Biden’s Middle East Policy Tied to Fate of Tehran Negotiations
US President-elect Joe Biden’s policy towards the Middle East region will not crystallize in the first months of his term, as observers agree that his current priorities are now directed at the US interior.
However, Biden will gradually
begin to tackle the region’s outstanding files, mainly the relations with
Tehran, especially as he had announced that he would return to the nuclear
agreement and lift the sanctions on Iran if it “strictly” adhered to the international
deal.
Former diplomats, who have worked
in Washington with successive US administrations, told Asharq Al-Awsat that the
fate of negotiations with Tehran would largely determine the course of the
region’s files.
In this regard, former Lebanese
ambassador to Washington, Riad Tabbara, noted that Biden’s statements during
his election campaign, “all confirm that, unlike his predecessor, he will adopt
a policy of openness to the Middle East region and to all of Washington’s old
allies, whether in Europe or elsewhere.”
The nuclear agreement with Tehran
is likely to be expanded to meet America’s ambitions, Tabbara said, adding that
several provisions would be reviewed, including the annulment of the 10-year
deadline, during which Iran could not produce a nuclear bomb, to be replaced by
a permanent agreement without a time limit.
The second provision, according to
Tabbara, will see the inclusion of the ballistic missile program and other
matters that were not covered by the agreement during the era of former US
President Barack Obama. As for the third item, it will pertain to organizing
Iran’s relationship with neighboring countries and with pro-Tehran militias,
mainly the Houthis, the Popular Mobilization Forces, and Hezbollah.
For his part, former Lebanese
ambassador to the US Abdallah Bouhabib stressed that Biden would focus on the
internal situation in the US, “where conditions are not good at all levels,
whether in terms of the coronavirus pandemic, the economic situation or civil
peace.”
“Since Biden was the vice president of Barack
Obama, and a large part of his current team was among Obama’s team, there is no
doubt that his policy towards the Middle East will be influenced to some extent
by Obama’s policy,” Bouhabib underlined.
Former Lebanese Ambassador to
Washington Antoine Shedid agreed with Bouhabib, but stressed that the reality
on the ground has changed in recent years.
“The region as a whole has changed, whether in
the series of normalization agreements between Arab countries and Israel or
with regard to Iran’s continuous interference in the region’s affairs,” Shedid
said, adding: “All these are files that Biden will have to take into account
while formulating his policies for the region.”
The British Times had ruled out that Biden would reverse the policies implemented by President Donald Trump on many of the main files in the Middle East, especially Palestine, Iran, and Syria. It said that Biden was likely to adhere to Trump’s policies, continue to increasingly neglect the region, and focus on other challenges.



