Can the U.S. and Iran reach a nuclear deal to avert a war?
CBSN
With President Trump's threat to attack Iran looming over the discussions, American and Iranian negotiators sat down again in Switzerland Thursday, separately, for another round of talks brokered by Oman, focusing on the Islamic Republic's nuclear program. In:
With President Trump's threat to attack Iran looming over the discussions, American and Iranian negotiators sat down again in Switzerland Thursday, separately, for another round of talks brokered by Oman, focusing on the Islamic Republic's nuclear program.
Iran says it does not have and will not build a nuclear weapon, and Mr. Trump has said he will not allow Tehran to acquire one — a position he shares with his recent predecessors Barack Obama and Joe Biden.
The Obama administration spent months negotiating an international deal to constrain and monitor Iran's nuclear enrichment program. But during his first term, Mr. Trump attacked the pact as "horrible" and pulled the U.S. out. Since returning to the White House, Mr. Trump has threatened to strike Iran if it doesn't make a new deal to curb its nuclear activities.
Despite warnings from many nations in the Middle East and elsewhere, including Iran, that any U.S. strike could spark a major international conflict, Mr. Trump has ordered the biggest American military buildup in the Middle East in decades, pressuring Tehran to make the deal he wants.
Mr. Trump has given no indication about whether he's decided to use force as the talks continue, so CBS News asked people with deep knowledge of Iran and the country's hardline Islamic rulers to try to gauge the prospects of an agreement emerging from the talks to avert a war.

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