developments, Washington’s Arab allies and Israel are now in opposite camps on the merits of a new nuclear deal. Israel still sees a deal as a lifeline for the Islamic Republic and has been urging the Trump administration instead to take military action to destroy Iran’s nuclear facilities. The Gulf states, by contrast, dread a new and potentially uncontainable war on their doorsteps and view a diplomatic resolution with Tehran as vital to regional security and stability.

They are also wary of creating a Middle East in which Israel has free rein—even in a future in which normalization with Israel can move forward. In their effort to achieve a new balance between Israel and Iran, the Gulf states have become primary players in Trump’s push for a new nuclear deal. Together, they aim to become the fulcrum of a reconfigured regional order.

To grasp the extent of the Gulf states’ shift on Iran, it is crucial to recall Saudi Arabia and the UAE’s reaction to the first US-Iranian nuclear deal a decade ago. When Iran and the United States signed the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA, in July 2015, the Gulf states shared Israel’s concern that it would bolster Iran’s regional influence. At the time, the Arab world was still recovering from popular uprisings during the 2010–11 Arab Spring, which had toppled once powerful rulers and sparked civil wars in Libya, Syria, and Yemen.

Iran had profited from the tumult, carving a sphere of influence stretching from the Arabian Peninsula to the Levant. In a speech before the US Congress in March 2015, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned, “Iran now dominates four Arab capitals—Baghdad, Damascus, Beirut, and Sanaa.”

The Gulf Arab states, like Israel, worried that the United States, in its push for the nuclear accord, was ignoring the growing regional threat posed by the Islamic Republic and its proxies. The same month as Netanyahu’s speech, Saudi Arabia announced it was leading a military intervention in Yemen against the Houthis, the insurgent group that was expanding Iran’s sphere of influence into the Arabian Peninsula. 

=============

Israel and Washington’s Gulf allies may have overstated the prospect of Iranian hegemony in the Middle East, but there was no denying that the turmoil in the Arab world had tilted the regional balance of power in Iran’s favor.

To its Middle East detractors, the JCPOA was not just about Iran’s nuclear capabilities but also about Iran’s relative influence. According to the terms of the deal, Iran got sanctions relief just for agreeing to limit its nuclear program; it was not required to rein in its proxy forces in the region.

As a result, the deal threatened to increase Iran’s sway even as it curbed the country’s pursuit of nuclear weapons. Arab states thus joined hands with Israel to underscore this flaw and used it in a high-profile effort to undermine the JCPOA. In addition to aggressively lobbying members of Congress—an offensive symbolized by Netanyahu’s 2015 speech—this effort included a public and media campaign against the deal.

During his first administration, Trump concurred with the deal’s critics. The United States unilaterally abandoned the JCPOA in 2018 and placed Iran under “maximum pressure” economic sanctions. At the time, the Trump administration expected that this pressure would weaken Iran and shrink its regional influence in favor of a new regional order centered on Israel and Washington’s Arab allies.

The administration promoted expanded Arab-Israeli security and intelligence cooperation, culminating in the 2020 Abraham Accords—the agreement that normalized relations between Israel and a series of Arab and North African states, including Bahrain and the UAE, and subsequently Morocco and Sudan.

It also took a harder line toward Iran’s support for proxy forces across the region, to the point of making the highly unusual decision to assassinate Iranian General Qasem Soleimani, the powerful head of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, in Baghdad in 2020. 

The tougher US strategy toward Iran continued under President Joe Biden. Contrary to expectations, the Biden administration did not restore the JCPOA and eschewed engaging with Iran—agreeing to talks only after Iran raised the stakes by accelerating its accumulation of highly enriched uranium.

Biden’s focus, much like Trump’s, was instead on forging an Arab-Israeli axis. Normalization of relations between Israel and Saudi Arabia thus became the lodestar of Biden’s Middle East policy. Indeed, at the time of Hamas’s October 07, 2023 attack, the administration thought it was on the cusp of an Israeli-Saudi deal that would bring lasting peace to the region. As events would soon make clear, that assumption was terribly misguided. The Trump-Biden strategy only aggravated regional tensions.

Iran responded to US pressure by expanding its nuclear program and its support for the Houthis in Yemen in their war with the Gulf states. It also began directly attacking US and Gulf interests, most notably Saudi oil facilities, in 2019.

