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Thinking back to his days as secretary of state, Mr. Shultz is quoted saying: "The world was not ready for a world free of nuclear weapons." It still isn't.
John Boehner and Nancy Pelosi should step in before this Waters embarrassment gets worse and hits a House that is already at a nadir in terms of public approval.
If President Obama does not act quickly and unilaterally to stop Iran's nuclear weapons program, he will be left with a stark choice to either launch a military strike or allow Iran to get the bomb.
President Obama may believe that disarmament is a formula for peace, but in the Middle East--and especially Iran--policymakers see such unilateral concessions as encouragement to war.
L. Douglas Keeney's "15 Minutes" offers a very different picture of what was going on in those early days of the Cold War.
There are few good options available to roll back Iran's nuclear weapons program. Nonetheless, after a year of false starts, the Obama administration should be pressed to find a new way forward.
Rather than gear strategy to prevent the Islamic Republic's nuclear advancement, the Obama administration appears instead to acquiesce to contain or deter and Iranian bomb.
Augmenting sanctions could still help deter Iran from pursuing a nuclear weapon, says Michael Rubin. But force shouldn't be ruled out.




