
CIA says Trump strikes will set back Iran's nuke programme by YEARS as White House calls for leaker to be JAILED
Iran confirms death of top military commander Ali Shadmani after Israeli strike
Iran has officially confirmed the death of Ali Shadmani, the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Khatam al-Anbia Central Headquarters, following Israeli air strikes last week.
State media outlet IRNA quoted a statement from the headquarters, which said Shadmani died from injuries sustained in the attack, the BBC and Sky News reported.
The Israel Defense Forces had previously announced his death on June 17, citing 'precise intelligence.'
Shadmani, known as Iran's 'wartime chief of staff,' was a close aide to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
He had only been appointed commander on June 13, following the death of his predecessor Gholamali Rashid in an earlier Israeli strike.
The IRGC's command centre has vowed 'harsh revenge' for his killing.
Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Major General Ali Shadmani in Tehran
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Daily Mail
25 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Trump official in 'line of fire' for leaked Iran bombing intel as they're left out of major security briefing
Tulsi Gabbard is rumored to be in Donald Trump ' 'line of fire' as she is set to miss out on the first intelligence briefing between the administration and Congress over strikes on Iran 's nuclear facilities. Gabbard, Trump's Director of National Intelligence, had to do a dramatic U-turn last week after the president said she was 'wrong' when she testified Tehran was not close to getting a nuclear weapon. Now, she is missing out on the Thursday meeting that will offer Congress a chance to see how successful the strikes were, as Trump has angrily insisted CNN and The New York Times were wrong in saying they had minimal effect. Gabbard was originally supposed to join members of Trump's inner circle - CIA Director John Ratcliffe, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth - in the briefing. A person familiar with Gabbard's schedule told the Associated Press said she was originally going to attend but no longer. 'The media is turning this into something it's not,' a senior Trump administration official told The Washington Post, adding that Ratcliffe will represent the intelligence community. However, controversial Trump biographer Michael Wolff said that Trump now sees Gabbard as a 'stooge' who will take the blame for the leaks. 'It's always important in the Trump script, the fallback is always who to blame, who to blame. Just have to have someone to blame. Tulsi is in the line of fire,' Wolff told The Daily Beast. Wolff added: 'There is an investigation that is going on. They will try to find someone to blame. Within the White House, within the West Wing, what they are saying as of this morning, who this is being pinned on, is Tulsi.' Trump and much of his administration have raged at the media's reports based on anonymous sources that the damage to Iran's nuclear facilities from Saturday night's bombing was not as severe as they had hoped. The leaked report from the Pentagon's Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) reportedly states that the U.S. strikes only delayed Iran from getting a nuclear weapon by a couple of months. An investigation has begun and many in the White House have said the person who leaked incomplete intel should be jailed. Gabbard fiercely backed the president in his rivalry with the press and said the U.S. troops eliminated Iran's nuclear capabilities. 'New intelligence confirms what @POTUS has stated numerous times: Iran's nuclear facilities have been destroyed. If the Iranians chose to rebuild, they would have to rebuild all three facilities (Natanz, Fordow, Esfahan) entirely, which would likely take years to do,' Gabbard wrote on social media. 'The propaganda media has deployed their usual tactic: selectively release portions of illegally leaked classified intelligence assessments (intentionally leaving out the fact that the assessment was written with 'low confidence') to try to undermine President Trump's decisive leadership and the brave servicemen and women who flawlessly executed a truly historic mission to keep the American people safe and secure,' she added. White House Communications Director Steven Cheung backed Gabbard in a statement. Gabbard fiercely backed the president in his rivalry with the press and said the U.S. troops eliminated Iran's nuclear capabilities Gabbard was originally supposed to join members of Trump's inner circle - CIA Director John Ratcliffe (pictured right), Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth (pictured center left) - in the briefing 'President Trump's Peace through Strength foreign policy is a tried-and-true approach that keeps America safe and deters global threats,' he said. 'Efforts by the legacy media to sow internal division are a distraction that will not work. President Trump has full confidence in his entire exceptional national security team. DNI Gabbard is an important member of the President's team and her work continues to serve him and this country well.' Cheung has previously called Wolff 'a lying sack of s***.' Last Friday, Gabbard reversed course and admitted that Iran actually does have the ability to create nuclear weapons after a public rebuke by her boss as Israel continued to wage war against the country. The director of national intelligence originally blamed the 'dishonest media' for a week of confusion about whether the administration believes the Persian country can develop a weapon of mass destruction. 'America has intelligence that Iran is at the point that it can produce a nuclear weapon within weeks to months, if they decide to finalize the assembly,' she wrote on X. 'President Trump has been clear that can't happen, and I agree.' Trump warned that Tehran has a 'maximum' of two weeks to avoid possible American air strikes if they don't abandon their nuclear ambitions. In New Jersey on Friday, however, the president dismissed Gabbard's testimony in March that the intelligence community 'continues to assess Iran is not building a nuclear weapon.' The president responded, 'Well then, my intelligence community is wrong. Who in the intelligence community said that?' Informed that it had been Gabbard, Trump said, 'She's wrong.' Gabbard responded on X Friday that 'The dishonest media is intentionally taking my testimony out of context and spreading fake news as a way to manufacture division.' She included video of her testimony that claims Iranians appear clearly to have 'enriched uranium stockpiles at its highest levels and is unprecedented for a state without nuclear weapons.' She also noted that Iran 'contains a wide range of threats' to the United States and Israel. The next day, Trump celebrated the strikes on Tehran by American forces. Now, Congress will get its first inside look at the bombings as the president rages against a leak regarding its success rate. The administration has