
Republicans and Democrats at odds over Iran nuclear capacity after US strikes
Emerging from a highly anticipated classified briefing on Thursday, Democratic and Republican senators were not in agreement over exactly how much US strikes on Iran set back that country's nuclear program.
Many Republicans said that they believe it will now take Iran years longer to build a nuclear weapon, though some acknowledged the threat is not completely neutralized. But Democrats said the picture is far less clear – and one said the US strikes set Iran back only by months.
According to an early US intelligence assessment that was described by seven people briefed on it, the US military strikes on three of Iran's nuclear facilities last weekend did not destroy the core components of the country's nuclear program and likely only set it back by months.
The analysis of the damage to the sites and the impact of the strikes on Iran's nuclear ambitions is ongoing, and could change as more intelligence becomes available. But the early findings of the assessment are at odds with President Donald Trump's repeated claims that the strikes 'completely and totally obliterated' Iran's nuclear enrichment facilities.
'To me, it still appears that we have only set back the Iranian nuclear program by a handful of months. There's no doubt there was damage done to the program. But the allegations that we have obliterated their program just don't seem to stand up to reason,' Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut told reporters.
'I just don't think the president was telling the truth when he said the program was obliterated,' Murphy said, adding that he believed Iran still has 'significant remaining capability.'
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, too, said that the briefing did not provide clear explanations to Trump's assertions.
'President Trump said that the nuclear stockpile was completely and totally obliterated. I did not receive an adequate answer to that question,' Schumer told reporters, accusing the White House of having 'no coherent strategy, no end game, no plan' for preventing Iran from building a nuclear weapon in the future.
The classified briefing on Thursday was long awaited inside the Capitol, with senators of both parties eager for more information after the surprise attack by the US on Iran. A slate of top US officials spoke to senators: Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine and CIA Director John Ratcliffe. That group will also brief House members Friday morning.
Republican senators, including Trump's top allies, left the briefing touting the effectiveness of the US strikes and — in some instances — echoing Trump's precise language that it 'obliterated' Iran's nuclear weapon capacity.
'They were obliterated. Nobody can use them anytime soon,' said Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, one of Trump's trusted national security advisers who had been pushing for this exact type of strike on Iran's nuclear facilities.
Inside the secure room in the Capitol basement, key details of that early Pentagon intelligence assessment — which was first reported by CNN — were read aloud to senators during the briefing, according to one attendee, Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri.
'They walked through it and talked more about what it is and what exactly it says. I thought that answered a lot of questions,' said Hawley, who had been a vocal critic of US military intervention in the Iranian-Israeli conflict.
'Having listened to them now for an hour-plus walk through the intelligence and walk through what we know at this point, I think it's very fair to say that this military mission accomplished its objective for what they intended to do,' Hawley said.
Other Republicans were more cautious in echoing Trump's initial language.
Asked if Iran's facilities had been obliterated, Sen. John Cornyn of Texas said: 'I believe the goals of the mission were accomplished. I think that's an ambiguous term, or could be interpreted different ways, so I would just say the goals of the mission were accomplished.'
Cornyn said it was unclear how long it might take for Iran to build a nuclear weapon, adding: 'Well, I don't think anybody's been underground to assess the damage. So I don't know if anyone can give you a precise number. I certainly can't.'
Asked if the sites were obliterated, Sen. Rick Scott of Florida said, 'It's all in your definition.' Asked for his definition, Scott repeated to reporters: 'I think the military did an unbelievable job.'
But Sen. Tom Cotton, who leads the Senate Intelligence Committee, was more definitive. He said the strikes would 'protect the world from the risk of an Iranian nuclear weapon for years.'
'I believe that this mission was a tremendous success and that we have effectively destroyed Iran's nuclear program,' Cotton said, criticizing the focus on the early assessment produced by the Defense Intelligence Agency, the Pentagon's intelligence arm.
CNN has reported that the final US military 'battle damage assessment' by the DIA could take days or even weeks to complete, multiple sources familiar with the Pentagon's process told CNN. The initial DIA analysis was produced just 24 hours after the attack, according to one of the sources. Because it was only a preliminary analysis, its judgments were 'low-confidence,' the sources said. It was not coordinated with the wider intelligence community, according to a US official, and the document itself acknowledged that it could take weeks to produce a finalized assessment.
'I think that Iranian nuclear development is set back years,' Sen. Roger Marshall of Kansas told reporters after the briefing.
While a number of Democrats declined to weigh in at all on the briefing, Sen. Chris Coons, a Democrat from Delaware, said the briefing Thursday was 'constructive' even as he said the administration has more work to do to get a fuller assessment of the damages in his view.
'We do not have a complete assessment yet of the strikes of last week and when we do, I think that will answer a lot of currently unanswered questions,' Coons said.
Asked by how much he felt the Iranian nuclear program was set back by the strikes, Coons said, 'we got more relevant details about that, but I think it is too early to actually fully grasp a number of critical and currently unanswered issues about what was exactly destroyed and exactly how long it would take to reconstruct it and what the intentions of the Iranian regime are.'
Sen. Mark Warner, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, also gave a cautious assessment of the strikes.
'Clearly, damage was inflicted on the Iranian nuclear program,' Warner said, though he added that 'it is going to take time to get a final assessment of how much damage.'
'The thing that I've had some concern about is when, people jump to a conclusion too early. I mean, clearly, the president making a comment on Saturday night, before any assessment of total obliteration – listen, I hope that is the final assessment. But if not, does that end up providing a false sense of comfort to the American people or for that matter, the world?' Warner said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
5 minutes ago
- Yahoo
The Middlemen Gaming the US Work Visa Lottery
For decades, foreign staffing and outsourcing firms have taken advantage of loopholes in a US visa program meant to bring in high-skilled workers to make up for a lack of domestic tech talent. Amid a US immigration crackdown the Trump administration contends is based in part on protecting American jobs, here's how middlemen keep gaming the visa system at the expense of US workers and many others.
