In Israel, Biden to sign joint pledge to prevent Iran going nuclear
US president Joe Biden and Israeli prime minister Yair Lapid participate in a bilateral meeting, in Jerusalem, on 14 July, 2022 |
US president Joe Biden and Israeli
prime minister Yair Lapid will sign a joint pledge to deny Iran nuclear weapons
on Thursday, closing ranks after long-running disputes between the allies over
global diplomacy with Tehran.
Biden, who is visiting Jerusalem, told Israeli TV on Wednesday he was open to “last resort” use of force against Iran - an apparent move toward accommodating Israel’s calls on world powers to present a “credible military threat”.
The United States and Israel have separately made veiled statements about
possible preemptive war with Iran - which denies seeking nuclear arms - for
years. Formally articulating the rhetoric could enhance the sense of deterrence
and resolve.
The
show of Israel-US commitment may also offer Biden a boost when he continues on
to Saudi Arabia on Friday. Riyadh has its own Iran worries, and Biden hopes to
parlay that into an Saudi-Iranian rapprochement under US auspices.
“I think what you’ll see in the joint declaration is a pledge and a commitment never to allow Iran to acquire a nuclear weapon and that we’re prepared to use all elements of our national power to ensure that outcome,” one US official said.
There was no immediate comment on the planned Jerusalem declaration from
Tehran.
In
2015, it signed an international deal capping Iranian nuclear projects with
bomb-making potential. In 2018, then-US president Donald Trump quit the pact,
deeming it insufficient, a withdrawal welcomed by Israel.
Iran
has since ramped up some nuclear activities, putting a ticking clock on world
powers’ bid to return to a deal in Vienna talks. Israel now says it would
support a new deal with tougher provisions. Iran has balked at submitting to
further curbs.
“The
only thing worse than the Iran which exists now is an Iran with nuclear weapons
and if we can return to the deal, we can hold them tight,” Biden said in the
Israeli TV interview.
Some
Israeli as well as Gulf Arab officials believe the deal’s sanctions relief
would provide Iran with far more money to support proxy forces in Lebanon,
Syria, Yemen and Iraq. They are also skeptical about whether the Biden
administration will do much to counter Iran’s regional activities.
The
US official, asked if Thursday’s declaration is about buying some time with
Israel as Washington pursues negotiations with Iran, said: “If Iran wants to
sign the deal that has been negotiated in Vienna, we have made very clear we’re
prepared to do that. And, at the same time, if they’re not, we will continue to
increase our sanctions pressure, we will continue to increase Iran’s diplomatic
isolation.”
A
senior Israeli official described the threat of military action as a means of
avoiding war.
“(It)
is a guarantee that the diplomatic, economic and legal efforts against Iran
will be effective,” Defence Ministry director-general Amir Eshel told Israel’s
Kan radio. “Iran has shown everyone that when it is pressed hard it knows how
to stop and change its ways.”
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