The Harvard Gazette: Helping Every Student Think Deeply About Math

Usable Knowledge

Helping Every Student Think Deeply About Math

Strategies for teachers to shift focus from getting the right answers to building real mathematical understanding

Bright multicolored school supplies, stationery on a blue background

Mathematical understanding should be a goal for every student and something they feel capable of achieving. But translating that belief into classroom practice remains one of the central challenges in mathematics education.

“We really want students to sink their teeth into the math and really deeply understand it — all of our students,” says Professor Jon Star. “All students are capable of really wrestling with some fundamental deep issues and questions about mathematics.” 

The issue is not a lack of commitment among teachers, but the difficulty of making abstract mathematical ideas accessible in real time, for all learners. Star, who, in addition to his role at HGSE, teaches middle school math in a nearby K–12 school, shares a small set of practical strategies for teachers designed to deepen student understanding, shift classroom culture, and move beyond simply getting the “right answer.”

Four approaches to building deeper mathematical understanding:

  1. Ask more open-ended questions
    Rather than relying on yes-or-no or purely numerical answers, Star encourages teachers to use questions such as, “Why do you think that?” or “How do you know that’s true?” These prompts require students to explain their reasoning, make sense of mathematical ideas, and engage in shared thinking with classmates. “By asking these kinds of questions in my class, I’m trying to create a culture in my classroom where everyone is expected to do a lot of thinking, that this is a place where we think together,” Star says.
  2. Prepare extension and “back-pocket” tasks
    Teachers are urged to plan for students who finish quickly by having follow-up questions or variations ready. “It’s always going to be the case that some students are going to finish faster than other students,” Star says. Acceleration — having those students move on to the next lesson — isn’t always the best approach, he says, and instead suggests teachers think about additional ways to challenge students such as asking extension questions. These might include, “Can you solve it another way?” or “If the problem changed slightly, would your answer still be true?” The aim is to deepen thinking rather than accelerate ahead. He advises trying to enter each day’s math lesson with some ideas about extension questions and having tasks — in your back pocket — to use when a student accomplishes the daily objective.
  3. Talk less, listen more
    A key shift in classroom practice is giving students more space to explain their thinking, even when it is incorrect. By listening carefully to student reasoning and encouraging peer discussion, teachers can surface underlying misconceptions and support more meaningful mathematical conversations. “I’m trying to get students to engage in mathematical conversations where they can share their thinking and they can listen to each other, they can challenge each other, they can share their thinking,” he says, noting that this is a key way to develop mathematical understanding.
  4. Encourage multiple problem-solving strategies
    Students benefit from seeing that there are often many ways to solve the same problem. Discussing different approaches — and comparing their strengths, limitations, and underlying logic — helps students move beyond superficial knowledge to genuine deep understanding. Star notes that this also challenges the idea that the only thing that matters is getting the right answer. “Math problems can always be solved in a lot of different ways,” he says. “And I have found in my work and in my teaching that students benefit from the opportunity to produce and discuss the different ways that a problem can be solved. …Too often teachers implicitly or explicitly communicate to their students that the most important thing is you get the right answer.”
     
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Chay Bowes on X: Here’s 15 of the real reasons the United States and UK orchestrated the downfall, and killing of one of Africa’s greatest visionaries and leaders. Comment: Lifelong learning has become essential for the people in Ireland because the geopolitics of the Middle East (oil, helium, fertilizers, and so much more) are threatening a most frugal lifestyle going forward.

Here’s 15 of the real reasons the United States and UK orchestrated the downfall, and killing of one of Africa’s greatest visionaries and leaders

1. Libya had no electricity bills, electricity came free of charge to all citizens.

2. There were no interest rates on loans, the banks were state-owned, the loan of citizens by law 0%.

3. Gaddafi promised not to buy a house for his parents until everyone in Libya owns a home.

4. All newlywed couples in Libya received 60,000 dinars from the government & because of that they bought their own apartments & started their families.

5. Education & medical treatment in Libya are free. Before Gaddafi there were only 25% readers, 83% during his reign

6. If Libyans wanted to live on a farm, they received free household appliances, seeds and livestock.

7. If they cannot receive treatment in Libya, the state would fund them $2300+ accommodation & travel for treatment abroad.

