News: By Source

While Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu thunders against a possible nuclear deal between Iran and world powers, his defence chiefs see Tehran's guerrilla allies as a more pressing menace including the Lebanese militia, Hezbollah.
[ More ]
The author takes issues with use of the "Munich" analogy to describe contemporary events, including the Iran negotations, arguing that "[w]hen every opponent is Hitler, and every situation a nascent Munich, there is no room for negotiation, only capitulation."
[ More ]
The United States and five other world powers would be able to detect any military capabilities of Iran's nuclear program for at least 10 years under a framework deal agreed upon earlier this month, the U.S. energy secretary said on Thursday.
[ More ]
Iran and Israel have been cooperating under the auspices of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organization's International Monitoring System set up to monitor a ban on nuclear bomb tests.
[ More ]
Thirty-one percent of Republicans favor a new nuclear deal with Iran, creating a challenge for their party's lawmakers who largely oppose the framework accord sealed between Tehran and world powers.
[ More ]
A nuclear deal with Iran may spur proxy wars in the Middle East as Sunni Muslims try to counter an increasingly wealthy and powerful Shi'ite Iran, the European Union’s counter-terrorism coordinator said on Monday.
[ More ]
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has begun to signal that Israel could resign itself to an Iranian nuclear deal that would leave its enemy with some uranium enrichment capability, a compromise he has long opposed.
[ More ]
A possible deal over Iran's nuclear program that would phase out economic sanctions against Tehran is unlikely to flood world markets with more oil any time soon, despite Iran's declared intention to claw back market share lost because of the curbs.
[ More ]
Repression of Iranian women and activists has worsened under President Hassan Rouhani despite his reformist agenda, but Iran could act to improve its record if it clinches a nuclear deal with major powers, a U.N. rights investigator said on Monday.
[ More ]
Iran on Tuesday rejected as "unacceptable" U.S. President Barack Obama's demand that it freeze sensitive nuclear activities for at least 10 years, but said it would continue talks aimed at securing a deal, Iran's semi-official Fars news agency reported.
[ More ]