Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124

Senior Iranian officials are threatening to increase the country’s nuclear program because Trump’s administration is a possible strike against the regime if Tehran does not come to the table for negotiations.
“The president should be a regime sweat, clean and simple,” said Behnam Ben Talebla, an Iranian expert and an older colleague from the Democracy Defense Foundation, for Fox News Digital.
“This can be achieved by strict implementation of maximum pressure sanctions and targeted campaign against regime in the region – Yemen is now a good example. Washington will also need to add a critical third element to its otherwise economic and military pressure. The maximum support for the Iranian people.”

Iranian military truck bears the rockets of the surface and the air portrait of the Iranian supreme leader of Ayatolah Ali Khamenei during the parade on the occasion of the Army Day in the country, April 18, 2018 in Tehran, Iran. (Atta Kenare/AFP via Getty Images)
Lisa Daftari, an expert in the Middle East and an editor -in -chief on a foreign table, told Fox News Digital that although diplomacy often requires negotiations, expanding any offer of the Iranian regime, even symbolically, risking the Legitimization of the Government that has terrorized its own people for decades and financed Proxy as Hamas, Houthis and Hezbollah.
“This regime succeeds in defiance, not dialogue. That has not changed. More than four decades Mullah have understood only one language: a mobile,” said the Daftari.
President Donald Trump told the Air Force reporters on Thursday that it would be better if there were direct conversations with Iran.
“I think it goes faster and you can understand the other side a lot better than you go through the mediators,” Trump said. “They wanted to use intermediaries. I don’t think it’s necessary to be true anymore. I think they’re worried. I think they feel vulnerable and I don’t want them to feel that way.”
Trump too threatening to bombard Iran and impose secondary sanctions on the Iranian oil if he did not reach the negotiating table for his nuclear program. Although the president said he preferred to make an agreement, Trump did not rule out the military option.

Iranians protest the death of 22-year-old Mahs Amin after being detained by moral police, in Tehran, Iran, September 20, 2022. (AP Photo/Middle East of Pictures, File)
“This will bombard the similarities they have never seen before,” President Trump told NBC News last weekend.
The United States has expanded their efforts to distract in the region, arranging additional squadron of fighter jets, bombers and drones to strengthen the air defense capabilities. Now they are also sending USS Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group in the region to join the USS Harry S. Truman, who was in the Middle East to fight Houth’s in Yemen.
The Iranian supreme leader, but Khamenei, replied with his threats and said that Iran would answer “decisively and immediately” on any threat that American Iran has issued an idea of indirect conversations, which is supposedly considering administration.
Waltz tells Iran to give up a nuclear program or ‘there will be consequences’

The military truck carries a rocket next to the portrait of the Iranian supreme leader of Ayatolah but Khamenei during the annual military parade. (Atta Kenare / AFP / Gettyimages)
Taleblu said: “Tehran is a counterer of indirect conversations by the way of rejecting Trump, while the door leaves open to conversations that can be used as a shield from a potential preventative attack.”
The President sent a letter to Khamenei, expressing interest in achieving a nuclear issue agreement. While increasing its military presence in the region, reports show that Trump’s administration considers indirect conversations with Iran to suppress the spread of its nuclear program And avoid direct interface.
Experts and observers of the region warn that Iran has used negotiating as a delay tactic in the past and warn Trump’s administration not to go into conversations that could further strengthen Iran.
“Trump’s administration should impose full pressure on the regime in Iran considering how weak the regime has become in the last few years. The indirect talks are the strategy of the time of buying time, so it can live for a fight for another day,” said Alreza Nader, an independent analyst in Washington, DC, and Iran’s expert.
Nader’s recommendation to Trump is to support the people of Iran and claims that the regime is much weaker than it seems.
“President Trump really wants an agreement. Iran has the opportunity to return and negotiate here, retain his civil nuclear program, but achieve a concession on his size and duration of the agreement,” said Alex Vatanka, a senior associate at the Middle East Institute, for Fox News Digital.
“Trump is in a dominant position. The Republicans are scared of him in Congress. Nothing can stop him – at least for now. But the power is covered. The longer it is in the White House, the more vulnerable it could. Iran should not wait,” Vatanka added.

Houthi Yahya Sarem spokesman participates in a conference held by protesters, mostly Houthhi fans, to show support for the Lebanese Hezbollah and Palestinians in the Gaza belt, in Sani, Yemen, November 2, 2024. (Reuters/Khaled Abdullah)
In an interview with Mark Dubowitz from the Democracy Defense Foundation, “Iranian breakdown, “ Former Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid said that in the end, Israel would attack the Iranian nuclear plant, with or without the United States, because there is no choice, according to Lapid.
But Larian, the Advisor of the Supreme Leader, said in an interview that, although Iran does not seek nuclear weapons, Tehran will not have other choices but to build a nuclear weapon if the US or Israel hits Iran.
AND International Atomic Energy Agency He reported in February that Iran had accelerated his nuclear program and enriched the uranus near the level of weapons.
Danielle Plotka, a senior associate in foreign and defense policies at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), told Fox News Digital that additional military assets in the Middle East were sound policy with regard to the threats that the US and his allies face in the region.
The question is, what does Trump’s administration ask for?
“The agreement in which the Iranians do not fully get rid of their nuclear weapon program? If so, the president sets the United States for the risk that Barack Obama inflicted on our allies and himself – just delaying the Iranian nuclear program until later date,” said Fox News Digital.

Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, left, and President Donald Trump. .
Plotka said it was strange that President Trump It seems that he imagines a joint comprehensive plan of action (JCPOA) similar to an agreement, and this has encouraged a lot of criticism on the Capitol hill.
Trump originally withdrawn from the JCPO, also known as the Iranian Nuclear Agreement, during his first term in 2018 and re -applied sharp economic sanctions. The Bidana administration initially watched the re -involvement with Iran about the nuclear issue after taking over duties, but the conversations were nowhere to be complicated by Iran’s domestic policy and its role in the support of its terrorist groups in the region.
The second risk that the president runs, according to Aei Plotka, is perceived as a paper tiger.
“He threatened Hamas by bombing that he had never delivered. Now he is threatening Iran’s military action. But that really means? Or is he just blowing hot air?” she said.
Plotka said, “There is a huge uncertainty about the president’s intentions, and this uncertainty is an opportunity for the Iranians to use.”
The Vatanka Institute in the Middle East said he believes Trump may require a potential victory he can sell at home and say that he received a better deal than the President Obama from JCPO, if Iran agreed to permanently retain the level of low -level enrichment, as opposed to the date of expiration involved in JCPO.