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Biden must embrace a stronger strategy to take on Iran

Matthew Continetti Senior Fellow, American Enterprise Institute
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Team USA may have scored a huge victory over Iran in the World Cup, but the Middle East nation remains a major adversary on the geopolitical stage. Iran’s rulers have executed hundreds of its own citizens for protesting the regime’s oppressive tactics, sold drones to Russia to use in its ongoing war effort against Ukraine, and continued its work to build nuclear weapons. President Biden has vowed to help free Iran’s people. Straight Arrow News contributor Matt Continetti warns the White House has not done enough. He says Biden must embrace a stronger strategy to take on Iran and minimize the threat it poses.

The Islamic theocrats who rule Iran are responding to internal revolt with savage repression and external terror. They murdered their own people, even children, while providing Russia with the means to commit atrocities against Ukrainian civilians. They continue to pursue nuclear weapons while ramping up their efforts to kidnap and assassinate regime critics, including former high-ranking officials of the U.S. government. They violate Iraq’s sovereignty with attacks on America’s Kurdish allies and fund the Houthi rebels terrorizing commercial traffic in Yemen. 

Iran is the very definition of a rogue state, reckless, violent incendiary and cruising for a bruising. To his credit, Biden has levied sanctions on Iranian government officials and organizations associated with the brutal crackdown on demonstrators. It’s a start. Otherwise, Biden has wasted time. He spent more than a year in a pointless diplomatic waltz in Vienna over the Iranian nuclear program, negotiations that the administration now admits had broken down. 

He invested political capital in the short-lived truce in Yemen that has been defunct for months. He backed in Israeli-Lebanon maritime agreement that will strengthen Iran’s proxy Hezbollah, and his passive-aggressive relationship with Saudi Arabia jeopardizes the Middle East’s emerging anti-Iran alliance. The potential rewards of a change in strategy are great. Iran is vulnerable. The courage of the protest movement is hollowing out the power of the regime from within; the application of external pressure could cause it to collapse. If all goes well, military force wouldn’t be necessary. 

For that to happen however, the Ayatollah, his army and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, need to take the threat of force seriously enough that it scrambles their calculations and spooks them into concessions.

I was among the estimated 12 million people who watched the U.S.-Iran World Cup match on television on November 29. I cheered when the 24 year-old midfielder Christian Pulisic kicked the winning goal. My stomach was in knots during the second half as Team USA fended off a sustained Iranian offensive, and was filled with national pride when the Americans won. But a soccer game is no substitute for grand strategy. 

And right now, President Biden’s Iran policy is a shambles. The Islamic theocrats who rule Iran are responding to internal revolt with savage repression and external terror. They murdered their own people, even children, while providing Russia with the means to commit atrocities against Ukrainian civilians. They continue to pursue nuclear weapons while ramping up their efforts to kidnap and assassinate regime critics, including former high-ranking officials of the U.S. government. They violate Iraq’s sovereignty with attacks on America’s Kurdish allies and fund the Houthi rebels terrorizing commercial traffic in Yemen. 

Iran is the very definition of a rogue state, reckless, violent incendiary, and cruising for a bruising. To his credit, Biden has levied sanctions on Iranian government officials and organizations associated with the brutal crackdown on demonstrators. It’s a start. Otherwise, Biden has wasted time. He spent more than a year in a pointless diplomatic waltz in Vienna over the Iranian nuclear program, negotiations that the administration now admits had broken down. 

He invested political capital in the short-lived truce in Yemen that has been defunct for months. He backed in Israeli-Lebanon maritime agreement that will strengthen Iran’s proxy Hezbollah, and his passive-aggressive relationship with Saudi Arabia jeopardizes the Middle East’s emerging anti-Iran Alliance. The potential rewards of a change in strategy are great. Iran is vulnerable. The courage of the protest movement is hollowing out the power of the regime from within; the application of external pressure could cause it to collapse. If all goes well, military force wouldn’t be necessary. 

For that to happen however, the Ayatollah, his army and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, need to take the threat of force seriously enough that it scrambles their calculations and spooks them into concessions. Thus, the first step toward defeating the Islamic revolutionaries in charge of Iran is reviving America’s defenses and demonstrating America’s commitment to the security of the Persian Gulf. The next step is repairing America’s alliances with Saudi Arabia and Israel. The Saudis must understand that America supports the anti-Iranian coalition. And America must recognize that criticism of Israel’s incoming government should take second place to more important priorities, such as expanding the Abraham Accords and coordinating both covert and overt actions against the Iranian nuclear program. 

President Biden can no longer afford to treat foreign policy as a distraction from his domestic goals. He needs to make the case not only for continued American assistance to Ukraine, but also for supporting the domestic opposition to a pariah regime that endangers the world. And he needs to do it using the same rhetoric as Ukrainians and Iranians who resist subjugation because they desire freedom. 

The GOP House majority can remind Biden that only a broad and sustained effort backed by a credible deterrent will inspire dissidents and punish the maligned behavior of the Iranian regime. 

It will take a bipartisan effort to revitalize American leadership and help the Iranian people realize their aspirations for democracy. 

A win in soccer might be enough for some countries, not for team USA.

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