Jared Kushner, President Trump's son-in-law and advisor, broke a long silence on Monday night - and published a column with insights on the Middle East for President Biden's administration. In the column, published in the Wall Street Journal and brought to you by Israel Today, Kushner advises him to show determination in negotiations with Iran.
You don't have to be a volunteer at an emergency organization to save lives. You can too.
‘'Against experimental vaccine, coronavirus': How many people has the anti-vaccine pike killed?
Kushner emphasizes the success of the 'Abraham Accords' in breaking the paradigm that the conflict between the Israelis and the Palestinians must first be resolved, which he calls "a real estate dispute, before the region can be brought to calm and put on a path of peace. Kushner lists the achievements of the agreement, including the number of tourists from Israel to the UAE and the series of economic agreements signed between the countries, to present the benefits of the normalization process. "It would be a mistake not to build on the new stability achieved in the Middle East," Kushner writes, saying that the relations between Israel, Morocco, Sudan, Kosovo, Bahrain, and the UAE are a change in the perception of foreign relations in the region. On the negotiations on the nuclear agreement with Iran - Kushner wrote: "The Biden administration has one advantage that the Trump administration never had, and that is a relationship with Iran. While many have expressed concern about the Biden administration's move to establish negotiations, with the help of European partners, with Iran within the framework of the nuclear agreement, I see it as a wise move, because it has exposed the Iranian bluff." Kushner claims that, thanks to the Trump administration's policy, the United States has a "strong hand" in negotiating with Iran, and argues that the United States must be patient and insist that any future agreement include a real monitoring mechanism that will ensure that Iran cannot develop nuclear weapons and prevent it from arming and training forces in foreign countries. According to him, neutralizing the Iranian threat will allow countries in the region to cut their military budgets and will bring economic prosperity and new opportunities for the peoples of the entire region.