Tehran delays before Biden administration to reap more gains
The Iranian regime’s strategy for
dealing with the Joe Biden administration is worthy of study, as it seeks to
benefit from Washington’s decision to return to the nuclear agreement in order
to pass its goals such as bringing in financial liquidity, accelerating
armament, and lifting sanctions. Tehran is thus delaying the return to the
agreement to ensure that the greatest pressure is achieved and to obtain the
largest American concessions.
It has become clear that the Iranian
leadership puts the interest of the regime first before the life and economic
interests of the citizens. Therefore, it is not expected that Tehran will make
major concessions regarding Western demands to benefit from the financial
incomes to improve the economy and the living situation. Rather, it will
benefit from the proceeds of the nuclear agreement to strengthen the regime
internally, solidify its control over its Arab colonies, and try to benefit from
Washington's return to the agreement by all means.
It is difficult for Tehran to give
up the countries and regions it controls under any circumstances, except under
tremendous pressure, which is highly unlikely under the Biden administration
because of the nuclear agreement. Therefore, as long as Washington returns to
the agreement, there will be no American resistance to Iran’s control of four
Arab countries. At least, this is what Tehran believes, given that the pressing
forces inside the United States will do the impossible to prevent Biden from
liberating Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen from Iran’s grip until the next
elections, which Tehran is relying on until 2024.
It seems that the Iranian regime is
relying on its militias in Iraq to keep the country under its control. From
here, Iran will continue to strengthen the capabilities of the Popular
Mobilization Forces (PMF) and its loyal groups, and it will expand this support
by obtaining financial revenues through the nuclear agreement and the lifting of
sanctions.
Tehran faces two challenges inside
Iraq. The first is the presence of American forces, and Iran will undertake the
task of evacuating the militias by arming them in order to threaten these
forces, and it will try to use the Iranian lobby in the United States to compel
the administration to withdraw its military forces.
The second challenge is the civil
society uprising against the militias, as Tehran fears the renewal of the
October 2019 demonstrations, which may lead to foreign intervention, including
by the United States. But the Khomeinist leadership in Tehran believes that
signing the agreement with Washington and lobbying will prevent the
administration from supporting the popular uprising when it returns to the
streets, as Iran's project in Iraq until 2024 is to deepen its control over the
country, as well as seizing its oil through companies that it controls through
militias. All of this is based on the assumption that the Biden administration
will not respond to Iranian expansion in the region.