Tehran threw
President Barack Obama a badly needed "lifeline" for his Iran policy at
last week's nuclear discussions in Geneva: It promised U.N. access to a
recently declared nuclear site and committed "in principle" to ship
low-enriched uranium, or LEU, abroad to make fuel rods for producing
medical isotopes. If Geneva had been a "bust," Obama would have been
committed to mustering international endorsement for what his secretary
of state calls "crippling" sanctions against Iran -- even though no
Today Flynt Leverett, a research fellow who specializes in Iran at The New America Foundation, shares the view of many experts, who are doubtful of the chances ...
Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett, former National Security Council staffers, in The New York Times : "Instead of pushing the falsehood that ...
... limits on Iran are rather small, but that's something on which the American side is very focused, says Flynt Leverett from the New America Foundation. ...
Astonishingly, however, writing in the New York Times this week, former National Security Council staffers Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett suggest ...
Flynt Leverett, on the other hand, is no diplomat. In 2003, he parted ways with the National Security Council and, since then, he has been outspoken about ...
Iran experts Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett wrote: "Absent some agreement with Washington on its long-term goals, Iran's national security ...
Two respected Iran scholars, Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett , have proposed in a New York Times op-ed article that the Obama administration step ...
Tehran's disclosure that it is building a second uranium enrichment
plant near the holy city of Qum has derailed the Obama administration's
already faltering efforts to engage with Iran. The United States will
now cling even more tightly to the futile hope that international
pressure and domestic instability will induce major changes in Iranian
decision-making.