Biden’s Administration Admits 'Failure of Diplomacy' with Iran

US President Joe Biden. AFP
US President Joe Biden. AFP
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Biden’s Administration Admits 'Failure of Diplomacy' with Iran

US President Joe Biden. AFP
US President Joe Biden. AFP

The Biden administration acknowledges that the nuclear deal with Iran may not happen, despite its constant communication with Tehran.

According to Foreign Policy magazine, the Biden administration plans to blame former US President Donald Trump, whose withdrawal from the nuclear deal supposedly provided Iran with an excuse to boost its nuclear weapons capabilities. But the uncomfortable truth is that Iran's most aggressive moves came after the election of US President Joe Biden, which is moving Tehran forward not because of Trump's maximum pressure campaign, but because of Biden's decision to reduce that pressure.

Early in December, the administration acknowledged that it was discussing alternatives "if the path to diplomacy toward a mutual return to compliance with the 2015 nuclear deal is not viable in the near term." A US State Department spokesperson made the comment while Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz was visiting Washington to propose joint military exercises to prepare for possible attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities. The need for such consultations indicates that a deal is out of reach.

Earlier this month, an unnamed senior US official warned that “in the first quarter of 2022, Tehran could make things happen and quickly get one bomb.” In other words, Iran took advantage of the protracted negotiations in Vienna to move toward a nuclear breakthrough.

Washington's European allies also know that the talks are headed for failure. However, admitting failure and taking responsibility are two very different things. Biden will have to realize that it was his own decisions, not those of Trump, that got the United States to this point.

According to the report, Biden encouraged Tehran's march towards the bomb by refusing to impose any sanctions on the Tehran regime because of its provocations.

Even if the censure is discussed at the next regular meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency in March, the outcome will not be fortuitous. The US management will have to go through a lot of diplomacy in effect needed to secure the board approval.

The report concluded that Tehran's accumulation of knowledge about the development of nuclear weapons would irreparably damage the global nonproliferation regime and lead to a more dangerous world. If Biden hopes to stop Iran, he will have to realize that it was his own decisions, not the decisions of anyone else, that got the United States to this point, the report said.



Russian Drone Attacks Kill Three in Northeast Ukraine

23 June 2025, Ukraine, Kyiv: Rescue workers move a dead body from a destroyed residential building following a Russian air strike. Photo: Aleksandr Gusev/SOPA Images via ZUMA Press Wire/dpa
23 June 2025, Ukraine, Kyiv: Rescue workers move a dead body from a destroyed residential building following a Russian air strike. Photo: Aleksandr Gusev/SOPA Images via ZUMA Press Wire/dpa
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Russian Drone Attacks Kill Three in Northeast Ukraine

23 June 2025, Ukraine, Kyiv: Rescue workers move a dead body from a destroyed residential building following a Russian air strike. Photo: Aleksandr Gusev/SOPA Images via ZUMA Press Wire/dpa
23 June 2025, Ukraine, Kyiv: Rescue workers move a dead body from a destroyed residential building following a Russian air strike. Photo: Aleksandr Gusev/SOPA Images via ZUMA Press Wire/dpa

Russian drone attacks killed three people in Ukraine's northeastern region of Sumy, including a child, local authorities said on Tuesday.

It came a day after Ukraine said Russia carried out dozens of drone and missile strikes on its territory, killing 10 people in the capital Kyiv.

Diplomatic efforts to end the three-year war have stalled, with the last direct meeting between Kyiv and Moscow almost three weeks ago and no follow-up talks scheduled, said AFP.

"We have information about three dead. Among them is an eight-year-old boy," said Oleg Grygorov, head of the Sumy region's military administration.

The boy's body was pulled from the rubble of a destroyed house, he added.

"The strike took the lives of people from different families. They all lived on the same street. They went to sleep in their homes but the Russian drones interrupted their sleep -- forever."

Russian drone strikes also left five people wounded in Kharkiv, as well as four others in the Dnipropetrovsk region, authorities said on Telegram.

Drone attack on Moscow

Russia said a drone had targeted a residential building in Moscow overnight, wounding two people, including a pregnant woman.

"About 100 people were evacuated from the building, including 30 children," according to the region's governor, Andrei Vorobyov, who added that two more drones were shot down.

Russia had fired dozens of drones and missiles at Ukraine a day earlier, ripping open a housing block in Kyiv, killing 10 civilians and burying others beneath the rubble.

Separate Russian attacks on Monday in the southern Odesa region left two people dead and another dozen wounded, local authorities said.

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky said a school was hit.

"Sadly, some people may still be trapped under the rubble," he added.

Zelensky met British Prime Minister Keir Starmer during a surprise visit to London on Monday.

Zelensky is due to attend a two-day NATO summit in The Hague starting on Tuesday.

Russia occupies around a fifth of Ukraine and claims to have annexed four Ukrainian regions as its own since launching its invasion in 2022 -- in addition to Crimea, which it captured in 2014.

Kyiv has accused Moscow of deliberately sabotaging a peace deal in order to prolong its full-scale offensive and to seize more territory.