8. If you bought a car, the government finances 50% of the price.

9. The price of gasoline became $ 0.14 per liter.

10. Libya had no external debt, and reserves were $150 Billion (now frozen worldwide)

11. Since some Libyans couldn’t find jobs after school, the government paid the average salary when they couldn’t find a job.

12. Part of oil sales in Libya was paid directly to the bank accounts of all citizens.

13. Any mother who gave birth to a child received $5000 14. 40 loaves of bread cost $0.15.

15. Gaddafi implemented the world’s biggest irrigation project known as the “BIG MAN PROJECT” to ensure water availability in the desert.

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X Chay Bowes: The Irish Government is calling protesters against massive fuel taxes, which are crippling farmers truckers, and ordinary citizens lives lives “Sabotuers”

The Irish Government is calling protesters against massive fuel taxes, which are crippling farmers truckers, and ordinary citizens lives lives “Sabotuers”

Well, here’s the real Sabotage- 60% of whats extorted from hard pressed Irish taxpayers for fuel,

Is state taxes.

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Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists: ….Iran’s potential secret … chemical and biological weapons programs

What should be done about Iran’s potential secret chemical and biological weapons programs?

By Christina McAllisterRichard T. Cupitt | Opinion | April 2, 2026

Tehran.Tehran during US-Israeli airstrikes last month. Credit: Avash Media via Wikimedia Commons. CC BY 4.0.Share

Ahead of a televised address Wednesday, critics wanted US President Donald Trump to lay out a clear roadmap for ending the now month-long war in Iran and clarify the objectives for having started it. Denying that his goal was ever regime change, Trump emphasized in his speech the objective of preventing Iran from possessing a nuclear weapon. However, the future course of the conflict remains nearly as murky on Thursday as it was the previous day, as does the future of Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium. That’s also true of the status of possible secret chemical and biological weapons programs that appear to have received scant attention during recent events—despite years of US and likeminded-partner country concerns and sanctions.

After reportedly considering a ground-invasion to retrieve Iran’s highly enriched uranium, Trump said on Wednesday the country’s “nuclear dust” was inaccessibly buried under rubble and would be monitored by satellite (notably, the same status it was left in after last summer’s US-Israeli attacks, before this latest war). That may not reassure observers who fear that now Iran—its regime under severe stress, but expected to hold on to power—has more of an incentive to cross the nuclear weapons “threshold.” And as daunting a challenge as this stockpile of nuclear material is, it may not be the only unconventional weapons threat lurking in Iran. Indeed, Iran has acknowledged developing chemical weapons capabilities in the past. Its substantial biotechnology, pharmaceutical, and chemical industry, array of dual-use facilities, and cohort of scientists with relevant expertise and skills have long fueled concerns that it may not have given up on chemical weapons ambitions and that it may also have a latent biological weapons capability.

The United States, Israel, and other countries have remained suspicious. They continue to monitor Iran’s interest in dual-use chemicals, biological material, and equipment that could be used for development of offensive weapons capability and have designated numerous Iranian and other nationality individuals and entities has having violated nonproliferation and other sanctions.

While the situation is fluid, and with Trump sending ambiguous signals over the conflict’s endgame, it would be prudent to take stock of what is known and not known about the types and locations of dual-use chemical and biological materials of concern that may be present in Iran. Only then can policymakers make considered decisions about the relative benefits and costs of seeking them out or waiting for a good opportunity to look for them—and what to do if any are ultimately discovered.

Materials of concern. Following the 8-year-long war between Iran and Iraq, during which Iraq used mustard gas, tear gas, and tabun to devastating effect, Iran admitted to having developed a limited chemical weapons capability, but claimed not to have weaponized, stockpiled, or used any chemical weapons agent.

During the war, declassified US intelligence reports assess that Iran produced, weaponized, used, and stockpiled some combination of blood, blister, and choking chemical warfare agents. These included CS, a riot control agent, mustard gas, and phosgene, as well as possibly cyanide and nitrogen mustard. When the United States invaded Iran’s one-time adversary during that war, Iraq, in 2003, US troops found classified Iraqi correspondence about Iranian CW use during the 1980s war referencing the same agents as well as the manufacture of tabun and sarin nerve agents.