Even before the October 07 attack, the Gulf states had lost confidence in Washington’s strategy. In March 2023, Saudi Arabia broke ranks to normalize ties with Iran—in a deal brokered by China. One immediate benefit was an end to Houthi attacks on Saudi Arabia and the UAE. The Gulf states remained committed to expanding ties with Israel, but maintaining a balance between Iran and Israel would prove difficult.

Then came Hamas’s attacks and Israel’s blistering war in Gaza, which derailed normalization between Israel and Saudi Arabia. A resurgent “axis of resistance,” backed by Iran—including Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Houthis in Yemen, who, along with Hamas saw the prospect of Israeli-Saudi normalization as an existential threat—was now at open war with Israel.

The Biden administration assumed that this new regional conflict would strengthen the case for an Israel–Gulf state security alliance, but the Gulf states were loath to be dragged into that conflict. In January 2024, when Biden resolved to respond militarily to the Houthis’ attacks on international shipping in the Red Sea, Saudi Arabia and the UAE assiduously avoided getting involved, despite their years-long struggle against the group.

Arab states also had to account for the growing anger among the Arab public about the treatment of the people of Gaza, which precluded any further tightening of Arab-Israeli security cooperation. 

Then, in the fall of 2024, a series of Israeli successes turned the tide of the war. In late September, Israel eliminated Hezbollah’s top leadership, including the organization’s longtime leader, Hasan Nasrallah, in a targeted bomb attack—a strike that followed on the heels of a successful undercover operation that decimated the group’s command-and-control structure using exploding pagers. The following month, Israeli forces killed Yahya Sinwar, the Hamas leader who had masterminded the October 07 attack. And in early December, the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad, a longtime close Iranian ally, collapsed. Meanwhile, dangerous exchanges of missiles and drones between Iran and Israel raised the stakes but also further dented Iran’s aura of power, with Israel claiming to have neutralized many of Iran’s air defenses. 

By the end of the year, the axis of resistance had been diminished, and Tehran found itself largely cut off from the Levant. Even Iran’s defense of its homeland looked vulnerable. With Trump, a strong backer of Israel, poised to return to the White House, a confident Netanyahu government in Israel saw a rare opportunity to deal a decisive blow to Iran, destroying its nuclear facilities and devastating its economic infrastructure in an attack that would push the Islamic Republic to the brink.

Yet Trump has not followed the expected Israeli script. Worried that military strikes on Iran will pull the United States into a costly war, the president has thus far resisted Israeli pressure to dispense with diplomacy and wage open war on Iran. Instead, he has pushed for a new version of precisely the thing he repudiated during his first term: a nuclear deal. In doing so, he is backed by the Gulf states, which, despite their opposition to the earlier deal, also now favor diplomacy with Iran.

Since Trump took office, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE have all counseled against war and acted as intermediaries and mediators between Tehran and Washington. The most obvious reason for this shift is fear of what war in the Gulf would do to their economies. At a more fundamental level, Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states see a nuclear deal as central to achieving a new balance of power in the Middle East.

In part, Gulf support for an Iran deal has to do with Israel’s own changed position in the region. Even as it continues its offensive in Gaza, Israel has already begun to emerge triumphant, confident in its absolute military superiority, and ready to use it to assert domination over the Middle East.

In addition to expanding its occupation of Gaza, which Israeli leaders have suggested could be put under indefinite military rule, Israel has been imposing its will on south Lebanon and is occupying and carrying out military incursions into large swaths of Syria. And now it wants to extend its victorious campaign in the Levant to the Gulf, with a military attack on Iran. In addition to provoking Iranian retaliation that could soon include targets on the Arabian Peninsula, such an attack could disrupt world energy supplies and cast doubt on the long-term viability of the economic boom in the Gulf.

The Middle East’s main power brokers, including the Arab states, Iran, Israel, and Turkey, have historically resisted domination by one regional actor. When the Arab world was reaching for primacy under the banner of Arab nationalism in the 1950s and 1960s, Iran, Israel, and Turkey banded together to contain it. Even after the Islamic Revolution in 1979, Israel was not reflexively hostile to Iran if regional power balancing dictated otherwise: in the early years of the Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s, when Saddam Hussein’s Iraq was gaining an upper hand and posing as a claimant to leadership of the Arab world, Israel supplied revolutionary Islamist Iran with intelligence and war materiel. Later, as Iran emerged as a rising power, Israelis joined hands with Arab states to counter it. 

