
Jeffrey Goldberg
Editor in Chief, The Atlantic
Jeffrey Goldberg is editor in chief of The Atlantic, where he was previously a national correspondent. A former Middle East and Washington correspondent for The New Yorker, Goldberg has corresponded for The New York Times Magazine and New York magazine, written for the Jewish Daily Forward, and was a Jerusalem Post columnist. He authored Prisoners: A Story of Friendship and Terror. Goldberg received the 2003 National Magazine Award for Reporting for his coverage of Islamic terrorism and an Overseas Press Club award for best human-rights reporting, among other honors. He’s been a Syrkin Fellow in Letters of the Jerusalem Foundation and a public-policy scholar at Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.
Highlights
This exchange has been lightly edited for clarity
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Jeffrey Goldberg: The primary criticisms [of the Iran nuclear deal] in, let's say more hawkish circles, are that the deal is too time constrained. It's unrelated and it does not deal with any of Iran's other malevolent actions in the Middle East. Trump says that these are the reasons that he wanted to get out of the deal. Put Trump aside for a minute. Do you think that the deal was tough enough?
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William Burns: I think it was the best of the alternatives we could produce at that time. If we could have done a more comprehensive deal that included all of Iran’s threatening behavior in the Middle East, we would have done that. But we weren't going to get our closest European allies, as well as the Russians and Chinese, to agree to really strong international sanctions if the aims were that wide, at least right at the outset. Like any arms control process I've been involved in over the years with the Soviets and with the Russians, these aren't one-off agreements. You build on them over time. And so our expectation always was with this nuclear agreement with Iran that we were then going to have to build on it to try to extend the timelines in terms of some of the constraints on Iranian capacities to push back in other areas in the Middle East. We were just in a better position to do that. When we had united most of the international community around that set of goals, we were in a better position to deal with all of those other threatening Iranian actions.
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