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  • 16 hours ago
For the third consecutive day, Iranian students have taken to the streets, challenging the authorities in the wake of a recent violent crackdown. Protests have ignited at leading universities in Tehran, characterized by chants, confrontations, and striking displays of defiance that are resonating across the campuses.

Simultaneously, tensions between Iran and the United States are escalating quickly. Washington is contemplating potential military intervention while insisting on restrictions regarding Iran’s nuclear ambitions and missile capabilities. U.S. troops are increasing their presence in the area, and diplomatic discussions are precariously poised.

With Iran’s leadership grappling with economic strain, global sanctions, and a resurgence of unrest, the situation has never been more critical.

Will diplomatic efforts ease the turmoil, or are we on the brink of a significant crisis in the Middle East?

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00:00What happens when students refuse to stay silent?
00:02For the third straight day, Iranian students are back on the streets.
00:06At Tehran University, chants echo through the campus.
00:10At Al-Zahra University, flags burn.
00:12At Amir Kabir University, tensions turn into scuffles.
00:16This comes just weeks after security forces crushed nationwide protests.
00:20Thousands were killed.
00:21But the anger is not gone.
00:23Now the pressure is growing from outside Iran, too.
00:26The United States is pulling staff from its embassy in Beirut.
00:30President Donald Trump has warned that really bad things could happen if talks fail.
00:35Washington wants Iran to scale back its nuclear program and missile range.
00:39Inside Iran, the leadership faces its biggest crisis in decades.
00:43Sanctions are squeezing the economy.
00:45Protests are spreading again.
00:47And U.S. military forces are building up in the region.
00:50The question now is simple.
00:52Will diplomacy win?
00:53Or is the region heading toward something far more dangerous?
00:56Are there any more problems going on in the region?
00:56Or is it yet more dangerous?
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