Iran, Trump
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Opinion
Tactics without strategy: How Trump’s weakness and Netanyahu’s self-interest exploded in IranThe attacks bore the twin hallmarks of Israeli military actions under Netanyahu: Tactically brilliant but lacking any strategic vision
There are growing tensions in the conservative movement over whether President Donald Trump should agree to a new nuclear deal with Iran or use force against it.
They died in their own beds. Hossein Salami and Ali Shamkhani—Iran’s most senior military officers and the stewards of Iran’s nuclear weapons program—had spent years threatening Israel with destruction.
The president had a dream of being a prize-winning peacemaker. Now he may enter the nightmare of America fighting yet another war.
Trump swept into office hoping to be a peacemaker. Five months in, a new conflict is roiling the Middle East, with no end in sight to the war in Ukraine.
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From LA to Gaza, Jane Harman explains how President Donald Trump has made the U.S. less secure at home and abroad.
Iran launched three retaliatory waves of missiles at targets in Israel on June 13, as Israelis rode out the attacks in bomb shelters and world leaders discussed the deepening conflict.
"There has already been great death and destruction, but there is still time to make this slaughter... come to an end," Trump wrote on social media.
The tension in the Middle East has inflamed long-simmering disagreements in Trump’s political base over U.S. intervention in foreign affairs. “No issue currently divides the right as much as foreign policy,
Iranian state media report more explosions, with blasts heard in Tehran, as Israel says its air force is hitting military targets.