Iran war live: US vows to defend Gulf interests; Israel kills 2 in Lebanon
ONP Summary
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio began a diplomatic tour of Gulf states starting in Abu Dhabi, with planned stops in Kuwait and Bahrain, to address concerns from longtime American allies about a recently concluded peace agreement with Iran. The agreement, which features a $300 billion fund and was reached to end a four-month conflict, has raised worries among Gulf leaders who fear the deal gives excessive concessions to Tehran while leaving unaddressed the threats posed by Iranian missiles and proxy militias. Rubio's visit seeks to reassure these nations, which sustained direct Iranian missile attacks during the recent Middle East war.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets tend to present the diplomatic effort more straightforwardly, with some including Iran's counterarguments to the agreement, and focus on the U.S. commitment to regional security without dwelling heavily on skepticism about the deal's terms.
Moderate: Centrist outlets frame the visit as a 'delicate' or challenging diplomatic mission, using the term 'charm offensive' to describe Rubio's approach, while some raise questions about whether the State Department has the institutional capacity to successfully advance the administration's foreign policy objectives.
Conservative: Conservative-leaning outlets emphasize the legitimacy and extent of Gulf allies' concerns, focusing on the perception that the agreement is excessively favorable to Iran and fails to adequately address regional security threats, presenting Rubio's diplomatic task as difficult precisely because the deal merits skepticism.
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Rubio promises to protect Gulf interests in talks with Iran, as Israel says it will not withdraw from southern Lebanon. ...