Now that Israel is laying claim to being the region’s unrivaled power, Arab states and Iran—and also Turkey—need each other to establish a balance. Among the former are Bahrain, Egypt, and Jordan, which do not have diplomatic relations with Iran but, like other Arab powers, have drastically increased their engagement.

Above all, Gulf states have become Iran’s crutch in pursuing nuclear negotiations with the United States. The Gulf states understand that, in the rivalry between Iran and Israel, they are the prize. Israel wants an axis with the Arab world that would contain Iran, and Iran wants to deny Israel a footprint in the Arabian Peninsula.

For their part, Gulf leaders want a regional order that restrains both Iran and Israel while empowering their own governments. It is this balancing imperative that has turned Washington’s Gulf allies from erstwhile opponents of a nuclear deal into strong advocates. As they see it, a new deal between Iran and the United States would deny Israel a path to war with Iran that could spill onto their shores, and then only confirm Israel’s unchecked regional supremacy. 

In turn, Iran, which is eager to conclude a nuclear deal to avoid war and boost its ailing economy, has become increasingly dependent on the Gulf states to manage the Trump administration and keep the negotiations going. Oman’s foreign minister, for example, has played a key role in the talks by developing proposals that bridge differences between Tehran and Washington; Saudi Arabia has embraced the idea of creating a regional nuclear consortium with Iran to jointly manage uranium enrichment. The Saudi foreign minister has also suggested that the kingdom is willing to use its economic muscle to help a final deal take hold.

Iran and the Gulf states now need each other, and both sides need a nuclear deal. That is a welcome development. It could build trust between the Gulf neighbors, enabling them to deepen their engagement to include security cooperation, investments, and trade.

Moreover, reengaging with Iran does not require the abandonment of normalization efforts with Israel. Gulf leaders do not want to have to make a Faustian choice between Iran and Israel. They want relations with both in order to strike a regional balance that works to their countries’ advantage and ensures the peace and stability that are vital to the region’s geoeconomic goals.

For the Gulf states, a nuclear deal would align their strategy with Washington’s Middle East policy, which could then be consecrated in a formal strategic partnership between the United States and Saudi Arabia.

Trump’s recent visit to the Gulf seemed to confirm this expectation. Even before arriving in the region, his administration set aside Israel’s concerns and concluded a bilateral cease-fire agreement with the Houthis. At the same time, the ambitious economic deals that Arab leaders offered Trump served as the backdrop to US statements on Gaza, Iran, and Syria that reflected Gulf priorities at the expense of Israel’s preferences.

At every stop on his trip, Trump reiterated his preference for resolving the Iran nuclear issue through diplomacy. And on occasion, he seemed to acknowledge Arab concerns over the war in Gaza, in Abu Dhabi, for example, he said, “A lot of people are starving in Gaza”—apparently criticizing Israel’s ten-week blockade on aid to the territory. 

But for this realignment to truly bring regional peace and stability, the United States must give a new nuclear deal with Iran a broader strategic framing. A deal would need to be reached in tandem with a push to expand the Abraham Accords, normalizing Israel’s relations not only with Saudi Arabia but also with other Arab states, such as Syria.

To resume normalization efforts with Israel, Riyadh will demand an end to the war in Gaza and a viable political future for the Palestinians. Yet at another level, the United States and its Gulf allies must think of normalization as a necessary complement to both a US-Iranian nuclear deal and the growing Iran–Gulf state axis, with these three pieces together forming a new regional balance. 

Of course, US negotiations with Iran may stall, and Washington could return to a more confrontational course with Tehran. Such an outcome would likely prolong regional conflict and foreclose any possibility of further Arab-Israeli normalization in the near term.

But if a deal can be reached, the Gulf states have an opportunity to become the pivot of a new regional order, with axes running through them to Iran, Israel, and the United States. After years of war and turmoil, that might finally offer a real chance to bring stability to the region. 

Courtesy Foreign Affairs

 

Thursday, 12 June 2025

Israel strikes Iran, Inevitable happens

Israel said early on Friday that it struck Iran, and Iranian media said explosions were heard in Tehran as tensions mounted over US efforts to win Iran's agreement to halt production of material for an atomic bomb, reports Reuters.

An Israeli military official said Israel was striking "dozens" of nuclear and military targets. The official said Iran had enough material to make 15 nuclear bombs within day.

