Trump Demands Iran Deal Expansion: Abraham Accords Leverage
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- Trump's condition ties nuclear nonproliferation directly to regional peace—a linkage the Biden administration has avoided.
- By expanding the Accords, he aims to isolate Iran while strengthening Israel-Sunni Arab alliances.
- This approach mirrors his administration's success in brokering normalization deals with UAE, Bahrain, and Morocco.
Trump's condition ties nuclear nonproliferation directly to regional peace—a linkage the Biden administration has avoided. By expanding the Accords, he aims to isolate Iran while strengthening Israel-Sunni Arab alliances. This approach mirrors his administration's success in brokering normalization deals with UAE, Bahrain, and Morocco.
Critics argue mixing the two issues complicates already fragile talks. But Trump's leverage comes from Republican control of the Senate, which must approve any final agreement. Without Republican buy-in, any deal risks being reversed after 2025.
The strategic play forces Iran to choose between nuclear concessions and accepting normalized Israeli-Arab relations. Expanding the Accords also pressures Palestinian leadership to engage or be left behind. Trump's team calculates this hardline stance boosts his 2024 campaign narrative of strength abroad.
Power Move: Trump's linkage transforms the Iran deal from a nuclear-only pact into a broader Middle East realignment. Expect GOP candidates to adopt this as a litmus test for any future diplomatic engagement. The next president—whether Trump or Biden—will inherit this expanded framework.
This article was edited with AI assistance for readability. Read original here.



