The nuclear deal with Iran, finalised in Vienna this week, marks a seismic shift in Middle Eastern geopolitics. For Israel, the agreement represents a strategic defeat of historic proportions, isolating Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as his closest allies peel away to embrace Tehran. The pact, which lifts sanctions in return for curbs on Iran’s uranium enrichment, has drawn signatures from the United States, China, Russia, France, Britain, Germany, and the European Union.
Notably, France and Britain, long considered Israel’s staunchest European partners, played pivotal roles in securing its terms. Paris, in particular, leveraged its position to ensure robust inspection protocols, effectively sidelining Israeli objections. For Netanyahu, who has campaigned relentlessly against the deal, warning of an existential threat, the outcome is a diplomatic rebuke.
His government’s efforts to rally Gulf states against Tehran have faltered, with Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates signalling a pragmatic acceptance of the accord. The UAE, which normalised relations with Israel in 2020, now finds itself balancing its Abraham Accords commitments with a desire to avoid regional isolation. Meanwhile, Iran’s reintegration into global markets promises to redraw energy dynamics.
Tehran’s return as a major oil exporter could depress prices, challenging the fiscal stability of Saudi Arabia and other Gulf producers. But for Israel, the calculus is more immediate. The agreement does not address Iran’s ballistic missile programme or its support for proxy groups such as Hezbollah and Hamas.
These remain flashpoints, and Israel has indicated it will continue preemptive strikes against Iranian-linked targets in Syria. Yet without US backing for a military option, such operations risk escalation against a newly empowered Tehran. The deal also compels a reassessment of Israel’s deterrent posture.
For decades, its purported nuclear monopoly has been a cornerstone of regional dominance. With Iran’s pathway to a weapon theoretically blocked but its conventional and proxy capabilities enhanced, Jerusalem must pivot to asymmetric deterrence. This may explain Netanyahu’s recent overtures to India and Greece, seeking new defence partnerships beyond the transatlantic framework.
Domestically, the agreement deepens political fissures. Netanyahu’s coalition, already fractured, faces pressure from nationalist factions to take a harder line. Opposition leaders, however, argue that the deal offers a chance to reduce military spending and reinvest in social services.
The prime minister’s popularity, already dented by corruption allegations, may suffer further if Hezbollah launches rockets from southern Lebanon under Iranian encouragement. But the most profound shift is psychological. Israel’s strategy of permanent confrontation has been rendered obsolete by a diplomacy that prioritises inclusion over coercion.
The old certainties of American exceptionalism and European solidarity have dissolved. For Netanyahu, the Vienna agreement is not merely a policy disagreement. It is an indictment of his worldview.
The region now moves on without him.








