AhlulBayt News Agency (ABNA): The Tel Aviv-based newspaper Haaretz reported that the goals set by Benjamin Netanyahu, the Prime Minister of the Zionist regime, for the war against Iran appear unattainable due to recent developments and the emerging framework of negotiations between Iran and the United States.
Haaretz wrote in this report that the preliminary understandings published between Tehran and Washington—which are to serve as the basis for negotiations in the coming days—have caused one of Netanyahu's main objectives in this war, namely creating conditions for the collapse of Iran's political system, to fail.
According to this report, on the other hand, the recognition of Iran's current leadership as a negotiating party and some of the provisions raised in the potential agreement will lead to the strengthening of the Islamic Republic of Iran's position.
The lifting of international sanctions, the setting aside of certain measures by the UN Security Council and the IAEA, as well as the resumption of Iran's oil exports, are among the factors that, according to this media outlet, increase Tehran's legitimacy and economic power.
Haaretz also wrote that clauses raised in the negotiations include the release of Iran's blocked assets abroad, compensatory payments, and even a mechanism for collecting tolls from ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz—a strategic waterway through which a significant portion of the world's energy passes.
The report further stated that officials of the Zionist regime have been trying in recent days to assess whether the attacks carried out during this war could cause unrest inside Iran.
According to Zionist sources, part of the goal of these attacks was to weaken Iran's sovereignty and create internal chaos after the ceasefire was established. According to Haaretz, Netanyahu officially announced the main goals of this operation just two weeks after the start of the war.
In a statement on March 12, he said the goals of this war were to prevent the development of nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles in Iran, as well as to create conditions for regime change in the country.
However, the emerging framework of negotiations now raises the question of whether Netanyahu has been able to achieve these goals. Particularly, the continuation of negotiations with Iran's current government and the possibility of reduced economic pressures could lead to the stabilization of Tehran's position.
Meanwhile, field developments in Lebanon could also make the Zionist regime's achievement of its goals more complicated. According to Haaretz's report, Iran's demand in the negotiations for the cessation of the Zionist regime's attacks against Hezbollah and other resistance movements limits Netanyahu's ability to achieve his goals in Lebanon.
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