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The first attack on Biden’s Iran deal will come from the US Congress

There are midterm elections in November and the Republicans look set to win in a landslide - an Iran deal would be another albatross around the Democrats’ necks

August 26, 2022 14:00
Blinken GettyImages-1401643524
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 07: Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken speaks during a discussion at the Media Summit of the Americas at the ASU California Center on June 7, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. The event coincides with the Ninth Summit of the Americas as leaders from North, Central and South America travel to Los Angeles for the summit to discuss issues such as trade and migration. The United States is hosting the summit for the first time since 1994, when it took place in Miami. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)
3 min read

The dog days of August are a time to go on vacation or start a war.

The politicians have escaped the humidity of Washington. Joe Biden has gone to ground in Delaware as he tries to shake off the Covid he picked up on his Middle East trip.

But the outfit that Saul Bellow called “The Good Intentions Paving Company” never closes.
The Biden administration’s pandering to the Iranian regime is paving the road to hell for the entire Middle East. With the passing of time, it’s getting increasingly hard to see the good intentions behind the Obama administration’s Iran deal and increasingly easy to see the bad outcomes.

The good intentions were good only for the United States: getting out of the Middle East, and to hell with allies, let alone the enemies who refused to be bombed into democracy.

The bad outcomes are already obvious.

An emboldened Iran already has a veto in Baghdad, Damascus, Sanaa and Beirut. If there is a deal in Vienna — and the signs this week are that there might be — then Israel and its new Sunni allies will face a choice.

Either attack Iran now and risk falling out with the US and the EU or allow Iran to continue lying to the International Atomic Energy Agency and dodging sanctions until it wriggles through to a working nuclear weapon, with the attendant risks of radioactive fallout across the region.

In time, this road to hell will reach Europe, whose leaders are doing the shovel-work of preparing the text of a deal in Vienna. The Iranians will inevitably extend the range of their missiles. Quite soon, probably, given their deepening alliances with Russia and China.

The Biden administration seems incapable of joined-up thinking.

The US is fighting a proxy war with Russia in Ukraine. Its leaders and media boast that American-supplied missiles are killing Russian generals, and that an American-led economic boycott is destroying Russia’s economy. Russia, meanwhile, is buying Iranian drones, the better to fight America’s Ukrainian proxies.