Nuclear program of Iran
The moment may come when soldiers have to choose between the Constitution and Donald Trump. No doubt most will embrace the Constitution. But some will see that as a tough call.
Trump says he hates the Obama-era nuclear deal with Iran. But he’s toying with a French proposal to get the Iranians to comply with it: a $15 billion line of credit to Tehran.
The previously unannounced visit of Javad Zarif may help calm the escalating dangers of war between the U.S. and Iran, but not for long.
Lawmakers know less about nuclear threats than ever before. A former congressman runs a dinner series to educate them in hopes of averting global annihilation.
Iran's announcement that it will stockpile more nuclear materials than allowed by the international agreement Trump has tried to destroy is nuanced, but perilous nonetheless.
The Iranian president used the U.S. violation of the 2015 nuclear deal as a wedge to divide Washington from its pro-deal allies and portrayed Trump as an international lawbreaker.
The Singapore statement pales even in comparison with the interim, preliminary Iran deal signed by the U.S. and other world powers in 2013.