
Top US and Israeli national security officials met Thursday by secure video conference for their first round of talks on Iran and other regional issues.
The first virtual US-Israel Strategic Consultative Group meeting led by national security adviser Jake Sullivan and his Israeli counterpart, Meir Ben-Shabbat, comes as President Joe Biden’s national security team has stepped up efforts to engage the Israelis about his Iran efforts.
Sullivan has also held at least two lengthy calls with Ben-Shabbat prior to Thursday’s meeting.
National Security Council spokeswoman Emily Horne said in a statement that “the two sides shared perspectives on regional security issues of mutual interest and concern, including Iran, and expressed their common determination to confront the challenges and threats facing the region.”
The talks came after Secretary of State Antony Blinken in his first appearance before Congress stressed that Biden is committed to consulting with Israel, and other Gulf nations, “regarding anything that we might do going forward on that agreement" with Iran.
“We need to be engaged with them since it affects them on the takeoff, not on the landing,” Blinken told members of House Foreign Affairs Committee on Wednesday. “And we’re committed to doing that.”
Biden announced last month his administration is ready to join talks with Iran and world powers to discuss a return to the 2015 nuclear deal, in a sharp repudiation of Donald Trump’s “maximum pressure campaign” that sought to isolate Tehran.
White House officials have said the US is prepared to return to the deal as soon as Tehran shows “strict compliance” with terms of the deal.
Iran, however, has held firm to demands that there be a full lifting of the sanctions Trump reimposed before it will return to the negotiating table.