Donald Trump to make final decision ‘within the next two weeks' on US taking military action against Iran
President Trump said Thursday he would make his final decision on whether to strike Iran in the 'next two weeks,' because he's still hoping for negotiations
'Based on the fact that there's a substantial chance of negotiations that may or may not take place with Iran in the near future, I will make my decision whether or not to go within the next two weeks,' White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters, reading a statement directly from Trump during her daily briefing.
The press secretary stressed that Iran currently has the capability of creating a nuclear weapon — and could do so with the directive of their Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
'Iran has all that it needs to keep a nuclear weapon,' Leavitt said. 'All they need is a decision from the Supreme leader to do that.'
Trump said Wednesday that the Iranians were looking to go to the White House to talk to him directly — but noted that may be difficult given they would have to travel from Tehran, which is being pummeled by targeted strikes from Israel.
'If there's a chance for diplomacy, he's not afraid to grab it,' Leavitt said.
Talks are set to happen between Europe and Iran on Friday, with Iran's Foreign Minister Araghchi meeting his UK, French, German, and EU counterparts in Geneva, Switzerland, but none have been scheduled yet in Washington.
Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff, who has been in charge of negotiations with Iran, is not set to attend the talks, Leavitt said.
The deal would mean Iran agreeing to no more uranium enrichment.
Trump has said he told Iran to make that deal back in April, giving them a 60-day window, but they refused, leading to Israeli strikes on key nuclear sites and the killing of top Iranian military officials.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has asked Trump to involve the US military to eliminate Iran's remaining storage of uranium, has warned that negotiating with Iran will lead nowhere, as it has in the past.
Whether the president 'wants to join or not — that's entirely his decision,' Netanyahu told the Hebrew-language public broadcaster Kan News.
The Israeli PM also revealed that the IDF has 'the capability' to take out two remaining nuclear facilities without the US if necessary.
'We will achieve all our objectives and hit all of their nuclear facilities,' Netanyahu added.
In the end, Trump will look to achieve Iran not having a nuclear weapon through diplomacy, but is still open to strikes, Leavitt said.
'I think the president has made it clear he always wants to pursue diplomacy. But believe me, the president is unafraid to use strength if necessary.'
Israel has asked for US involvement particularly to use its bunker-busting bombs on the Fordow nuclear facility hidden deep in an Iranian mountain.
Trump has said he's considering it — but that his final choice will come 'seconds' before he acts.
Originally published as Donald Trump to make final decision 'within the next two weeks' on US taking military action against Iran

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Deal-making? Decisive? Dithering? Or just momentarily deferred? Everyone will take their pick trying to determine why Donald Trump has bought himself time to make the most consequential decision a US president can make — whether to plunge his forces into another foreign conflict of unknown risk and uncertain duration. As ever with Trump pronouncements, there's a little something in this for everyone. "Within the next two weeks" is a timeline vague enough to simultaneously exasperate the Netanyahu government, confound the Iranian leadership, delight nervous allies and bewilder financial markets. On the domestic front, it could prolong the civil skirmish among Republican MAGA (Make America Great Again) forces over whether armed conflict passes as a form of American "greatness" or not these days. Why the US president settled on a timeline of an ill-defined decision-making period of anywhere between one and 14 days is anyone's guess. Make no mistake, leaders and officials in almost every government, not to mention military and foreign policy analysts the world over, are feverishly making their best guesses right now. So here are a few entries to guide this global guessing game. Trump is taking strategic and tactical ambiguity to a new level and has been for days. Earlier this week on the South Lawn of the White House, we probably got the most revealing insight into his mindset when asked by reporters about direct US military involvement in the Israel-Iran conflict. In any event, he scoffed at publicly telegraphing any decision he may make on bombing missions in Iran so that the world's media could "be there and watch". The obvious conclusion is that advance notice would not be given. This, at least, would be consistent with the approach taken by most commanders in chief — think George W. Bush in Iraq, Obama on killing Osama bin Laden, or more recently, Biden's authorised strikes on Houthi rebels in Yemen. Taking the current president at his word, we're not likely to know until after US forces have fired any shots. If they never do, we may be left to deduce ourselves whether this was the result of an active decision Trump took, or a passive one that passed with the moment into the mists of time. The White House has offered very limited reasoning on the significance of the time allocated for extra presidential musing. The clearest explanation for settling on it was offered was by press secretary Karoline Leavitt, who's suggested two weeks is the difference between an latent nuclear weapon program and an active one. "Iran has all that it needs to achieve a nuclear weapon. All they need is a decision from the supreme leader to do that," she said. "And it would take a couple of weeks to complete the production of that weapon, which would of course pose an existential threat, not just to Israel, but to the United States, and to the entire world." A US deferral carries with it no apparent obligations on Israel or Iran to cease their missile assaults on one other. It does allow time for diplomacy to do its work. According to the Reuters news agency, that work's been quietly going on in the background throughout the week since Israel launched Operation Rising Lion with its attacks on Iran. Quoting diplomatic sources, Reuters has reported that Trump's special envoy, Steve Witkoff, and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi"have spoken several times by phone" during the week. Separately, Secretary of State Marco Rubio is hitting the phones to counterparts from Canberra to Paris, trying to build consensus around a campaign of maximum pressure on the Iranians. Through another channel, the so-called "E3" group of European foreign ministers from Germany, France and the UK are holding their own in-person talks with Araghchi in Geneva to explore a possible nuclear deal. 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They're pitched against more hawkish pro-Israeli Republican figures including Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Texas senator Ted Cruz. Perhaps unintentionally, Cruz exposed the size of the rift within the MAGA clan in a combative on-camera interview with Carlson, revealing that for all his swagger, the Texan knew dangerously little about the foe he would have bombed into nuclear submission — unable to place any figure on simple facts including Iran's population. The internal MAGA fight might cause Trump some political discomfort at home, but he's just guaranteed the combatants can slug it out for a couple more weeks, or longer, until he makes a final decision.