As global tensions over Iran’s nuclear program escalate, Tehran and the West have reached a standoff. To revive negotiations, a clear understanding of the key factors influencing Iran’s stance is paramount.
Carnegie’s James Acton and Shahram Chubin discussed Iranian nuclear policy from both the political and technical perspective, including the effects of the Iran-Iraq War on Tehran’s current behavior. Jessica Mathews, president of the Carnegie Endowment, moderated.
Acton, Chubin and Mathews led a discussion with participants to address potential challenges, outcomes, and timelines associated with negotiating the Iranian nuclear issue.
No one is fully knowledgeable about the state of the Syrian economy, how exactly it has been affected by the events taking place in the country, or how to interpret the choice economic indicators issued by Syrian officials.
The U.S. pivot to the Asia-Pacific has created both tension and opportunity in its relations with China.
The gap between the efforts to deepen integration in order to save the euro and what most people really think should happen is wider than it has ever been before.
The Russian political system is likely to undergo some changes this year, perhaps even serious ones — not because Putin wants them, but because elements of Putin's inner circle are convinced that the government must take some of the protesters' demands seriously.
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