peter: lawrence korb in washington, how far will mr. biden push against that stance? pushed back when he was vice president. and when prime minister netanyahu came to the night and states and took the unprecedented step of addressing the u.s. congress, and told them not to approve a deal that the obama-biden administration had made with iran, so i think that he will push back. he has given getting back into the iran nuclear deal the highest priority, that is why the negotiations are going on in vienna right now. so i think he will push back very, very hard against this, because this is a priority, because a nuclear-armed iran would completely destabilize the middle east. it is a bigger threat than anything going on, whether it is in yemen or syria or what have you. peter: roxanne, put this in the context of, not the immediate past, not the last month or so, but the wider picture and context when it comes to a friction-based relationship between jerusalem and washington, not what i guess it should be in a perfect world, a frictionless relationship. >> i would argue the