TOP STORIES
U.S. President Donald Trump has all but decided to
withdraw from the 2015 Iran nuclear accord by May 12 but exactly how
he will do so remains unclear, two White House officials and a source
familiar with the administration's internal debate said on Wednesday.
In the first major interview by a representative of the
Iranian government since Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's
broadside on the Iran nuclear deal, Iran's Ambassador to the UK told
CNN that if the United States pulls out of the agreement, "it
means that there is no deal left."
The direct military conflict between Israel and Iran has
already begun, with a series of increasingly bold (and usually
unacknowledged) Israeli strikes on Iranian bases in Syria in recent
weeks. The question now is whether this clash could be contained
within Syria-or whether violence could spread to Israeli, Iranian and
maybe Lebanese territory, unleashing a regional war.
UANI IN THE NEWS
Sen. Kirk: It appears that Prime Minister Netanyahu's
intelligence service caught the Iranians with the gems around their
knees there, caught them comprehensively cheating on the agreement
that was signed with President Obama. And they've been trying to make
a nuclear weapon all along, even after the Obama payment of 10
billion dollars in cash to the Iranians.
NUCLEAR DEAL & NUCLEAR PROGRAM
A top Iranian diplomat warned on Wednesday that if the
United States withdraws from the Iran nuclear deal in the coming
days, Tehran could resume its uranium enrichment activities.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Wednesday that
the nuclear deal with Iran should not be canceled but its negotiating
framework needed to be broadened.
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned
on Thursday against scrapping an international deal on Iran's nuclear
programme unless there was a good alternative in place.
Everyone has an opinion about the importance or
irrelevance of the secret nuclear documents that the Mossad
appropriated from Iran, but does anyone have a clue as to what they
are talking about? Do people know what it was Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu actually presented in his PowerPoint presentation, what was
really old news and what was clearly new? Let's break it down.
The Israeli prime minister had at least five audiences
in mind for his dramatic presentation about Tehran's nuclear-weapons
intentions.
SYRIA, ISRAEL & IRAN
The strike on a Syrian military base near Hama on Sunday
was carried out by Israeli F-15 fighter jets after Iran had
transferred a shipment of anti-aircraft missiles there, three U.S.
officials told NBC News. The officials said Israel seems to be
preparing for open warfare with Iran and is seeking U.S. support.
A senior Iranian lawmaker has warned that his country
will retaliate against what he called Israeli "aggression"
in Syria after missile strikes this week killed 26 mostly Iranian
fighters stationed at a Syrian military base.
Iran and Israel have been exchanging threats for
decades. What's different now is that Syria's civil war, which sucked
in both countries, provides a potential battlespace -- one that's
much closer to Jerusalem than to Tehran.
In three bold moves this week - with F-15s, a PowerPoint
presentation and the passage of a contentious new law - Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has strengthened his hand in trying to
foil Iran's strategic ambitions, while potentially pulling the two
nations closer to direct conflict.
Now that the IDF is bracing for an Iranian response to
recent alleged Israeli attacks in Syria (which, it is thought, left
dozens of Iranian troops dead), Israel will be forced to decide how
exactly it will respond.
ECONOMIC NEWS
Oil prices nudged higher Thursday, drawing closer to a
more than three-year high, with uncertainty on the future of the Iran
nuclear deal helping to put a floor in the market.
Iranians placed a lot more bets on gold in the first
quarter after the local currency weakened to a record and fears grew
that the U.S. would pull out of the nuclear deal, signaling a return
to sanctions.
NORTH KOREA & IRAN
With the prospect of another round of North Korean
diplomacy in the air, the United States must take full advantage by
insisting that any deal with Kim Jong Un's regime include full
disclosure of everything it knows about the Iranian nuclear program
and the decades-long nuclear proliferation abetted by Pakistan's AQK
Network. The president frequently mentions the North Korean and
Iranian nuclear threats in the same speech, but he needs to link the
two.
TERRORISM & EXTREMISM
Iran's decades-long insistence that its nuclear
intentions are entirely peaceful is starting to wear a bit thin
following the daring raid by Israeli agents that resulted in them
stealing the crown jewels of Iran's nuclear programme. For those of
us who have followed the Iran nuclear brief closely over many years,
the dramatic revelations made by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu have an all-too-familiar ring of truth about them.
FOREIGN AFFAIRS
The Arab League says it supports Morocco's decision to
sever ties with Iran over its alleged support for the Polisario Front
in the disputed Western Sahara. Tehran has denied supporting the
pro-independence group.
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