It's All About Us
The speech by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to a joint session of congress has produced a great deal of commentary by politicians, policy makers, and pundits in the United States. Virtually all of this commentary has focused on a triangle of Israel, Iran, and the United States. The fact is that the negotiations on Iran's nuclear program in a structure referred to as P5+1. Sitting across the table from Iran is not only the United States but also Britain, France, Germany, Russia, and China. All of these sovereign nations have their own perceptions, interests, and motivations which are not necessarily fully aligned with those of the United States.
None of these politicians, pundits, and policy makers have raised the possibility of these other nations embracing the negotiated framework agreement and the United States declining to do so. Only Britain among them has consistently supported American positions. France and Germany have differed with the United States on several important issues in this century. Russia and China have obvious reasons to disagree with American positions. Russia is currently the subject of economic sanctions imposed by the United States and China seeks to exert its position as a diplomatic peer of the United States. It is possible that America and Israel (and likely Britain) could find themselves isolated from the rest of the community of nations on this issue.
When the myth of the "exceptional nation" collides with realpolitik and the interests of other sovereign nations.....myth loses.
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