Yes. Iran seems to have more capability (range) than some people thought and have conveniently confirmed a new minimum. Some will take that as a warning, and some as a challenge; of the latter, some will regard it as an unacceptable risk.
It might, but it would be terror bombing. That's a different context than long-range attacks on military forces and military-supporting infrastructure.
Politicians caving to terror bombing would be an interesting lesson.
Yes. Iran gets its money, and a slight bit of economic pressure is relieved. Both sides get something. The Iranian government of course has to decide what mix of guns and butter is imperative for its survival at this point.
It's not the first unusual trade-off. Ukraine kept pipelines open...
Precision missiles, or launch-and-hope-it-hits-something-in-the-area? HE warhead, or nuclear or chemical?
If there's no precision, and it's basically a large package of explosives, it's not much more than WW II V1/V2. Lips aren't going to start quivering for that.
"He was always there" may be true, but evidently "he" was one of two or more personalities on exhibit. The other gotcha-finding one dominated up until very, very recently. If he isn't self-disciplined enough to completely keep that one in check, the media that don't like conservatives will be...
Technically there may be no veto. (Whenever consent is a condition, there is a veto.) Practically, the way the politics work there is in many cases effectively a veto.
It's a strange way to set down the laws. People can face reasonably foreseeable risks, but have to in effect respond only spontaneously with whatever is at hand.
I enjoyed Eby's framing when presented with the issue. Apparently it was a choice between supporting health care, or satisfying bond rating agencies. Not a peep about all their other spending choices that have been squeezing out health care spending. The newscast would have been more amusing...
At the extremes, yes, but it depends on the capacities of the competing economies.
Unfortunately for the Iranians, it isn't just a drone tennis match in which they serve and the US and Israel respond. There are munitions flowing the other way and the "broken window" costs are going to be immense.
Everyone on the planet leaks whatever they can to push back against Trump, and people are asking why more of them aren't allowed into the discussions...
Which at some point raises the question of whether any "war crimes" are committed. Does anyone care? The topic should at least rate a mention, but some of what pundits are producing just seems to take for granted that it's no big deal if Iran escalates any way it pleases.
One possible change of trajectory for Iran is that a military dictatorship replaces, finally, the nominally religious one, overtly casting aside the trappings of theocracy. The mullahs may be abstemious religious scholars intent on preparing/purifying themselves for the afterlife, but almost...
There was something a while back I read that indicated they have already prepared themselves for funding to end. Intel might hurt, if it happened.
I continue to suppose that Israel already assumes "no support" from any future Democratic administration and is preparing/prepared for that.
Already did. Barack Obama. Gave Israel generally cold shoulder; made nice with Israel's top regional enemy (Iran); declined to veto UNSCR 2334. That surely indicates less than "thinks much of Israel".
Everyone who has ever had an interest in receiving oil from that region has had a hand in propping up the governments in the name of stability. Right this moment people are, in effect, arguing to prop up Iran (by arguing against taking it down) in the name of stability.
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