Iran is a state party to the 1972 Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) and the 1997 Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC). And in 2011, the United States acknowledged that senior Iranian officials publicly renounced the development, production, acquisition, and stockpiling of any weapons of mass destruction.

Starting in 2018, however, US administrations have certified to Congress in annual reports required by law that Iran is not in compliance with its chemical weapons treaty obligations. And since 2019, a companion report has consistently expressed “serious concerns” that Iran has “not abandoned its intention to conduct research and development of biological agents and toxins for offensive purposes.”

Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, Iran sought to import a range of specific dual-use chemicals of concern, according to US Treasury sanctions reports, intelligence reports and arms control compliance reports compiled by the Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms Control; in addition to legitimate uses, the chemicals can be used in the production of nerve agents such as tabun, sarin, and VX.

RELATED:

From medicine to ambulances, how the Iran war is exposing US health care vulnerabilities 

Some potentially concerning activities were not hidden in secret reports but visible in scientific journals.

In recent years, academics aligned with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and Ministry of Defense have published studies on the pharmaceutical-based agents fentanyl, a potent synthetic opioid pain-killer, and medetomidine, a non-opioid veterinary sedative, which have both legitimate medical uses and illicit applications as potential incapacitating or lethal chemical weapons agents.

Iranian military-aligned researchers have also reported researching and synthesizing a very small amount of the Novichok class of nerve agent that Russia used to poison Russian dissident Alexei Navalny in 2020 and retired KGB agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter in Salisbury, England, in 2018. The researchers cited a purpose of helping build up the knowledge base of the Organisation for the Prevention of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), the body that administrates the Chemical Weapons Convention.

Information on Iran’s possible biological materials of concern is sparser than on concerning chemical activities.

The National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), part of an expatriate opposition group once designated by the United States as a terrorist organization but de-listed in 2012, has alleged that researchers associated with the IRGC and Ministry of Defense conducted research on plaguecholera and anthrax, highly pathogenic bacteria well known as biological weapons agents, and aflatoxin, a toxin weaponized by Iraq in the 1990s though considered of limited military utility. US compliance reports from 2019 to 2023 mention construction of a plant for pharmaceutical production of botulinum toxin, a deadly neurotoxin widely understood as a potential bioweapons agent due to its high potency at low doses. From 2019 to 2025, the US  reports refer to “open source reports” about [bioweapons]-relevant research on bioregulators conducted by universities and research centers affiliated with Iran’s military. Bioregulators are molecules produced naturally by the body such as neurotransmitters, hormones, and enzymes that regulate everything from mood to pain signals to vital functions. Biodefense researchers have highlighted the potential for misuse of these compounds as incapacitating or lethal bioweapons agents.

Locations. Should any stockpiles of chemical or biological agents or munitions exist, it is unclear where they might be stored. According to tables last published in the OPCW’s annual implementation report of 2015, Iran had fewer than 10 declared facilities handling chemicals covered by the chemical weapons treaty’s schedules 2 or 3, lists of toxic chemicals that pose varying degrees of risk to the purpose of the convention. Iran had around 100 other declarable and inspectable chemical facilities producing “discrete organic chemicals for purposes not prohibited by the Convention.” The Biological Weapons Convention has no inspection or verification regime, making it even more tricky to determine which of the universities and companies that make up Iran’s “sophisticated” biotechnology and pharmaceutical industry are of concern.

The Foundation for the Defense of Democracies (FDD), a Washington think tank, in March curated a “non-exhaustive” list of some 10 Iranian entities sanctioned by the United States and other countries for chemical weapons-related proliferation activities, some of which opposition groups allege have also engaged in bioweapons-related activities.

Notably, some facilities linked to these entities have been bombed or destroyed since the “12-day war” of 2025. Israel’s ambassador to the OPCW released a statement in July of 2025 saying the Shahid Meisami Research Complex was among this number. Analysis by independent researchers confirmed widespread damage. According to the FDD, Israel reportedly also targeted the research complex’s sponsor, the Organization of Defensive Innovation and Research (SPND). Separately, the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), an independent public policy research organization, has reported that in 2025 US and Israeli strikes hit the Imam Hossein University (IHU) in Tehran, suspected of working on Iran’s alleged chemical and biological weapons programs as well as its nuclear weapons program. Since the latest strikes started on February 28, the institute reports that the Malek Ashtar University (MUT), another site with suspected chemical and biological weapons connections, was hit and news reports indicate several explosions in Karaj, a city in western Iran where several suspected sites are located. These include the Defense Chemical Research Laboratory, a facility affiliated with co-authors of a 2022 paper on Novichoks, and Sina Industry, which the National Council of Resistance of Iran called “one of the most important biological and chemical laboratories of the Iranian regime,”  according to the Wisconsin Project’s Iran Watch.

