Iran, Trump and nuclear weapons
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The Louisiana Republican said he did not anticipate the Trump administration deploying troops to Iran amid the ongoing war in the Middle East.
Perspective: The high-stakes options President Trump faces to end Iran's nuclear program as risk of escalation looms.
Iran may not have a nuclear weapon—but it controls the Strait of Hormuz. Here’s why this narrow waterway could become Tehran’s most powerful strategic weapon.
Steve Witkoff, the U.S. special envoy to the Middle East, said he does not know how or when the war against Iran will end. The post ‘I Don’t Know’: Trump’s Iran Negotiator Says He Has No Idea How War Will End first appeared on Mediaite.
Just days before the U.S. strikes on Iran, Tehran was hinting a nuclear deal with Washington was a possibility.
Iran’s government has named Motjaba Khameini, the son of the late supreme leader, as the country’s new ruler in what was described as a defiant move.
For decades, Iran’s nuclear ambitions have been at the center of tensions with the US and its allies, raising concerns that Tehran could eventually build atomic weapons. Israel has long considered a nuclear-armed Iran as an existential threat.
IAEA chief claims no evidence of Iran building nuclear bomb despite U.S. envoy revealing Iranian negotiators boasts having about 460kg weapons-grade uranium stockpile.
Clinton was at the center of an Obama-era deal that constrained Iran's uranium enrichment when the U.N. was calling for its suspension.