Trump’s nuclear options
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President Trump launched military strikes on Iran after several rounds of talks over the country's nuclear program and uranium stockpiles. Here's what to know about the nuclear program.
The Louisiana Republican said he did not anticipate the Trump administration deploying troops to Iran amid the ongoing war in the Middle East.
A raid is fraught with risk, but it may become the only way to make sure the nuclear material is safe and out of the regime's hands.
Just days before the U.S. strikes on Iran, Tehran was hinting a nuclear deal with Washington was a possibility.
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.
Rafael Grossi, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, said Iran has an “ambitious” nuclear program but doesn’t have a program for building nuclear weapons currently. “It is an evaluation that is based on the fact that Iran has a very big,
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.
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.
IDF Spokesperson Brig.-Gen. Effie Defrin revealed the strike in a March 3 press conference, though doubts had persisted about how critical the site was for Iran's nuclear program.