
Trump Shares Details of His Private Call With Tucker Carlson About Iran
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President Donald Trump on Wednesday said that he recently spoke on the phone with right-wing commentator and media personality Tucker Carlson about the rapidly escalating conflict between Israel and Iran and whether the United States would get involved.
The Context
Trump's typically ironclad MAGA coalition has splintered since last week, when Israel launched a series of strikes that took out top Iranian military and intelligence leaders, nuclear sites and key nuclear scientists.
Israel also attacked Iran's state-run television network this week, further fueling concerns from those on the right and the left that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is pushing for regime change in Iran, as opposed to just destroying Tehran's nuclear program.
The war—and the possibility that the U.S. may get involved in the bombing—has fractured Trump's MAGA base, putting isolationists like Carlson, former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon and U.S. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene directly at odds with pro-Trump foreign-policy hawks like Fox News personalities Sean Hannity and Mark Levin, along with GOP Senators Ted Cruz and Lindsey Graham.
President Donald Trump meets with members of the Juventus soccer club in the Oval Office of the White House on June 18 in Washington, D.C.
President Donald Trump meets with members of the Juventus soccer club in the Oval Office of the White House on June 18 in Washington, D.C.
Alex Brandon/AP
What To Know
The president on Wednesday said he recently spoke to Carlson, confirming what the former Fox News prime-time host said in an earlier interview with Cruz.
Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office on Wednesday, Trump said Carlson had reached out to him to apologize for some comments he made deriding those in the administration and the MAGA sphere who have cheered Israel's strikes against Iran.
"Tucker's a nice guy," Trump said. "He called and apologized the other day because he thought he said things that were a little bit too strong and I appreciated that."
The president, who has put out mixed messaging about whether the U.S. will switch from a defensive posture to an offensive one against Iran, went on to say that he asked Carlson if he was OK with Iran having nuclear weapons.
"I did ask Tucker, I said, 'Well, are you OK with nuclear weapons being in the hands of Iran?'" Trump told reporters. "And he sort of didn't like that. And I said, 'Well, if it's OK with you, then you and I do have a difference.'"
"But it's really not OK with him," the president added. "Therefore, you may have to fight."
This is a breaking news story. Updates to follow.

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