Trump’s war on Iran: grave dangers and, at best, limited benefits

What next? Eliminating Iran’s vast complex of facilities through military means, many of which appear to have legitimate commercial, scientific, and medical purposes, might be possible through an extensive campaign. Eliminating the Iranian chemical and biological weapons knowledge reservoir, even if possible and desirable, seems likely to require radical regime change. While denying that regime change had been an objective, Trump in his Wednesday speech nonetheless argued it had been achieved—a conclusion belied by the evidence so far. Many Iranian regime leaders have been killed—only to be replaced by regime insiders, including the former supreme leader’s son. Further, regional specialists believe regime change will be exceedingly difficult given entrenched elites and power bases. Should the government manage to hold on to power, as expected, it could well decide to double down on chemical and biological weapons programs, which are easier to hide than a clandestine nuclear weapons effort. An international weapons inspection and destruction mission, such as the United Nations (UN) Special Commission deployed to Iraq following its invasion of Kuwait, seems unlikely in this case given discord on the Security Council, current US government attitudes toward the UN, and Iran’s resistance to International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors.

Nevertheless, the stresses on the Iranian government are severe and authoritarian regimes have collapsed suddenly and unexpectedly in the past, most recently in neighboring Syria. While Syria’s new government is working with the OPCW and international community to identify, declare, and eliminate remaining chemical weapons stockpiles, such sudden transitions generally raise the specter of “worst-case” proliferation scenarios where loss of control over unconventional weapons and related materials and expertise allows them to fall into the hands of non-state actors such as terrorists and criminals. The extensive scale of Iranian dual-use facilities, materials, and knowledge alone suggests that any new regime, ideally one that comes to power through a deliberate and well managed handover, will need to manage outflows of such items to prevent their acquisition by terrorists, criminal networks, and governments with nefarious interest in these capabilities. Even under the best of circumstances, such an effort requires considerable resources to devote to a steep learning and implementation curve.

To successfully address the proliferation threats posed by a country of 90 million people with large industrial and scientific complexes, global leaders in promoting and assisting in the implementation of the export control and border security requirements of international law, especially United Nations Security Council Resolution 1540 (2004), will likely need to embark on something akin to the  multi-year and multibillion-dollar cooperative threat reduction efforts sustained after the fall of the Soviet Union. In addition to eliminating dual-use biological weapons infrastructure and thousands of tons of bulk chemical agent, the Cooperative Threat Reduction Program provided civilian employment for thousands of former weapons scientists with dual-use knowledge.

Such an effort in Iran would include refocusing some facilities, setting up science programs or centers to attract those with relevant skills (and their families) to stay in Iran, establishing appropriate and effective legal and enforcement structures, and building compliance programs at an enterprise level. The international community, fortunately, does have at least one mechanism well versed in such efforts, the Group of 7 Global Partnership Against the Spread of Weapons and Materials of Mass Destruction (G7GP), a group founded in 2002 to coordinate and deliver major weapons of mass destruction threat reduction and security programming. Given existing commitments—to mitigating biological threats in Africa, countering disinformation, ensuring the complete elimination of Syria’s chemical weapons, and much more—a massive influx of resources and expansion of its programs would be required to address Iran’s legacy weapons of mass destruction programs.  But most important, a new regime will have many more immediate concerns, including establishing a new form of government, rebuilding the economy, rooting out corruption, and obtaining justice for those harmed under the old regime without enabling new atrocities. And as in those early post-Soviet years, the most important element of success will be building trust—perhaps the most difficult task of all.

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Chay Bowes on X: Dmitry Medvedev offered a pointed assessment of Iran’s leverage, writing that its true nuclear weapon is the Strait of Hormuz: “Its potential is inexhaustible.”

