https://www.frontpagemag.com/is-israel-the-loser-in-the-saudi-iranian-rapprochement/
Even if the U.S. were convinced that Iran is crossing Israel’s nuclear “red line,” would the Biden administration still support an Israeli strike that could cause it new headaches by destabilizing the region? Not likely. A red light from Washington to Jerusalem will be hard to overcome, despite a long-stated plan for Israel to go it alone if necessary. America’s precedent of allowing its “line in the sand” to be crossed in 2012, when President Obama chose not to act against Syrian President Bashar al Assad’s use of chemical weapons against his own people, indicates that other U.S. “red lines” also may be ignored. So, the pressure on Israel not to strike Iran will be enormous.
I think we all realize that when Biden assures us that Iran will not get nuclear weapons “on my watch,” he doesn’t mean it; he is merely hoping to head off a strike by Israel by providing this assurance. Israel is prepared to go it alone, but it wants to wait until it is absolutely sure that Iran intends to acquire a nuclear weapon. Meanwhile, it waits for Biden to give Israel the weapons it needs. That unwillingness says far more about Biden’s intentions than his claim that Iran won’t be able to make a bomb “on my watch.” He won’t do it himself, and what’s worse, he won’t help Israel, which is wiling to take on the task by itself, by delivering to the Jewish state the weapons it most needs.
Israel’s partners in the Abraham Accords, such as Bahrain, may follow Saudi Arabia’s lead and restore normalcy with Iran. Bahrain may act to get Iranian secret forces to stop inciting its 80 percent-Shiite citizenry.