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U.S. Intelligence service agencies ar studying how persia would respond if U.S. Chairman Donald ruff were to declare a unilateral victory in the two-month-old war that has killed thousands and become a political liability for the White House, two U.S. Officials and a person familiar with the matter said.
The intelligence community is analyzing the question along with others at the request of senior administration officials.
The goal is to understand the implications of Trump potentially pulling back from a conflict that some officials and advisers worry could contribute to deep Republican losses in the midterm elections later this year, according to the sources.
While no decision has been made — and Trump could easily ramp back up military operations — a quick de-escalation could ease political pressure on the president, even as it could leave behind an emboldened Iran that could eventually rebuild its nuclear and missile programs and threaten U.S. Allies in the region.
The sources spoke on the condition of anonymity in order to discuss sensitive intelligence matters.
'Don't rush me': Trump refuses to give timeline on Iran
It is not clear when the intelligence community would complete its work, but it has previously analyzed the likely reaction of Iran's leaders to a U.S. Declaration of victory.
In the days following the initial bombing campaign in February, intelligence agencies assessed that if Trump were to declare victory and the U.S. Were to draw down its forces in the region, Iran would likely view it as a win, one of the sources said.
If Trump instead said the U.S. Had won but maintained a heavy troop presence, Iran would likely see it as a negotiating tactic, but not one that would necessarily lead to the end of the war, the source said.
Liz Lyons, the director of the CIA's office of public affairs, said in a statement after the publication of this story that the agency "is not familiar with the intelligence community's reported assessment."
The CIA declined to answer Reuters' specific questions about its current work on Iran.
The Office of the Director of National Intelligence declined to comment.
White House spokesperson Anna Kelly said the U.S. Is still engaging with the Iranians on negotiations and would "not be rushed into making a bad deal."
"The president will only enter into an agreement that puts U.S. National security first, and he has been clear that Iran can never possess a nuclear weapon," she said.
Opinion polls show the war is overwhelmingly unpopular with Americans. Only 26 per cent of respondents in a Reuters/Ipsos poll released last week said the military campaign has been worth the costs, and only 25 per cent said it has made the U.S. Safer.
Three people familiar with White House discussions in recent days have described Trump as keenly aware of the political price he and his party are paying.
Twenty days after Trump declared a ceasefire, a flurry of diplomacy has failed to fully open the economically vital Strait of Hormuz, which Tehran closed by attacking ships and laying mines in the narrow waterway.
Choking off the shipping lane that carries about 20 per cent of the world's crude oil has driven up energy costs worldwide and the price of gas at the pumps. Iran's ability to disrupt commerce gives it powerful leverage against the United States and its allies.
A decision to scale back the U.S. Military presence in the region, paired with a mutual lifting of the blockade, would eventually bring down gasoline prices.
So far, however, the two sides appear far from any agreement.
Last weekend, Trump cancelled a trip that would have seen his special envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner meet Iranian officials in Pakistan, telling reporters on Saturday that it would take "too much time" and that if Iran wanted to talk "all they had to do was call."
Price hikes from Iran war won't fade quickly: market analyst
Various military options remain formally on the table, with renewed airstrikes on Iran's military and political leaders among them, according to a separate person familiar with administration dynamics.
One of the U.S. Officials and another person familiar with the discussions said, however, that the most ambitious of those options — such as a ground invasion of the Iranian mainland — appear less likely than they did a few weeks ago.
A White House official described the domestic pressure on the president to wrap up the war as "enormous."
One of the sources said Iran has taken advantage of the ongoing ceasefire to dig out launchers, munitions, drones and other material that had been buried by U.S. And Israeli bombing in the opening weeks of the conflict.
As a result, the tactical costs of resuming full-scale war are arguably higher now than they were in the initial days of the ceasefire, which began on April 8.
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