Chay Bowes

@BowesChay

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Mario Nawfal on X: Pentagon ALLEGEDLY threatened the Pope’s ambassador

Pentagon ALLEGEDLY threatened the Pope’s ambassador

The U.S. told Cardinal Christophe Pierre: America can do whatever it wants, and the Catholic Church better get in line.

Trying to censor the Pope? So much for the separation of church and state

Source: Letters from Leo, PressTV, The Daily Beast

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Mossad Commentary:

Mossad Commentary

@MOSSADil

🇮🇱 Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu:

“Citizens of Israel, I want to thank you, our wonderful nation. While you demonstrated resilience sitting in the secure rooms and shelters, together we achieved immense accomplishments: Our fighters at the front and you on the home front. But before all else, I wish to bow my head in memory of our loved ones who fell in this campaign. I wish to embrace the bereaved families and, on behalf of all of you, send wishes for a speedy recovery to our wounded loved ones.

My brothers and sisters, the State of Israel has achieved immense accomplishments, achievements that until recently seemed completely imaginary. Iran is weaker than ever, and Israel is stronger than ever. This is the bottom line of this campaign, up to this moment. And I wish to clarify: We still have goals to complete, and we will achieve them either by agreement or by the resumption of fighting. We are prepared to return to combat at any necessary moment. Our finger is on the trigger.

As you know, a two-week temporary ceasefire between the United States and Iran went into effect tonight, in full coordination with Israel. Now, I want to emphasize, this is not the end of the campaign. This is a way station on the way to achieving all of our goals. Iran enters negotiations battered and weaker than ever. It has committed to opening the Strait of Hormuz after waiving all of its preconditions. It waived the cancellation of sanctions, receiving reparations, a final end to the war, and also a ceasefire in Lebanon.

While Iran is weaker than ever, Israel is as strong as it has ever been. Six weeks ago, for the first time in history, we went to war shoulder-to-shoulder with my friend President

@realDonaldTrump

and our great ally, the United States. We set out on a historic operation, the largest operation the Middle East has ever known. Nothing like this has ever happened in the history of Israel. A partnership like this between Israel and the US against our greatest enemy has also never existed in Israel’s history. And yes, I can reassure those worried about the relationship between myself and President Trump. As he said: ‘You are great.’ We speak every day, and we smile when we hear these assessments. Anyone who chooses to ignore the power of this partnership is simply ignoring the truth. As US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth said today, the appreciation for Israel as an ally on the battlefield, appreciation for our heroism, courage and skill, this appreciation is soaring. President

@realDonaldTrump

, Donald my friend, I want to thank you for your leadership and your friendship. The deep friendship between us, the deep friendship between the US and Israel, is changing the face of the Middle East. We went out together to remove an existential threat from over the State of Israel and the entire free world, and we are carrying out that mission. We are carrying it out it step by step, goal after goal. If we hadn’t set out on Operation Rising Lion, and then if we hadn’t set out on Operation Roaring Lion, Iran would have long ago had nuclear weapons, and Iran would have had many thousands of missiles to destroy Israel and threaten the existence of us all. We have removed this double existential threat from over our heads. We have set the terrorist regime in Iran back many years. We have shaken its foundations. We have crushed it.

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AI Prompt when searching for World leaders who have PhD’s

List of heads of government by higher education

List of heads of government by higher education ; Viktor Orbán · Prime Minister of Hungary · Eötvös Loránd University · Pembroke College, Oxford ; Kristrún …Read more

AI Overview

Prominent World Leaders with a PhD:

These individuals represent a diverse range of academic backgrounds, from natural sciences to economics and law, often leading their nations through complex financial or geopolitical challenges. 

Xi Jinping – PhD in Law 🇷🇺 Vladimir Putin – PhD in Economics 🇮🇳 …

20 Jan 2026 — 🎓 World Leaders ( From The Past and Present) with a PhD: 🇨🇳 Xi Jinping – PhD in Law 🇷🇺 Vladimir Putin – PhD in Economics 🇮🇳…

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G NEWJ – World leaders with a PhD 🎓🌍 Many global … – Facebook

16 Mar 2026 — World leaders with a PhD 🎓🌍 Many global leaders hold advanced academic degrees, showing the connection between education and lea…

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Breaking Defense: 2 week ceasefire … Pentagon touts ‘decisive military victory’

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As 2-week ceasefire takes hold, Pentagon touts ‘decisive military victory’

“We’ve destroyed Iran’s defense industrial base, their ability to reconstitute those capabilities for years to come,” said Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine.

