With the Iran deal closer than ever Israel presses for war
As Iran indicates it is open to a new nuclear deal,
Yair Lapid is pushing the U.S. towards an attack that would devastate the
entire region.
BY MITCHELL PLITNICK AUGUST 19, 2022
https://mondoweiss.net/2022/08/with-iran-deal-closer-than-ever-israel-presses-for-war/
While Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz was launching his assault on seven
Palestinian NGOs on Thursday, Prime Minister Yair
Lapid was pressing the United States closer to an attack on Iran that
could send the entire region into an unprecedented conflict.
Lapid sent a message to the White House that “In the
current situation, the time has come to walk away from the table. Anything else
sends a message of weakness to Iran.” He said this in a meeting with outgoing
uber-hawk Rep. Ted Deutch (D-FL) and U.S. Ambassador to Israel Tom Nides.
“Now is the time to sit and talk about what to do
going forward in order to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon,” Lapid
further stated. Given that Iran currently endures not only the sanctions that
it suffered under before the 2015 JCPOA, or Iran Nuclear Deal, was struck but
also the “maximum pressure” sanctions that Donald Trump placed on the country
that current President Joe Biden never saw fit to lift, it is unlikely that
Lapid has even more sanctions in mind.
Lapid was reacting to the latest turn in the JCPOA
drama, a turn that, not coincidentally, has also brought closer than ever the
possibility of a return to the deal that the United States unilaterally, and
without any justification, abrogated in 2018.
On August 8, the European Union submitted what
it considered to be a final draft of an agreement to fully re-establish the
JCPOA, stating it could not be negotiated further. The United States
immediately agreed that the draft could be the basis of an agreement; this was
unsurprising as it was very similar to the deal the U.S. was prepared to
embrace back in March.
Iran responded this week with a few reservations, but
with a clear message that a few changes could make it a deal, and they could sign.
Since the deal was presented to both Washington and Tehran as a “take it or
leave it” offer, Israel is claiming that this is tantamount to an Iranian rejection.
That’s a criminally flippant attitude about taking a course that is very likely
to a regional war. But it’s important to understand that Iran has some
legitimate concerns and this is not, as is being portrayed by some,
just a delaying tactic.
Iran’s concerns
There are three issues that Iran feels must be
addressed in the “final text;” a text which, it must be noted, few expect will
be truly final as long as neither Tehran nor Washington reject it outright or
put irreconcilable demands on its completion.
The issue of the designation of the Islamic
Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) as a foreign terrorist organization (FTO)
once seemed insurmountable. But Iran offered a compromise that
could help address the economic effects of the FTO designations. The IRGC is a
ubiquitous force in Iran, for better or worse, and the inability of its
financial arms to function due to this designation would hamper Iran’s economic
recovery.
Tehran, therefore, backed off the demand that the IRGC
be de-listed and adjusted it to a demand that some of its subsidiary
organizations be de-listed instead, primarily Khatam-al Anbiya Construction
Headquarters, a large engineering firm. The company has been under U.S. sanctions since
2007.
Second, Iran wants an International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) case against it closed. This case
involves three unexplained incidents of nuclear material that the IAEA has
detected. The draft text stipulates that the IAEA will close the case if Iran
provides a credible explanation of the nuclear material detected.
Iran’s response to the “final draft” did not include
anything, according to
reports, about the IAEA case. This is notable because
Iran was deeply concerned, understandably, that this issue could be used to
moot at least some sanctions relief even if the JCPOA was restored,
particularly if the IAEA referred the case to the UN Security Council. Tehran’s
silence may indicate that it finds the formula of providing a credible
explanation in exchange for dropping the case acceptable.
Finally, Tehran wants assurances that
the United States will keep its word this time. This is largely about Trump’s
unjustifiable withdrawal from the deal, but it also refers to the fact that
American rhetoric, even during the Obama administration,
was discouraging investment in Iran, limiting Iran’s economic recovery, and
minimizing the benefits Iran was getting from the deal.
This is a trickier issue. On the first two, Iran says
the U.S. has “shown flexibility,”
implying that this issue of guarantees is the most difficult. Whether or not he
wants to, Biden legitimately can’t promise that a future president won’t do
exactly what Trump did. And there’s nothing he can do if a member of Congress,
from either party, decides to make threatening statements toward Iran that any
investor will take as a warning not to invest there.
The current thinking seems to be that the renewed
JCPOA would include “indemnities” that
would guarantee Iran “certain economic returns” even if the U.S. backs out
again. Tehran seems to be indicating that this is acceptable, but they want it
spelled out in the new deal, which, so far, it has not been.
All of these are sensible solutions to the remaining
problems, and their very reasonableness explains Lapid’s bellicose reaction.
Election season is not the time a sitting Israeli prime minister wants the
specter of a nuclear Iran to diminish. After all the negative things that both
Lapid and his chief rival, opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu have said about
the Iran Deal its restoration will be seen as a major setback.
Israel lobby struggles to counter
While Lapid will certainly not try to undermine Biden
to the extent that Netanyahu did to Barack Obama in 2015 by working with the
Republicans openly, his reaching out to Deutch—who, though he is retiring,
remains one of the more influential Democrats in Congress and is eager to show
his worth to his next employers,
the anti-Palestinian American Jewish Committee—indicates he is about to
mobilize a full court press on Capitol Hill.
That makes this an “all hands on deck” moment. Recent
polling indicates that a strong majority of
U.S. citizens continue to support a return to the JCPOA. But opponents of the
deal will seize on Lapid’s opposition, and that can be more potent than
Netanyahu’s was back in 2015. Lapid and Biden have a much better relationship
than Obama did with Netanyahu, and Biden is both considerably less committed to
the JCPOA and much more cautious about, and sympathetic to, pro-Israel domestic
forces than his former boss.
Yet the distaste for U.S. involvement in yet another
Middle East conflict runs very deep. Moreover, while groups like AIPAC, the
Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, and other pro-war, pro-regime-change
institutions carry considerable weight on Capitol Hill, they have absolutely no
argument against the clear reality that Iran was complying with the JCPOA
before we pulled out of it and has since moved significantly closer to
nuclear breakout capability, whether or not it actually intends to build a
bomb, something that is far less certain than
the U.S. and Israel present it as.
Even Lapid is not offering a viable alternative to
diplomacy. He is mouthing generic, warmongering platitudes.
“The EU sent Iran a final offer, which does not comport with the principles to
which the Americans committed, and established that the offer was ‘take it or
leave it.’ Iran refuses the offer, and therefore the time has come to get up
and go. Anything else sends a message of weakness.”
But he doesn’t know what to do if
the U.S. does leave the table. “Now is the time to sit and talk about what to
do going forward in order to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear
weapon.”
Next week, Israel’s national security adviser will
arrive in Washington to meet his U.S. counterpart. Ahead of that meeting, it is
time to raise a voice loud and clear. Only 8% of Americans back a military
option with Iran. Next to that kind of pro-diplomacy majority, what the prime
minister of a foreign country, especially one running an apartheid state, wants
means less than nothing. We need to make that clear to everyone in
Washington.
Mitchell Plitnick
Mitchell Plitnick is the president of Rethinking
Foreign Policy. He is the co-author, with Marc Lamont Hill, of Except
for Palestine: The Limits of Progressive Politics. Mitchell's previous
positions include vice president at the Foundation for Middle East Peace,
Director of the US Office of B'Tselem, and Co-Director of Jewish Voice for
Peace.
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