None of the three Democratic candidates addressed foreign policy as they answered a sweeping question about what they would hope to achieve during the first 100 days after taking office.
Each candidate proposed raising the minimum wage, and all of the candidates spoke generally about improving the U.S. economy. Hillary Clinton also said she would work to bring the country together.
But missing from the exchange was any mention of foreign policy. ISIS. Syria. Iran. None of the subjects got treatment.
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The absence was notable because the debate follows a weekend of dizzying developments on the Iran front, and because the Republican debate on Thursday night featured a lengthy exchange on Iran during the first fifteen minutes.
The Democratic candidates are gathering Sunday after a historic series days on the world stage.
On Saturday, international sanctions against Iran were lifted after the United Nations’ nuclear agency said the country is complying with an agreement reached last summer to reduce its nuclear capability.
The announcement came only hours after a prisoner swap that resulted in the release of four American citizens from an Iranian prison. A fifth American held in Iran was also cleared to leave the country, though his release was not tied to the prisoner swap.