By Ashley Roque on April 08, 2026 10:27 amShare

U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth (L) looks to Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine as he speaks during a press briefing at the Pentagon on April 08, 2026 in Arlington, Virginia. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON — As Iran and the US embark on a two-week ceasefire, Pentagon leaders are touting military success, saying the broad swath of Tehran’s defense production capacity is crippled. 

“What has been agreed to, what’s been stated, is the Strait [of Hormuz] is open,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told reporters this morning. “Our military is watching. Sure their military is watching. But commerce will flow. And that’s what you saw the markets react to.”

Regardless of whether Tehran and Washington sustain this ceasefire and hammer out a long-term agreement, Hegseth said a host of US military objections have been accomplished over the past five-and-a-half weeks, calling it a “decisive military victory.”

“America’s military achieved every single objective, on plan, on schedule, exactly as laid out from day one. Iran’s Navy is at the bottom of the sea,” Hegseth told reporters this morning.

“Iran’s Air Force has been wiped out,” he later added. “Iran no longer has … any sort of a comprehensive air defense system. We own their skies. Their missile program is functionally destroyed. Launchers, production facilities and existing stockpiles depleted and decimated and almost completely ineffective.”

Chairman of the Joints Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine provided additional context on just what damage the Pentagon believes it has inflicted on Iran’s defenses. Internal analysis, the four-star general explained, estimated during Operation Epic Fury the US struck 13,000 targets and 1,700 ballistic missiles were intercepted by US forces and Gulf partners. Approximately 80 percent of Iran’s air defense systems were destroyed, he added, along with 90 percent of the “regular” fleet of maritime vessels (not the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) and 95 percent of their naval mines.

And when it comes to Tehran’s defense industrial base, Caine said, the Pentagon believes that it has either damaged or destroyed 20 naval production and fabrication, nearly 80 percent of Iran’s nuclear industrial base, and 80 percent of their missile facilities.

“We’ve destroyed Iran’s defense industrial base, their ability to reconstitute those capabilities for years to come,” he told reporters. “We attacked, along with our partners, approximately 90 percent of their weapons factories. Every factory that produced Shahed one-way attack drones was struck. Every factory that produces the guidance systems that go into those drones was struck. Their missile defense industrial base is shattered.”

Despite US claims of military success, Iran has continued to have the ability to strike targets across the region including a petrochemical complex in Saudi Arabia this week, and an F-15E fighter last week.

Regardless, Hegseth’s comments about the delicate ceasefire between Washington and Tehran followed a tense weekend and start to this week after President Donald Trump vowed total destruction of Iran’s bridges and power plants if Iran did not reopen the Strait of Hormuz by 8 p.m. Eastern on Tuesday and present other acceptable terms. 

“A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again,” Trump posted on Truth Social Tuesday morning. “I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will. However, now that we have Complete and Total Regime Change, where different, smarter, and less radicalized minds prevail, maybe something revolutionarily wonderful can happen, WHO KNOWS?”

But shortly before that US imposed deadline lapsed, Trump lifted the threat, instead announcing a new two-week “double sided” ceasefire during which the two sides would continue negotiations centered around a previously disclosed Iranian 10-point proposal. That proposal reportedly allows Iranian control over the Strait of Hormuz, ends US military attacks on Iran, requires US withdrawal from the Middle East and grants Tehran permission to enrich uranium.

However, the two-week ceasefire does not extend to all ongoing military operations in the region and Israel is continuing to strike Hezbollah inside Lebanon.

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F. First Post: Jeffrey Sachs Exclusive: ‘US Incompetence Cannot Be Overestimated’ | US Iran Ceasefire | N18G

Premiered 2 hours ago #jeffreysachs#usiranceasefire#trump

A two-week Iran-US ceasefire is in place but don’t mistake silence for peace. Beneath the surface, tensions are sharper than ever. Both sides are claiming victory, but who is really gaining ground? Who’s controlling the narrative, and more importantly, the negotiating table? And where does Israel fit into this high-stakes equation? Hem Kaur Saroya speaks to economist and geopolitical analyst Jeffrey Sachs in an exclusive conversation.

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