They discussed “regional strategic matters, continued to widen the circle of peace, the Iranian threat and other topics,” the Foreign Ministry said.
Ashkenazi congratulated Blinken on his confirmation and the two agreed to continue speaking regularly and meet in person as soon as possible, in light of coronavirus limitations.
The Foreign Ministry said that “the US is Israel’s greatest friend and its strategic partner in the regional process of peace, stability and security and economic matters.
“I am certain that we will know to act together against global terror and any threat to stability led by Iran and its proxies,” Ashkenazi added.
During his confirmation hearing in the US Senate, Blinken said the Biden administration plans to engage with US allies before acting on its plan to reenter the 2015 Iran Deal, which the Trump administration left in 2018.
“It’s vitally important that we engage on the takeoff, not the landing, with our allies and partners in the region, to include Israel and to include the Gulf countries,” Blinken said.
A new version of the agreement could limit Iran’s “destabilizing activities” and its ballistic missile program, he added.
“Having said that, I think we’re a long way from there,” Blinken said.