
Trump considers forcing journalists to reveal sources who leaked Iran report
Donald Trump said he is weighing forcing journalists who published leaked details from a US intelligence report assessing the impact of the recent American military strikes on Iran to reveal their sources – and the president also claimed his administration may prosecute those reporters and sources if they don't comply.
In an interview Sunday with Fox News host Maria Bartiromo, Trump doubled down on his claim that the 21 June airstrikes aimed at certain Iranian facilities successfully crippled Iran's nuclear weapons program. He insisted the attacks destroyed key enriched uranium stockpiles, despite Iranian assertions that the material had been relocated before the strikes.
Trump dismissed the leaked intelligence assessment in question – which suggested the strikes only temporarily disrupted Iran's nuclear development – as incomplete and biased. The report, circulated among US lawmakers and intelligence officials, concluded that the damage inflicted was significantly less than what Trump's administration had publicly claimed.
The president has attacked both Democratic lawmakers and members of the media for sharing portions of the classified analysis. He then threatened legal consequences for those responsible.
During the interview, Bartiromo referenced a post Trump had shared on social media days earlier, in which he wrote: 'The Democrats are the ones who leaked the information on the PERFECT FLIGHT to the Nuclear Sites in Iran. They should be prosecuted!'
Trump then reiterated on-air that 'they should be prosecuted'.
'Who specifically?' Bartiromo asked.
Trump replied: 'You can find out – if they wanted, they could find out easily.'
In recent days, Trump has targeted CNN and The New York Times for their reporting on the strikes. He has condemned the coverage as 'unpatriotic' and even floated the possibility of legal action.
The two outlets, along with several others, reported that preliminary findings from the US's Defense Intelligence Agency indicated the strikes had only limited success. The bombings delayed Iran's nuclear ambitions by several months but stopped short of destroying the program outright, according to the assessment.
On Sunday, a social media account belonging to the Iranian leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, accused Trump of needing to 'exaggerate to cover up the truth and keep it secret' after the recent US military strikes 'could not do anything'.
Trump, in contrast, has repeatedly insisted that three nuclear facilities were 'obliterated'.
He elaborated on how his administration might pursue the sources of the leak.
'You go up and tell the reporter, 'national security – who gave it?'' Trump said. 'You have to do that. And I suspect we'll be doing things like that.'
In the US, the constitution generally protects journalists from being compelled to reveal their sources – but there are limits to that reporter's privilege, as it is colloquially known.
The president had threatened to sue CNN and the New York Times for publishing articles about the preliminary intelligence report ahead of his comments to Bartiromo.
In a letter to the Times, a lawyer for Trump said the article had damaged the president's reputation and demanded that the outlet 'retract and apologize for' the piece, which the letter described as 'false,' 'defamatory' and 'unpatriotic'.
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