Greg Myre
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Is it going to maintain really hard positions on closing the Strait of Hormuz, maintaining its right to enrich uranium, hanging on to the uranium it has?
So we don't quite know how this Iranian government will negotiate, and we're getting very limited information out of Iran.
So that's the thing I'm really going to be checking.
I think that's a real wild card over the next two weeks.
I'm going to be looking to see what lawmakers do, especially Republican lawmakers.
Are they going to start questioning Iran?
the administration and asking more specific questions.
I'm also very curious to hear from Marco Rubio, the Secretary of State, who is often seen as giving kind of a more measured response and a description of what actually happened.
He's been very quiet.
I'm Frank Ordonez.
I cover the White House.
And I'm Greg Myrie.
Yeah, that they're far apart.
And I think that's the only realistic thing you can say right now.
I think Trump has hit a point where he feels he's going to have to consider negotiations that the current plan on the battlefield, another day or two or three of bombing is not going to make Iran capitulate.
So it is significant that Trump is talking about negotiations.
But Iran...
may have time on its side now.
It sees the Strait of Hormuz closed, and it is in no hurry to bring an end to the war if it doesn't get some of the things that it wants.
And one of those is a guarantee that the United States will not wage war again against it and try to topple the regime.