Throughout a public listening to earlier than Congress on Wednesday, the highest U.S. intelligence official asserted that Iran had been working to restart its nuclear program previous to the U.S. and Israel launching a conflict towards it—in contradiction to her written testimony submitted to the identical listening to.
In her written testimony to the Senate Intelligence Committee, Tulsi Gabbard, the director of nationwide intelligence, wrote that due to final summer season’s 12 days of U.S.-Israeli airstrikes on Iran’s missile and nuclear sites, “Iran’s nuclear enrichment program was obliterated. There was no efforts since then to attempt to rebuild their enrichment functionality. The entrances to the underground amenities that have been bombed have been buried and shuttered with cement.”
Throughout a public listening to earlier than Congress on Wednesday, the highest U.S. intelligence official asserted that Iran had been working to restart its nuclear program previous to the U.S. and Israel launching a conflict towards it—in contradiction to her written testimony submitted to the identical listening to.
In her written testimony to the Senate Intelligence Committee, Tulsi Gabbard, the director of nationwide intelligence, wrote that due to final summer season’s 12 days of U.S.-Israeli airstrikes on Iran’s missile and nuclear sites, “Iran’s nuclear enrichment program was obliterated. There was no efforts since then to attempt to rebuild their enrichment functionality. The entrances to the underground amenities that have been bombed have been buried and shuttered with cement.”
Nonetheless, in her spoken testimony, Gabbard deviated from her eight pages of prepared remarks—which in any other case carefully matched her verbal supply—in describing the standing of Iran’s nuclear program previous to the Feb. 28 begin of the most recent U.S.-Israel conflict towards Iran.
“Previous to Operation Epic Fury, the IC [U.S. intelligence community] assesses Iran was attempting to recuperate from the extreme injury to its nuclear infrastructure sustained in the course of the 12-day conflict and continued to refuse to adjust to its nuclear obligations with the IAEA [International Atomic Energy Agency], refusing them entry to key amenities,” she mentioned.
Democratic Sen. Mark Warner, the vice chairman of the committee, requested Gabbard why she had omitted some components of her submitted testimony on Iran, accusing her of attempting to keep away from contradicting U.S. President Donald Trump in public. Gabbard responded that she omitted them to save lots of time.
Upon additional questioning by Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff, Gabbard reaffirmed that it was the intelligence group’s evaluation that final summer season’s strikes had “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear program.
Ossoff then requested why a March 1 statement from the White Home justifying its assaults on Iran cited an “imminent nuclear risk posed by the Iranian regime.”
“Was it the evaluation of the intelligence group that there was an imminent nuclear risk posed by the Iranian regime?” Ossoff requested Gabbard.
Gabbard responded: “The intelligence group assessed that Iran maintained the intention to rebuild and to proceed to develop their nuclear enrichment functionality … the one one that can decide what’s and isn’t an imminent risk is the president.”
She added, “It isn’t the intelligence group’s duty to find out what’s and isn’t an imminent risk.”
Ossoff pushed again strongly on these remarks: “It’s exactly your duty to find out what constitutes a risk to the US. That is the worldwide threats listening to the place … you characterize the IC’s evaluation of threats.”
He accused her of “evading the query, as a result of to supply a candid response to the committee would contradict a press release from the White Home.”
Gabbard testified sooner or later after her subordinate, Joe Kent, the director of the Nationwide Counterterrorism Middle, resigned over his disagreement with Trump’s resolution to hitch Israel in attacking Iran. In his resignation letter, which he posted online, Kent mentioned that he couldn’t “in good conscience help the continuing conflict in Iran,” which he mentioned “posed no imminent risk to our nation.”
“I didn’t agree along with your buddy Mr. Kent, however I did agree with him yesterday that there was no imminent risk,” Warner mentioned, in a potential reference to Kent’s support of election- and Jan. 6-related conspiracy theories and invocation of antisemitic tropes.
Democrats have been essentially the most withering of their criticism of Gabbard—in addition to of FBI Director Kash Patel, who testified alongside Gabbard—throughout a variety of points.
However Republicans additionally raised critiques (albeit extra delicate ones) of the administration officers’ implementation of price cuts to places of work centered on counterintelligence, counterterrorism, and cyber points whilst U.S. President Donald Trump’s resolution to start out a conflict towards Iran has raised considerations about the opportunity of retaliatory assaults harming Individuals at home and abroad.
“You’ve got devoted declining budgets, personnel, and emphasis on countering terrorism, but the actual fact is that ISIS is rising and working in Somalia, Afghanistan, Syria, Pakistan, and Iraq,” Republican Sen. Susan Collins mentioned. “Al Qaeda is surging in Afghanistan, the Arabian Peninsula, and all through Central Africa. The Houthis in Yemen and the remainder of the Iranian proxies stay a severe risk. Focusing as you’ve carried out on great-power opponents appears to have diverted sources from the battle towards terrorism, a battle that could be very a lot nonetheless happening.”
Republican Sen. Jerry Moran mentioned he was frightened that the conflict on Iran was harming “the power for Ukraine to reach defending its borders” by additional constraining the U.S. protection trade’s capacity to provide enough munitions for Ukraine and the NATO allies supplying Kyiv in its resistance to Russia’s invasion. He additionally expressed concern that the administration’s waiver of some sanctions on Russian oil to assist ease the vitality disaster attributable to the Iran battle is financially benefiting Moscow.
CIA Director John Ratcliffe, who was additionally testifying, responded that whereas some latest U.S. actions “might profit adversaries like Russia,” they have been taken as a result of policymakers consider that they “profit U.S. residents, on this case with respect to preserving the financial system on monitor and preserving oil costs low.”
Ratcliffe urged Moran to believe in U.S. intelligence businesses, noting how they have been instrumental within the army operational success of final summer season’s strikes on Iran’s missile and nuclear websites.
“I’m assured that we are able to stroll and chew gum on the similar time: pursue targets within the Center East and supply help with regard to the … Russian aggression in Ukraine,” the CIA chief mentioned.











