Tehran is bracing for a tough confrontation with the incoming Trump administration while holding a weak hand after setbacks in 2024.
I examine what is happening with President-elect Donald Trump’s transition to the White House. This week: The forty-seventh president wants a deal to curb Iran’s nuclear program and
President Joe Biden has less than a month in office, but that might be enough time to leave a very big mess on President-elect Donald Trump's desk.
President Joe Biden allegedly spoke with advisors about planning airstrikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities in the lame duck period before President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration, according to a new report.
Coercive diplomacy” could leave Tehran to choose either a negotiated disassembly of its nuclear capability, or a forced one.
When President-elect Donald Trump announced his choice for No. 2 Middle East peace envoy, he made it clear that he wasn’t thrilled about it. Most Read from BloombergIs This Weird Dome the Future of Watching Sports?
The treaty will "formalize the parties' commitment to close defense cooperation," Russia's foreign minister said in late October.
Joe Biden reportedly discussed plans to strike Iran’s nuclear sites in the event Tehran moved closer to building a nuclear bomb before Donald Trump’s inauguration on Jan 20.