With the deal between the P5+1 (the five permanent members of the UN Security Council -- the United States, Russia, China, Britain, and France -- plus Germany) and Iran that was signed in Geneva last month, the Iranian regime stands on the verge of getting exactly what it wants, thanks to nuclear blackmail.
Though this agreement achieves a partial, temporary delay of the Iranian nuclear project, this is what it does not include on Iran's part:
• Stopping development and production of long-range ballistic missiles
• Ending the subversion of Sunni regimes in the region, such as Bahrain and Saudi Arabia
• Ceasing support and financing of terror organizations such as Hezbollah
• Halting the export of the Islamist revolution to other Muslim countries, such as Lebanon, Iraq, and west Afghanistan
• Stopping the brutal repression of the Iranian people and of its minority nationalities (Azeris, Kurds, Baluchis, Arabs, and others).
The P5+1 seems ready to give to the ayatollah's regime not only a comprehensive insurance policy for its survival, but also a license for its imperial ambitions and a permit to use the blackmail leverages of missiles and terror to undermine governments in the Persian Gulf and Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt and the Palestinian territories.
Thus Israel, which faces an estimated 70,000 rockets and missiles from Hezbollah and Hamas, and other American allies concerned about the threat of Iranian aggression in the region might be able to create a new regional alliance to confront it. But that is not feasible as long as there is no real progress in the Israeli-Palestinian negotiations; Arab countries will not join Israel in such an alliance while the West Bank is occupied and Israeli settlements there are expanded.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's harsh criticism of the Geneva deal is correct. The eagerness on the part of the P5+1 to strike a deal with the ayatollah's regime seems to stem not only from an aversion to standing up against evil, but also from a lack of understanding of the Islamist challenge and from a blurred distinction between allies and foes in the region.
But Mr. Netanyahu's keenness to appease the hard-liners and "settlers" in his country renders progress in the Israeli-Palestinian negotiations impossible, thwarting any attempt to build a regional alliance with Arab countries against the Iranian threat
The US administration might have been able to give the Israelis and Palestinians a bridging offer in early 2014. But now that the Geneva deal is signed, the US may not have the moral authority to exert pressure on any Israeli government regarding an agreement with Palestinians, especially when security issues are used as an obstacle to success. Thus this deal also increases the chances that Secretary of State John Kerry's sincere, tireless efforts to bring about a resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will fail.
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