
Leavitt attacks CNN reporter for Iran intel leak story
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt attacked CNN reporter Natasha Bertrand in response to her reporting on leaked intelligence relating to U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities last weekend.
'This reporter wrote a lie from the intelligence community to seek a narrative she wanted to prove,' Leavitt said of Bertrand, calling her out by name during a briefing with reporters on Thursday. 'This is a reporter who has been used by people who dislike Donald Trump in this government to push fake and false narratives.'
Leavitt's criticism of the reporter came a day after President Trump called for her firing and accused her of 'attempting to destroy our Patriot Pilots by making them look bad.'
CNN issued a statement on Wednesday defending Bertrand and saying it 'does not believe it is reasonable to criticize CNN reporters for accurately reporting the existence of the assessment and accurately characterizing its findings, which are in the public interest.'
Jake Tapper, a top anchor at the network, also defended Bertrand.
'President Trump and his administration are going after shooting the messengers in an increasingly ugly way,' he said.
The White House has sought discredit the leaked intelligence, which suggested the Saturday strikes only set Iran's nuclear program back by a few months.

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The Hill
33 minutes ago
- The Hill
Trump attacks on CNN, Fox underscore effort to stifle questions, put media on backfoot
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White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt from her own podium later on Thursday singled out CNN reporter Natasha Bertrand, saying she had written 'a lie from the intelligence community to seek a narrative she wanted to prove.' The personal attacks are unusual and underscore the administration's determination to put the media on defense and win a public relations air war over success of the attacks on Iran. The administration is confident of its success because it has worked before, and because of general distrust of the media. 'These people are never going to lose any polling points attacking the media, we know that for sure,' one national political reporter told The Hill on Thursday. 'But this is getting pretty personal and feels like it's getting more intense each day.' Trump also called out Bertrand by name on Wednesday, demanding that the network fire her for her reporting on the intelligence and referencing her previous reporting relating to Hunter Biden, Russian influence in the 2016 election and the coronavirus pandemic. CNN issued a forceful statement hours later defending Bertrand. 'CNN's reporting made clear that this was an initial finding that could change with additional intelligence,' a spokesperson for the network said. 'We have extensively covered President Trump's own deep skepticism about it. However, we do not believe it is reasonable to criticize CNN reporters for accurately reporting the existence of the assessment and accurately characterizing its findings, which are in the public interest.' The network's top political anchor, Jake Tapper, called Trump's attack 'preposterous,' and said the president was 'going after, shooting the messengers in an increasingly ugly way.' The New York Times, another target of the administration's ire, also issued a statement on Wednesday defending its reporting on the leaked memo and vowing to 'continue to report fully on the administration's decision making, including his dispute with the Defense Intelligence Agency.' Hegseth, a former colleague of Griffin, suggested a personal beef during his press conference on Thursday. 'Jennifer, you've been about the worst. The one who misrepresents the most intentionally,' the Defense secretary told Griffin after she asked if he was completely confident all the highly enriched uranium was inside the Fordow mountain where the strikes had taken place. Griffing was quick to defend herself. 'In fact, I was the first to describe the B-2 bombers, the refueling, the entire mission with great accuracy,' she shot back at the secretary. 'So I take issue with that.' Minutes later, Brit Hume, one of Fox's longest serving political analyst, chastised Hegseth on the network's air over the outburst. 'Her professionalism, her knowledge, her experience at the Pentagon is unmatched,' Hume said. 'I have had and still have the greatest regard for her. The attack on her was unfair.' Trump and his allies have repeatedly sought to discredit the leaked intelligence, saying the Iranian nuclear program has been totally 'obliterated,' and vowing to investigate the intelligence that was leaked to media outlets. Leavitt suggested that whoever leaked the intelligence to media outlets 'should be in jail' while going after Bertrand. 'This is a reporter who has been used by people who dislike Donald Trump in this government to push fake and false narratives,' she said. The intensifying rhetoric is raising concerns among press freedom groups, and calling to mind other moves the administration has taken to crack down on media coverage it views as unsupportive of its agenda. 'This is a familiar pattern by now: journalists report something Trump doesn't like, and he lashes out. He wants the press to parrot his talking points, and when they don't, he tries to bully them into submission,' said Clayton Weimers, executive director of Reporters with Borders. 'That's why he's suing CBS, the Des Moines Register, and the Pulitzer Board. It's why he banned the AP from the White House and wants to pad the White House briefing room and press pool with friendly right-wing voices.' Tim Richardson, program manager for journalism and disinformation at PEN America, told The Hill on Thursday the administration is trying to vilify journalists 'who accurately characterized that intelligence, rather than addressing the substance of his own administration's intelligence report.' 'These attacks erode public trust in fact-based reporting and embolden harassment against journalists who ask hard questions, especially in times of international conflict,' Richardson added. Former Defense Sec. Leon Panetta said Hegseth appears to disdain the media. 'There's no question that the way he has approached this reflects a lot of personal judgment and paranoia, very frankly, about the role of the press,' Panetta said. 'Rather than trying to paint the press as coming from one direction or the other, that's a trap. It's a trap because, frankly, we have press on all sides, on the left and the right, in the middle, all basically speaking to the truth.' 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Axios
39 minutes ago
- Axios
Trump threatens Democrats with prosecution over Iran leak
President Trump threatened to prosecute Democrats on Thursday after he accused them without evidence of leaking information about the U.S. strike on Iranian facilities. Why it matters: President Trump has fought to project his desired narrative that the strike on Iran "obliterated" the country's nuclear program despite a leaked early assessment that suggests the damage may have been more modest. "The Democrats are the ones who leaked the information on the PERFECT FLIGHT to the Nuclear Sites in Iran," he said on Truth Social. "They should be prosecuted!" A spokesperson for the Justice Department told Axios it doesn't comment on ongoing investigations. Democratic leaders Sen. Chuck Schumer and Rep. Hakeem Jeffries' offices didn't immediately respond to Axios' request for comment. Catch up quick: Trump initially claimed that the administration's weekend operation "totally obliterated" Iran's key uranium enrichment sites. A preliminary report from the Defense Intelligence Agency was later leaked to news outlets, suggesting the strikes may have not set back the Iranian program as significantly as originally announced. Zoom in: The leak outraged Trump and top officials, who said the report was incomplete.