"Following the preemptive strike by the State of Israel against Iran, a missile and UAV (drone) attack against the State of Israel and its civilian population is expected in the immediate timeframe," Defence Minister Israel Katz said in a statement.

Reportedly, Israel had begun carrying out strikes on Iran and there was no US assistance or involvement in the operation.

CNN reported that US President Donald Trump was convening a cabinet meeting.

Iran's state TV said several explosions were heard in Tehran and the country's air defence system was on full alert.

US and Iranian officials were scheduled to hold a sixth round of talks on Tehran's escalating uranium enrichment program in Oman on Sunday, according to officials from both countries and their Omani mediators. But the talks have appeared to be deadlocked.

Trump said on Thursday an Israeli strike on Iran "could very well happen" but reiterated his hopes for a peaceful resolution.

US intelligence had indicated that Israel was making preparations for a strike against Iran's nuclear facilities, and Israel could attack in the coming days.

Israel has long discussed striking its longtime foe Iran in an effort to block Tehran from developing a nuclear weapon.

The US military is planning for the full range of contingencies in the Middle East, including the possibility that it might have to help evacuate American civilians, a US official told Reuters.

 

Friday, 26 November 2021

Israel does not approve JCPOA negotiations

With nuclear negotiations in Vienna set to start on Monday of next week, the conflict between Israel and the United States over Iran policy almost seemed to overtake the conflict between Jerusalem and Tehran.

Prime Minister Naftali Bennett is extremely concerned that Washington is rushing toward a nuclear deal weaker than the 2015 JCPOA Iran deal, and made his most direct military-sounding threats yet this week.

Israeli-US exchanges on the issue could get a lot worse before they get better, at a time when predictions for the nuclear talks in Israel tend to range from Iran will not agree to anything to US will cave in for a bad deal.

The latest fireworks come after four evolving stages of ups and downs of how Israelis have viewed the Biden administration’s Iran policy over the last 10 months. The current stage seems to have returned to the original deeply worried stance of November 2020, and with Iran itself at a more dangerous point.

When US President Joe Biden was elected and in his early months, top Israeli officials in the administration of Benjamin Netanyahu ranged between resignation and dread that the US would rejoin the JCPOA 2015 Iran nuclear deal with no conditions.

For Israeli officials at that time, this would have erased all of the sanctions and psychological leverage they had built up over Iran over two-and-a-half years. This without receiving anything, will pave the way for the Islamic Republic to a nuclear weapon when the JCPOA would expire, if not before.  

Despite demands and threats from Iran that Biden must return to the JCPOA on its terms by January or February 2022, the Biden team took its time and said it would cut a deal only along with an add-on deal afterward that would strengthen and lengthen the JCPOA.

Among some other issues, this goal of Washington is one of the reasons that the April-June negotiations fell short of an agreement, even if they got close. One could call this period the first Israeli win in that the US stuck to its positions.

However, then there was a third stage of confusion in which there were no negotiations from June until now, where Israel was increasingly disturbed by the Islamic Republic’s escalating nuclear violations.

But on the positive side for Israel, US started to talk about a plan B with Iran. The US seemed to judge that diplomacy was failing and that the new administration of Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi simply was unwilling to reach anything resembling a reasonable deal.

Although there was uncertainty surrounding how close the Islamic Republic was progressing toward a nuclear weapon, this period was possibly the best for Israeli-US relations because both administrations were equally frustrated with Raisi’s stonewalling.

However, once the IAEA Board of Governors seemed ready to publicly condemn Tehran in September, which could have even led to a UN Security Council referral, Raisi finally signaled a readiness to return to talks.

Even a whiff of a return to talks shut down the expected September IAEA condemnation and brought Washington into engaging in rapid diplomacy.

Despite IAEA Director-General Rafael Grossi’s framing of negotiations with Iran as intractable so far (and the IAEA tried to bend over backward to be diplomatic), all signs were that the board of governors would put the issue again during its meetings this week. Off the record, US officials also started floating new flexibility toward the Iranians.

It is unclear whether the new flexibility means allowing Tehran to maintain all of its new army of advanced centrifuges for enriching uranium, or whether it means a “less for less” deal in which the US would partially lift sanctions for even a partial reduction in Iranian nuclear violations.

