"The Obama administration's Iran policy is in free fall and bordering on implosion," says Flynt Leverett, a fellow at the New America Foundation and a member of President George W. Bush's National Security Council. ... Original Article
In a series of opinion pieces and public speeches, Hillary and Flynt Leverett, who have served as Middle East analysts for the CIA, National Security ...
Flynt Leverett, director of the Iran project at the New America Foundation and a professor of international affairs at Pennsylvania State University, ...
Turkey's prime
minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, was expected to come to the White House
on Thursday for a meeting with President Barack Obama. Erdogan's visit
has now been postponed, and the decision to postpone comes on the heels
of the Turkish leader's high-profile visit to Iran this week.
Former Bush National Security Council officials Flynt Leverett and Hilary Mann Leverett wrote recently in the New York Times of their conversations with ...
"I think the Iranians are simply in no mood to accept any serious limits on the expansion of their program," said Flynt Leverett, director of the Iran Project at the New America Foundation ...
... they got nothing for that and they're not going to do that again,” said Flynt Leverett, an Iran expert with the New America Foundation. ...
“I think the Iranians are simply in no mood to accept any serious limits on the expansion of their program,” said Flynt Leverett, director of the Iran ...
“In a strategic sense, I don’t think Iran is in a fundamentally
different place than it was before elections, not in the way it
approaches negotiations or the way it looks at its foreign policy,”
said Flynt Leverett, director of the Iran project at the New America Foundation and a professor of international affairs at Pennsylvania State University. ...
Tehran threw
President Barack Obama a badly needed "lifeline" for his Iran policy at
last week's nuclear discussions in Geneva: It promised U.N. access to a
recently declared nuclear site and committed "in principle" to ship
low-enriched uranium, or LEU, abroad to make fuel rods for producing
medical isotopes. If Geneva had been a "bust," Obama would have been
committed to mustering international endorsement for what his secretary
of state calls "crippling" sanctions against Iran -- even though no