THE CURRENT → WASHINGTON WRAP Issue 868 · July 7, 2021

Rivlin and Biden Close the Circle

Is Biden bargaining with Tehran or engaged in diplomacy theater?

Rivlin and Biden Close the Circle

The first time Ruvi Rivlin met Joe Biden was in 1973. Biden was a freshly elected senator from Delaware who had come to see the Holy Land for the first time, and Rivlin, a young official with the Jerusalem municipality, had been appointed to show him around the city. Forty-eight years later, Israel’s outgoing president arrived in Washington to close the circle with the new president of the United States.

It was Rivlin’s third meeting with a US president over his seven-year term. He met Obama in Washington in 2015, and President Trump in Israel in 2017. This last meeting is Rivlin’s political swan song. Rivlin was the third world leader to meet Biden in a White House still subject to severe Covid restrictions. (Journalists had to take an antibodies test and produce a vaccination certificate before being allowed onto the grounds.) As expected, Rivlin was received with great warmth in the Oval Office, as well as in the Capitol Hill office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi — but these weren’t just courtesy calls.

President Rivlin came to the White House meeting with his military secretary, Colonel Ala Abu Rukon. On the American side, the meeting was attended by Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman, National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, NSC Coordinator for the Middle East and North Africa Brett McGurk, and NSC Director for Israel-Palestine Julie Sawyer.

Before the cameras, Biden pledged never to allow Iran to obtain a nuclear weapon. But clearly an important conversation took place behind closed doors. Biden’s aides passed in a note after an hour to remind him that the time scheduled for the meeting was up. But the discussion continued, even when a second note was passed in 20 minutes later. The meeting ended up running on for an hour and 40 minutes.

Continue reading with Mishpacha.

Create a free account to keep reading.

Everything you need to stay close to Mishpacha.
← Previous installment Will Bennett's Iran Deal Strategy Bear Fruit? Next installment → Braving the Heat to Speak Out