SEE THE DIFFERENCE?
Late last week the Obama administration announced an agreement on a framework for going forward with future negotiations regarding a possible deal over Iran's nuclear program.
This agreement has been trumpeted by President Barack Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry, along with their cheerleaders in the liberal media, as a done deal, a "peace in our time" moment, that will forever prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons.
Of course that isn't even close to true. In fact, a simple comparison of the U.S. version of the deal with the Iranian version shows two completely different deals.
This agreement has been trumpeted by President Barack Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry, along with their cheerleaders in the liberal media, as a done deal, a "peace in our time" moment, that will forever prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons.
Of course that isn't even close to true. In fact, a simple comparison of the U.S. version of the deal with the Iranian version shows two completely different deals.
tHIS IS AN astonishingly good Iran deal
When Aaron Stein was studying nuclear non-proliferation at Middlebury University's Monterey graduate program, the students would sometimes construct what they thought would be the best possible nuclear inspection and monitoring regimes.
Years later, Stein is now a Middle East and nuclear proliferation expert with the Royal United Services Institute. And he says that the Iran nuclear framework agreement, announced on Thursday, look an awful lot like those ideal hypotheticals he'd put together in grad school.
Years later, Stein is now a Middle East and nuclear proliferation expert with the Royal United Services Institute. And he says that the Iran nuclear framework agreement, announced on Thursday, look an awful lot like those ideal hypotheticals he'd put together in grad school.
NETANYAHU BLASTS IRAN NUCLEAR DEAL
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu denounced the agreement between Tehran and world powers as a "bad deal," as Barack Obama affirmed his support for long-time ally Israel despite differences over the nuclear accord.
An outline deal agreed in Switzerland on Thursday paves the way for Tehran to curtail its nuclear activity in exchange for relief from punishing economic sanctions.
An outline deal agreed in Switzerland on Thursday paves the way for Tehran to curtail its nuclear activity in exchange for relief from punishing economic sanctions.