The Future of the US-Iran Relationship
2/8/202643 min
After the indirect talks held between the US & Iran in Oman on Friday, Fareed talks through the potential prospects of those talks with Wendy Sherman, a former Obama administration official and a lead negotiator on the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, and Financial Times journalist Kim Ghattas.
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Clips
Transcript preview
First 90 secondsSpeaker 00:00
What is it about Australia that just hits different?
Claire Duffy0:03
Australia is where we shared our first kiss.
Speaker 20:05
Where we fell in love. That was eighteen years ago now.
Speaker 00:09
And this is what? Your fourth trip back?
Speaker 20:11
Australia has this incredible way of drawing you back.
Claire Duffy0:14
The ocean, the people, the oysters.
Speaker 20:17
[laughing] So good.
Claire Duffy0:18
So briny and [laughing] delicious, and the possibility of exploring something new.
Speaker 00:23
Learn more about Zach and Laura's journey at australia.com, and start planning the vacation of a lifetime.
Fareed Zakaria· Host0:30
[upbeat music] This is GPS, the Global Public Square. Welcome to all of you in the United States and around the world. I'm Fareed Zakaria, coming to you live from New York. [upbeat music] Today on the program, after Friday's talks between the US and Iran, is a new nuclear deal possible? I'll talk to Wendy Sherman, who led the US side of the negotiations that led to the last deal with Iran, plus the journalist Kim Ghattas. Then, Tuesday will mark four months since the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas began, but all is not quiet on that Middle Eastern front. [bomb exploding] More than five hundred Gazans have been killed in that time, including at least twenty-four on Wednesday alone, and a true peace seems very far away. I'll talk to former CNN correspondent, Arwa Damon, about the state