As IAEA reports show Iran's nuclear efforts advancing, the US and its allies have few viable options to respond.
Now is the time to crack down on nuclear violations, precisely now that Iran has shown all of its cards.
Report: Iran not pursuing a weapons program at this time, has the capacity to produce enough fissile material for a nuclear bomb in less than two weeks.
It would seem that the West and the Islamic Republic are creeping toward a variety of informal understandings resembling a new nuclear deal.
"We have always wanted a return of all parties to full compliance with the 2015 nuclear deal," the country's Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian told reporters.
"[The deal] does not end Iran's nuclear program and will only help to fund Iranian terror proxies," Israel's PMO said on Saturday.
US congressman Steny Hoyer shares concern with “Israeli officials across the spectrum" about the potential Saudi nuclear program turning military.
The nuclear and Middle East regional elements of the understanding seem to be holding, even as the Russia-Iran part may never have been nailed down.
“Rumors about a nuclear deal, interim or otherwise, are false and misleading,” State Department spokesman Matthew Miller told journalists in June.
Western states have been hesitant to discuss sanctions, while Washington and Tehran held indirect talks for an informal agreement that would have Iran freeze its nuclear program.