Iran, Trump
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The two men might wish that they lived in a world where whoever dropped the most bombs got whatever he wanted. But the war has shown that this isn’t true.
At a Miami-area news conference Monday, President Trump said he expects the war in Iran to end "very soon," but also called it "the beginning of building a new country."
The president plans to give “an important update on Iran” at 9 p.m. ET.
U.S. President Donald Trump claimed that Iran’s president wants a ceasefire ahead of his speech. Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman says Trump’s remarks were “false and baseless.”
DUBAI/TEL AVIV/WASHINGTON, March 10 (Reuters) - The United States and Israel pounded Iran on Tuesday with what the Pentagon and Iranians on the ground called the most intense airstrikes of the war, despite global markets betting that President Donald Trump ...
Tucker Reals is CBSNews.com's foreign editor, based in the CBS News London bureau. He has worked for CBS News since 2006, prior to which he worked for The Associated Press in Washington, D.C., and London. Two more members of the Iranian women's soccer team ...
A week and a half into the U.S. and Israeli strikes against Iran, the latest national public opinion poll indicates that more than half of American voters oppose U.S. military action. But the survey from Quinnipiac University in Connecticut is the latest ...
WASHINGTON—Just 48 hours after President Trump had all but declared Tehran was militarily defeated and looking for a deal to end the war, Iran downed two American warplanes. Trump’s repeated declarations that the war is nearly over are colliding with the gritty battlefield reality,