This text has been translated by AI and may contain errors.
Skip to Content

Omer Carmi

This individual is a guest contributor. MEI is not able to assist with contact requests.

Omer Carmi

Omer Carmi is a former visiting fellow at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy and a PhD student at Tel Aviv University. He is on Twitter @CarmiOmer.

The Latest from Omer Carmi

Filter by
1 Result
More continuity than change in Tehran
Photo by EU Vienna Delegation/Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • More continuity than change in Tehran

    Ahead of the seventh round of the Iran nuclear negotiations that ended on Dec. 3 in Vienna, many observers interpreted Ebrahim Raisi’s election to the presidency and his recent rhetoric as representing a distinct shift in Iran’s nuclear strategy. Indeed, in November, Raisi’s government’s official newspaper Iran explained that Tehran’s strategy in Vienna has changed, and that it has embraced a new approach looking to compel the West to agree with Iran’s terms for a “good deal.” Yet there is more continuity than change in Iranian decision-making on the nuclear file than meets the eye, and Raisi’s election by itself has not represented a fundamental rearrangement.

    December 3, 2021