Iran, Donald Trump
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Just days before the February 28 U.S. strikes on Iran, Iranian officials were hinting a nuclear deal with Washington was possible. Tehran and Washington had restarted Omani-brokered talks in February with President Donald Trump setting an early March deadline for an agreement to be reached.
The nuclear agreement did not bless Iran’s "right" to nuclear weapons. Iran could have acquired or developed a nuclear weapon by defying the terms of the nuclear agreement. That’s because the agreement was based on Iran’s continued adherence to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty,
He participated in the historic agreement that limited Iran's nuclear program a decade ago. Today, he works for Crisis Group. In 2009, when Ali Vaez arrived in Washington and the ayatollahs' atomic program began to raise suspicions,
President Donald Trump’s strikes on Iran were decisive. His reasons for launching the war and definition of victory have been less clear.
Eight months after Kansas congressmen claimed Iran's nuclear program was "obliterated," President Donald Trump has again attacked Iran.
In discussing his reasoning for launching U.S. airstrikes on Iran, President Donald Trump said, "An Iranian regime armed with long-range missiles and nuclear weapons would be a dire threat to every American.
Warnings of Iran's nuclear capability were once again used to explain the new strikes on the Middle Eastern country but less than a year ago the US administration claimed it was wiped out