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump Teases ‘Big' India Trade Deal as Negotiators Harden Stance
(Bloomberg) -- US President Donald Trump said a 'very big' trade deal could be signed soon that would open up the Indian market to American business, as negotiators meet in Washington to break a recent deadlock over key issues. Philadelphia Transit System Votes to Cut Service by 45%, Hike Fares US Renters Face Storm of Rising Costs Squeezed by Crowds, the Roads of Central Park Are Being Reimagined Mapping the Architectural History of New York's Chinatown US State Budget Wounds Intensify From Trump, DOGE Policy Shifts 'We are having some great deals. We have one coming up, maybe, with India, a very big one, where we are going to open up India,' Trump said at an event on Thursday at the White House. Trump's comments offer a note of optimism for a potential interim trade deal, even as key differences persist between the two sides. His reciprocal tariffs on goods from US's trading partners are set to take effect on July 9, and an early deal would help New Delhi avert the hike. Talks have been strained by Washington's demand that India open its market to genetically modified crops — an ask New Delhi has rejected, citing risks to its farmers. India is also unwilling to sign a deal that doesn't address both sectoral access and reciprocal tariffs on its exports, Bloomberg has reported. A team of Indian trade officials, led by chief negotiator Rajesh Agarwal, is slated to hold meetings with officials in Washington over two days this week to resolve differences and find a common ground, people familiar with the matter said, asking not to be identified as the discussions are private. India was among the first nations to initiate trade talks with the US this year, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi making sweeping concessions to appease the White House. Follow Bloomberg India on WhatsApp for exclusive content and analysis on what billionaires, businesses and markets are doing. Sign up here. The Office of the US Trade Representative and an Indian trade ministry spokesperson didn't respond to requests for comment on the latest round of negotiations. --With assistance from Catherine Lucey, Prateek Mazumdar and Ramsey Al-Rikabi. (Updates with Trump comments) America's Top Consumer-Sentiment Economist Is Worried How to Steal a House Inside Gap's Last-Ditch, Tariff-Addled Turnaround Push Apple Test-Drives Big-Screen Movie Strategy With F1 Luxury Counterfeiters Keep Outsmarting the Makers of $10,000 Handbags ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.


CNN
22 minutes ago
- CNN
US, China formalize deal on rare earth shipments
China on Friday signaled it would approve the export of rare earth minerals to the US, hours after White House officials said the two sides had reached a deal, in what would be a major breakthrough following weeks of negotiations over US access to the key materials. Rare earths – essential in everything from everyday electronics to fighter jets – had become a key focus of trade frictions between the world's two largest economies in recent weeks as their tit-for-tat tariff escalation morphed into a supply chain struggle. 'China will approve the export application of controlled items that meet the conditions in accordance with the law. The United States will cancel a series of restrictive measures taken against China accordingly,' China's Ministry of Commerce said in a statement. The statement was framed as a response to a question that specifically referenced how 'China will accelerate the export of rare earths to the United States.' The Chinese statement followed comments from US President Donald Trump and his Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick Thursday confirming that the two sides had reached a deal. The agreement appears to formalize an understanding reached between the two sides earlier this month in London, which the US at the time said needed to be approved by Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping. On Thursday, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick was quoted by Bloomberg News as saying that China is 'going to deliver rare earths to us' and once they do that, 'we'll take down our countermeasures,' referring to the export curbs US imposed on China in May as US officials accused Beijing of not honoring a deal reached the previous month in Geneva, by holding up rare earth exports. At a White House event on Thursday Trump said: 'we just signed with China yesterday,' without elaborating. In its statement Friday, China's Commerce Ministry said it hoped that the two sides could 'continuously enhance consensus, reduce misunderstandings, strengthen cooperation, and jointly promote the healthy, stable and sustainable development of China-US economic and trade relations.' China controls around 90% of global rare earth processing, according to the International Energy Agency. The two countries last month in Geneva reached an agreement to de-escalate hefty tariffs that had resulted in a de-facto trade embargo, but that agreement quickly fell apart due to the Trump administration's frustrations that China was not lifting export controls on rare earths that it had imposed following Trump's so-called reciprocal tariffs placed on China in April. The US, in retaliation, imposed export curbs on chips software, ethane and jet engines, while threatening to revoke the US visas of Chinese students. China said it was complying with the agreement and blamed Washington for reneging on its promises. Officials from both sides then returned to the negotiating table in London in June. Following the talks, Trump announced a deal had been reached– pending approval from both national leaders, and that both sides had agreed to ease export restrictions. The US will also allow Chinese college students to attend American universities, Trump suggested. 'Magnets and any necessary rare earths will be supplied up front by China,' he wrote on social media at the time. Reuters reported this week that the US Commerce Department has allowed ethane traders to load ethane on vessels bound for China. But it has prohibited them from unloading in China without authorization – signs experts interpret as the administration is preparing to lift the curbs. Under the dual use licensing regime China introduced for rare earths in April, exporters are required to seek approvals for each shipment to customers in any country and submit documentation to verify the intended end use of these materials. While China has in recent weeks repeatedly said that it has been 'speeding up' approvals of rare earth export licenses for 'compliant' applications, experts and industry insiders have told CNN that many companies are still struggling to secure sufficient supplies of these critical elements and magnets. Analysts also expect China's dual use export restrictions still prohibit shipments to military suppliers, leaving US defense contractors without access to such materials.