The obstacle to the peaceful resolution of Iran's nuclear program is not in Washington, but in Tehran.
If no serious response is forthcoming by then, the United States and the other countries would have every right to turn ...
The most effective sanctions against Iran, in my view, would be those that are multilateral and not unilateral.
Russia and China are partners with the United States in the international effort to convince Iran to join negotiations o...
The United States is now in a stronger position to argue convincingly for a more tough-minded international approach to ...
By supporting the international offer for negotiations, the Obama Administration is building credibility with countries ...
U.S. policy, in short, should be to increase pressure on the Iranian government at a time when it finds itself an intern...
As many Congressional leaders have stated, we must negotiate with Iran from a position of strength.
Now is therefore not the time, in my judgment, for the United States to consider a military approach to this dilemma.
They should make a much greater effort to join in the international pressure on Iran to give up its nuclear ambitions.
I continue to believe that President Obama was correct to not inject the United States into the middle of the Iranian do...
Our bipartisan coalition sends an unambiguous message of unity, strength, and resolve to Iran and the rest of the world.
I believe his instincts have been right in positioning the United States to regain the upper hand with Iran in the inter...
The courageous people of Iran deserve our support.
My best judgment is that, even if negotiations are held this autumn, they will fail due to the predictably unreasonable ...
Should negotiations fail, stronger sanctions, not war, are the next logical step.
We will not be well served if we allow the debate in our own country to be reduced to 'negotiation or war' with Iran.
The Iranian government has been weakened by the national and international furor over its dishonest handling of the elec...