Today Iran Gets Nuclear Offer from Russia… Why Is the US Silent? …….

Six days—that’s all that stands between a possible peace deal and a return to full-scale war in the Middle East. And the most important factor right now isn’t weapons or troops—it’s silence.
Russia has offered a deal: move Iran’s enriched uranium out of Iran and store it in Russia under international monitoring. This could reduce the immediate nuclear threat and open the door to peace.
But the United States hasn’t responded. No yes, no no—just silence.
That silence could mean several things: the U.S. might still be considering the deal, using it as a negotiation tactic, struggling with internal disagreements, or quietly rejecting it without saying so publicly.

Meanwhile, the clock is ticking. The ceasefire expires on April 21. If no agreement is reached, military action could resume, oil prices could rise further, and the conflict could escalate again.
The key issue remains Iran’s nuclear program. The U.S. wants it dismantled completely. Iran refuses to give up its right to enrichment. Russia’s proposal sits in the middle—but may not fully satisfy either side.
So what happens next depends on one question:
Will the U.S. break its silence?
Because when it does, we’ll know whether this war is ending—or about to begin again.