Raisi had already achieved more than his predecessor, Hassan Rouhani, simply by refusing to talk for a few months. This is clear from the fact that the old “less for less” deal floated in 2019 required the Islamic Republic to start returning to the nuclear deal – not just to freeze new violations.

If the 2019 “less for less” deal meant partial sanctions relief would come for Iran shipping out some of its new large uranium stock and freezing all new enrichment, the updated, worse “less for less” deal sounds like mere freezing or slowing of new enrichment – without shipping out any of the uranium stock.

If, in 2019-20, advanced centrifuges would need to be destroyed (and there were fewer of them anyway), now they could just be placed in storage. Placing them in storage would mean they could easily be returned to operation in a matter of days or weeks.

If the Biden administration is ready for a weaker JCPOA or a weaker “less for less” deal or any negotiations that seem to reduce the sense of crisis, even without a deal – then its original idea of improving the JCPOA would seem to be out the window.

Some top Israeli defense figures, including Defense Minister Benny Gantz, have been promoting Israel working quietly behind the scenes to get a better JCPOA, even if it does not get everything it wants – for example, greater limits either on Iran’s ballistic missiles (there are currently none with any teeth) or on its aggression in the region.

But if Washington is not equipped or committed sufficiently to achieve these improvements, then what exactly can Israel hope to get from the US?

Could it be as narrow as what circumstances Biden would green-light an Israeli preemptive strike on Iranian nuclear facilities, even if he will not order a strike on his own?

US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and US CENTCOM head General Kenneth McKenzie Jr. this week both emphasized that the US military option is on the table.

Yet, because of Biden’s passivity in using military force to date and his botched pullout from Afghanistan (Trump also intended to pull out, but his assassination of IRGC Quds Force chief Qasem Soleimani intimidated the Ayatollahs more than Biden has to date), many view this as empty talk with no details.

For example, during the Obama administration, US military officials gave public interviews about the readiness to use specific aircraft and weapons – and none have done that yet this round.

Possible reluctance on Biden’s part to use force raises the old question, dating back around a decade, of whether Israel has the capability to take out Iran’s deep underground Fordow facility.

There are additional, more recent questions about whether Israel could take out enough of Iran’s multiple nuclear facilities (unlike the cases of Iraq and Syria, where each had only one major facility) on its own to sufficiently set back the program.

Interestingly enough, there was a wide disparity of answers on this question by former top Israeli officials. Former IDF intelligence chief Amos Yadlin said Israel definitely could.

Former Mossad chief Tamir Pardo and former Mossad Iran desk chief Sima Shine both said they doubted that Israel could on its own.

Pardo’s successor at the Mossad, who just retired in June, Yossi Cohen, told the Jerusalem Post Conference last month and a Haaretz conference this month that Israel should make sure to have or develop such a capability – leaving his position unclear.

Similarly, former National Security Council chief Yaakov Amidror emphasized that Israel needs to have such a capability, but was vague about whether Israel could do so now.

Former IDF chief (2015-19) Gadi Eisenkot previously confidently told The Jerusalem Post that Israel could take out Iran’s nuclear program, without specifying how.

Whether the “yes” officials are bluffing to deter Iran or the “no” officials are misinformed or are downplaying Israeli capabilities to deter Jerusalem from rushing to pull the trigger, Bennett, even after this week’s speech, has not made it clear at what point he would strike.

With all of Netanyahu’s tough rhetoric, even he was intimidated from striking Iran for several years when the JCPOA was being negotiated or was operating.

Would Bennett really strike the Islamic Republic if there was a new version of the JCPOA operating, holes and all, but with the US back in the deal?

Would he aggressively use the Mossad to sabotage nuclear facilities and slow down the Islamic Republic as Netanyahu did, even if the delays from such hits might be measured only in months and not in years?

There is one factor that is much worse now than in the 2012-15 period, a factor that led Iran to make at least some big short-term nuclear concessions for the JCPOA.

Then, China and Russia wanted the Ayatollahs to make concessions and make the crisis go away.

But now China and Russia are both at new low points with the US, and short of Biden offering some game changer on Taiwan or Ukraine, he may have little to offer them to get them to press Tehran to cut a more reasonable deal.

In short, Israel is entering a period where the overall trends for changing Iranian behavior are worse. It may need to live with an extended period of uncertainty, as the US and Iran start a new game of chicken, which some think could run deep into 2022.