How the Iran war could drive conflicts in countries thousands of miles away

AI Summary
The Trump administration repeatedly asserts that a US-Iran nuclear agreement is very close, with President Trump and Vice President Pence stating a deal could be finalized within days or before November elections. The diplomatic push centers on Iranian nuclear disarmament, though ongoing military tensions—including recent US strikes on Iran and Israeli attacks Trump had advised against—complicate negotiations.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets highlight the disconnect between Trump's optimistic deal forecasts and concurrent US-Iran military strikes, emphasizing the fragility of any agreement and skepticism about near-term success.
Moderate: Centrist outlets report Trump's deal claims while noting broader setbacks to his administration's foreign policy objectives, economic challenges, and declining public support.
Conservative: Conservative-leaning outlets present Trump's diplomacy as a credible effort to prevent military escalation and achieve a significant nuclear agreement offering strategic and economic benefits, framing a deal as achievable before the November elections.
Comoros, an island nation of less than a million people, more than 3,000 miles away from Iran, might not seem to have much at stake, politically, from the current conflict in the Middle East.
Donald Trump has never publicly mentioned it.
It is neither an ally nor a target of the Iranian regime.
But as […] ...