Tehran strengthened by emerging agreement, especially in the eyes of Arab countries, which fear future attacks and so will offer economic support; Axis of extremist Sunni states is stronger, the Abraham Accords will not expand, and the biggest loser is Israel

By Samia NakhoulBEIRUT, June 15 (Reuters) - The U.S.-Iran deal may silence the guns, but it cannot alter the verdict of more than three months of war. The region has emerged from…

Experts say the regional balance of power remains largely unchanged, while Iran appears politically strengthened

Gulf nations face a precarious future after Iran's attacks. A new deal offers only a temporary reprieve, leaving them vulnerable to regional proxies and missiles. Analysts suggest…

The deal may halt the fighting, but it leaves Iran’s nuclear and missile programs unresolved, with Tehran intact, Gulf states exposed and confidence in US protection badly shaken

Tehran strengthened by emerging agreement, especially in the eyes of Arab countries, which fear future attacks and so will offer economic support; Axis of extremist Sunni states…