Sen. Reed Calls Trump’s Military Strike on Iran Premature

While agreeing Iran must not go nuclear, Reed urges diplomacy over military action and questions effectiveness of recent U.S. strike

Sen. Reed during a previous interview at The Public’s Radio.
The Public’s Radio
Share
Sen. Reed during a previous interview at The Public’s Radio.
The Public’s Radio
Sen. Reed Calls Trump’s Military Strike on Iran Premature
Copy

U.S. Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island agrees with President Trump that Iran should not be allowed to develop a nuclear weapon, but he said Trump’s use of a military airstrike over the weekend is too much, too soon.

“The best path would be for negotiations,” Reed said in an interview Monday. “We had an arrangement in place under the Obama administration that we had detailed inspections on the ground. They were staying within the limits — they were trying to push the limits, but staying within the limits.”

Reed said it’s unclear for now if the U.S. airstrike achieved its goal.

“We have not received yet a damage assessment,” he said. “Obviously, given the tonnage we dropped, there was destruction there. The question is, how much of their enriched uranium survived? Did they move it out prior to the attack? And it’s going to take some kind of detailed analysis, which they’re conducting now.”

Speaking after a Greater Providence Chamber of Commerce event in Warwick, Reed said he would support military action against Iran if it was about to finalize a nuclear weapon.

Short of that, he said, President Trump’s decision to order an intense airstrike in Iran amounts to a big gamble, due to the uncertainty of possible consequences. He said one possibility is enhanced assistance for Iran’s nuclear program from one of its allies.

Senate Republicans say legislation goes too far. Some gun rights advocates say it doesn’t go far enough.
Talks resume with federal mediator and larger union presence amid mounting worker hardship, community support, and questions over hospital finances and real estate deal
After a brisk three-hour debate, lawmakers advanced a budget boosting health care funding and raising new taxes on vacation homes—while bracing for potential federal cuts that could send them back to the State House this fall
The new law would require districts to create a policy to ban student use of cell phones during the school day by August 2026
AG’s office to skip independent actuarial review this year to redeploy resources to other health care reform efforts