To unpack this complicated plot are Stephen Kinzer, author of "Reset: Iran, Turkey and America's Future," and Mohsen Asgari, correspondent for the BBC in Iran.
Todd Zwillich, The Takeaway's Washington correspondent, and Ron Christie, former special assistant to President George W. Bush and fellow at Harvard University's Institute of Politics, analyze last night's debate.
People in Iran and Iranian-Americans are reacting to news of the United States's accusation that the Iranian government backed a plan to assassinate a Saudi ambassador on U.S. soil. We talk with Siamak Kalhour and Dr. Mohammad Marandi.
David Sanger, chief Washington correspondent for The New York Times, gives more details on the foiled plot. Sanger can be heard on WQXR's weekly program, The Washington Report.
The latest Republican presidential debate was held in New Hampshire on Tuesday night. Anna Sale, reporter for WNYC's It's a Free Country, shares some conversations she had with New Hampshire voters.
Top E.U. officials have today been urging the country to ratify the bill swiftly – and a new vote on the fund is likely by the end of this week.
Mark Whitaker, correspondent for the BBC, sat down with one Cleveland protester, Kyle DeForest, a songwriter, to explore the motivations of one man confronting corporate greed in America.
Martin Indyk, former United States ambassador to Israel and director of foreign policy at the Brookings Institute, talks more about what this deal means for all involved.
We talk to graphic designer John Maeda and former Apple store employee Adaliz Guzman about how the iconoclastic innovator impacted their lives and the world around them.
On Wednesday, the Pew Research Center released a poll indicating that only a third of American servicemen and women believe the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have been worth the costs. David Loyn and Genevieve Chase respond to the Pew poll.