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Israel surprised by Biden’s strength on Iran

Israeli diplomats and intelligence officials have been surprised, pleasantly, by the Biden team, writes Anshel Pfeffer

August 5, 2021 10:41
joe biden GettyImages-1232046162-a
US President Joe Biden speaks in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on March 31, 2021. - President Biden will unveil in Pittsburgh a $2 trillion infrastructure plan aimed at modernizing the United States' crumbling transport network, creating millions of jobs and enabling the country to "out-compete" China. (Photo by JIM WATSON / AFP) (Photo by JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images)
6 min read

The Iranian leadership could barely wait to see the back of former president Hassan Rouhani. Officially, the new president, cleric and prosecutor Ebrahim Raisi, was supposed to inaugurated on Thursday but Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei signed the decree appointing him on Tuesday and by Wednesday he was already chairing the cabinet of his predecessor’s ministers, most of whom are not expected to remain in their posts.

Mr Raisi also made his inauguration speech early, speaking of his desire to remove the “oppressive” American sanctions which have crippled Iran’s economy, but vowing that he would “not tie the nation’s standard of living to the will of foreigners.”

Most observers and analysts had expected that over the past six months, between the inauguration of the Biden administration in the United States and the departure of Mr Rouhani, the two countries would have found a way to broker America’s rejoining of the Iran nuclear agreement, with the necessary compromises on the Iranian side blamed on the outgoing president. But both sides have proved tougher than expected.

If anything, Israeli diplomats and intelligence officials have been surprised, pleasantly, by the Biden team. “They’ve been much more responsive to our concerns than we expected,” said one cabinet minister. “They’re really on our side. It’s helped of course that the Iranians have also been intransigent.” By “our side,” the minister meant on the side of the new Israeli government. Benjamin Netanyahu, he said, didn’t have that kind of rapport with Joe Biden.

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