As expected, the Biden administration is actively pursuing reestablishing the
Iran deal. Currently, US representatives are meeting Iran officials in Vienna
who have demanded that US sanctions imposed under the Trump administration be
removed
first as a precondition to talks. Secretary of State Blinken,
for his part, has claimed that Biden wants to
“lengthen and strengthen”
the deal.
This time around, there is no longer
talk framing opponents to the Iran deal as warmongers, as the Obama administration and its allies did. It was a theme that was
repeated endlessly and hammered into the public consciousness, that while the
deal was not perfect, the choice was a binary one -- on between the Iran deal
and war.
The argument worked.
The argument of limited choice has also been used in pushing the two-state
solution -- but has been updated.
At one time, the need to create a separate, independent Palestinian Arab state
was justified on the basis of the threat of a "demographic time bomb," that
the Arab population in Israel, Gaza and the "West Bank" would swamp the Jewish
population.
For example:
The Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS) released its annual
population survey for 2014, in which it predicted that starting in 2016, the
number of Palestinians and Jews living in Israel and the Palestinian
territories of East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza "will total about 6.42
million each by the end of 2016 provided that current growth rates remain
constant."
The bureau also states: "The number of Palestinians in historical Palestine
[Israel and the Palestinian territories] will total 7.14 million compared to
6.87 million Jews by the end of 2020." [emphasis added]
Obviously, this did not materialize.
That was back in January. In March, US ambassador to the UN, Linda
Thomas-Greenfield reiterated at a UN Security Council meeting that "we believe
this vision [of a 2 state solution] is the best way to ensure Israel’s future as
a democratic and Jewish state."
If the choice is one state, Israel can either be Jewish or democratic; it
cannot be both, and it won't ever really be at peace.
Hold on.
It is one thing for the US government to pursue an admittedly imperfect deal
and do an end-around to bypass Congress to make an agreement. It is one thing
for the US to do this to ourselves.
But it another thing to force this on an ally.
There is another comparison between the US attitude to Iran and the
Palestinian Authority.
Kerry reiterated that, after settling debts, Iran would receive
closer to $55 billion. He conceded some of that could go to groups
considered terrorists, saying there was nothing the U.S. could do to
prevent that.
“I think that some of it will end up in the hands of the IRGC or
other entities, some of which are labeled terrorists,” he said in
the interview in Davos, referring to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps.
“You know, to some degree, I’m not going to sit here and tell you
that every component of that can be prevented.”
But he added that “right now, we are not seeing the early delivery
of funds going to that kind of endeavor at this point in time.”
[emphasis added]
Iran did not share Kerry's interest in economic recovery.
And it is almost painful to read the degree that Kerry is forced to hedge on
how little the billions in relief would go to terrorism. Of course, much of it
did go to terrorism and not towards the benefit of the Iranian people.
Caschetta sees the same wishful thinking in Biden's planned bypassing of the
Taylor Force Act (TFA) to provide millions in aid to Abbas:
Likewise, Joe Biden believes that the advantages to funding Palestinians
outweigh the unfortunate fact that a percentage of that money will be spent
on missiles, salaries of imprisoned terrorists and pensions for the families
of Palestinian "martyrs."
Add to that the Biden administration's support of the upcoming Palestinian Arab
elections, which will allow Hamas terrorists to
again directly
participate with Fatah. This is a repeat of the elections in 2007, when the Bush
administration OK'ed Hamas participation -- and culminated in the bloody coup
that kicked out Abbas and Fatah and sent them packing, back to the West Bank.
Putting aside the legal issues of US aid in contravention of the
TFA, Jonathan Schanzer, of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies
notes that
US support for these elections is itself problematic:
This is somewhat awkward in light of the fact that Biden, while serving as
a U.S. senator, spearheaded the Palestinian Anti-Terrorism Act of 2006, which prohibits U.S. assistance if the Palestinian Authority is
“effectively controlled by Hamas.”
(a) Declaration of Policy.--It shall be the policy of the United
States--
(1) to support a peaceful, two-state solution to end the
conflict between Israel and the Palestinians in accordance with
the Performance-Based Roadmap to a Permanent Two-State Solution
to the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict (commonly referred to as the
``Roadmap'');
(2) to oppose those organizations, individuals, and
countries that support terrorism and violently reject a two-
state solution to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict;
(3) to promote the rule of law, democracy, the cessation of
terrorism and incitement, and good governance in institutions
and territories controlled by the Palestinian Authority; and
(4) to urge members of the international community to avoid
contact with and refrain from supporting the terrorist
organization Hamas until it agrees to recognize Israel, renounce
violence, disarm, and accept prior agreements, including the
Roadmap. [emphasis added]
Of course, if Biden can work his way around the Taylor Force Act, he should
have no problem contravening the law that he himself proposed.
This comparison between Iran and the Palestinian Authority also points to
differences.
Consider the push by the media and progressive groups for the US to take
action against Saudi Arabia for the murder of Jamal Khashoggi. The measures
suggested include ending US support for the Saudis against the
Iranian-supported Houthis in Yemen, cutting back US arms sales to Saudi
Arabia and pushing against crown prince Mohammed Bin Salman.
This already started during the Trump administration.
Now, it is promoted as part of the Biden administration's vaunted support
for human rights.
So on the one hand, we have the call for justice on behalf of
Khashoggi, who was not a US citizen, contrary to media claims. He was in the US on the basis of an O-1 visa, which is
granted to individuals with “extraordinary ability.” Putting aside his
jihadist views, this journalist who wrote for the Washington Post did not
even know English; his articles were translated by an employee at the
Qatari embassy and his last article was delivered by this translator the
day after Khashoggi was reported missing. The Washington Post did not
respond when asked if they were aware of this background to the
articles.
The US concern for justice for Khashoggi is not matched by a concern for
justice for Malki Roth, whose murderer, Ahlam Tamimi, continues to be
sheltered by the Jordanian government in defiance of the active
extradition treaty between the 2 countries. While the Trump administration
made clear it considers the treaty in force and broached the topic with
the Jordanians, it never applied pressure on what they consider an
ally.
Can we expect the Biden administration's professed concern for human
rights to extend to extraditing the self-confessed murderer of an
actual American citizen?
Or is Biden going to follow Obama's example, as when he treated American
lives cheaply when he paid the ransom for the release of Americans kidnapped
by the Iranian regime?
One of Trump's last contributions towards the end of his term is the Abraham
Accords, which will be a thorn in the side of the Biden administration, both
in terms of its Iran policy and any attempt to bring a two-state solution to
reality.
In terms of Iran, Trump supported the steps Israel repeatedly took to defend
itself against Iranian attempts to exploit its position in Syria and expand
its sphere of influence against Israel. We have already seen that Israel
continues this policy during the Biden administration, even while the US is
engaged in negotiations with Iran in Vienna in an attempt to restart the
Iran Deal. Thanks to the Abraham Accords, Israel is no longer alone in this
fight.
In terms of the Palestinian Authority, while Biden will be able to some
degree to renew US support for the Abbas regime, both politically and even
economically, claims of the inevitability and necessity of the two-state
solution have lost their sense of urgency. The normalization of ties between
Israel and the Arab world will continue and may even converge with a growing
attitude among Arab Israelis to work within the system to improve their
lives.
In terms of the lives of Arabs in Israel, Biden may find himself irrelevant.
In terms of the lives of Palestinian Arabs, if the best that Biden can do is
offer a continuation of the Abbas regime, he has nothing of substance to
offer.
In terms of Iran, the US may find that it cannot go back to 2015.