The global affairs journalist, Christiane Amanpour, uses a clean, crisp, and to the point approach in her 2012 article about Iran. She uses inductive reasoning throughout the piece. In the article, Iran Official Offers' Permanent Human Monitoring' of Nuclear Sites, she gives us insight into Iran. Amanpour informs, "While talk about a possible Israeli strike against Iran's nuclear facilities reached a fever pitch in the past few months, the six countries that negotiate with Iran over the nuclear program -- the U.S., U.K., France, Germany, Russia and China -- accepted last week an Iranian offer to return to negotiations after a year's standstill. Iran's nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili, had sent a letter to the European Union's top diplomat in February expressing Iran's willingness for the first time to return to negotiations without pre-conditions." Fast forward several years to the conversation between Christiane and Vali Nasir, where they discuss Iran's strategy with the United States, and you will see Christiane use prolepsis and euphemism throughout the interview. The rhetorical devices used within the paper and the interview move the writing and the conversation productively forward. Amanpour continues to provide the world with relevant information, whether by reporting for various news outlets, a show on PBS, or social media such as the tweet On February 18, 2021. Christiane Amanpour illuminates foreign affairs to people worldwide.
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