rubbished reports by both CNN and the New York Times that the damage to Iran's nuclear facilities from Saturday night's bombing was not as severe as they had hoped, while simultaneously demanding the person who leaked incomplete intel be jailed. The leaked report from the Pentagon's Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) reportedly states that the U.S. strikes only delayed Iran from getting a nuclear weapon by a couple of months. Trump called for the CNN reporter who broke the story, Natasha Bertrand, to be fired and 'then thrown out like a dog' on Truth Social Media, drawing an enraged response from colleague Jake Tapper. Tapper went off on Trump during his Wednesday show: 'Today, President Trump and his administration are going after shooting the messengers in an increasingly ugly way.' He also defended Bertrand, saying: 'They're calling journalists 'fake news' for true stories. They're calling for an excellent CNN reporter, Natasha Bertrand, to be fired, which is preposterous — and to which a CNN statement today reads, 'we stand 100 percent behind Natasha Bertarnd's journalism, as they should.' Tapper went into a dissection of CNN's reporting on the matter, saying that the Defense Intelligence Agency's assessment of the bombing was 'low confidence... meaning that the DIA is far from sure about it.' 'It was described to CNN by seven people briefed on the DIA assessment, and our reporting stressed that the assessment's conclusion could evolve as new information comes to light,' he said. Tapper claimed that CNN reached out to the White House before broadcasting the story and that the administration 'attacked the assessment but confirmed it exists.' 'Even President Trump himself today confirmed it,' he said. Tapper said he was not criticizing the troops who executed the strikes, saying they 'honor and respect' them. Trump ripped into CNN again after Tapper defended the network's reporting and slammed the president for his 'ugly attack' on the press' coverage of the Iran bombings. Defense Secretary Hegseth said the FBI has taken the lead on conducting the probe after CNN, the New York Times and other outlets disclosed the report's findings. 'We're doing a leak investigation with the FBI right now, because this information is for internal purposes, battle damage assessments, and CNN and others are trying to spin it to make the president look bad,' he said during a NATO meeting alongside Trump and other top officials on Wednesday. The Pentagon chief defended the president like an attack dog, claiming the Fordow nuclear enrichment site was 'obliterated.' Flanked by Trump, Secretary of State Rubio, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte and White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, Hegseth also mentioned how the classified document was only a preliminary assessment. 'It was a top secret report, it was preliminary, it was low confidence,' the Pentagon secretary explained. 'Given the 30,000 pounds of explosives and capability of those munitions, it was devastation underneath Fordow, and the amount of munitions, six per location, any assessment that tells you something otherwise is speculating with other motives.' He added that the preliminary DIA battle damage assessment indicated 'moderate to severe' damage was done to the facility. The administration, Hegseth continued, believes it was 'far more likely severe and obliterated.' Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who was sitting next to Hegseth, argued the leakers had an agenda. 'This is what a leaker is telling you the intelligence says,' he said of the report. 'That's the game these people play. They read it and then they go out and characterize it the way they want it characterized.' He added it was 'against the law' to leak the information and told the media the leakers 'characterize it for you in a way that's absolutely false.' Israeli military spokesperson Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin similarly said Wednesday that 'it is still early to assess the results of the operation.' Though he added, 'I believe we have delivered a significant hit to the nuclear program, and I can also say that we have delayed it by several years.' In a Truth Social post on Wednesday afternoon, Trump revealed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth would address the public at 8am Thursday morning to provide 'both interesting and irrefutable' proof about the success of the mission. Trump said the purpose of the conference is to 'fight for the Dignity of our Great American Pilots. 'These Patriots were very upset,' he said. 'After 36 hours of dangerously flying through Enemy Territory, they landed, they knew the Success was LEGENDARY, and then, two days later, they started reading Fake News by CNN and The Failing New York Times. 'They felt terribly!' Trump reminded them that the doubts about the success of the mission were 'as usual, solely for the purpose of demeaning PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP.' His comments come after the CIA confirmed Ira n's nuclear facilities suffered 'severe damage' after the devastating airstrikes Saturday night. Trump had earlier suggested Hegseth's title should be changed to the 'Secretary of War' given the deteriorating situation in the Middle East, and kicked off meetings at the NATO summit on Wednesday by comparing Saturday's precision airstrikes to the two atomic bombings on Japan that ended World War II. 'I don't want to use an example of Hiroshima. I don't want to use an example of Nagasaki. But that was essentially the same thing. That ended that war,' he told reporters at The Hague. Seven B-2 bombers flew from the U.S. to Iran on Saturday to carry out what Pentagon officials have said is the most sophisticated stealth airstrike in decades. Each B-2 carried two 30,000 pound bunker buster bombs aimed at Fordow's nuclear labs hundreds of feet underground. The 14 bunker busters dropped on Fordow weighed a total of nearly 420,000 pounds combined, Pentagon chief spokesman Sean Parnell has said. 'Fake news, CNN and MSDNC, all of these terrible people, you know, they have no credibility,' Trump slammed the outlets reporting on the intel leak.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Gulf allies believe Israel is out of control after ‘reckless' war
Israel's attack on Iran risks triggering a lasting rupture with its Middle Eastern allies, Gulf Arab officials have warned. Once seen as the region's chief guarantor against the Iranian nuclear threat, Israel is now increasingly viewed as its most destabilising force after entering conflict with Tehran, which one Arab diplomat characterised as 'unforgivably reckless'. Although some officials admitted that they hoped Israel had succeeded in destroying Iran's nuclear facilities, representatives of three Gulf states have expressed alarm about its growing military dominance and Benjamin Netanyahu's willingness to wield it. Speaking on condition of anonymity, one official said: 'He appears to be beyond restraint – in Gaza, Lebanon, Syria and now Iran. 'Unchecked, uncontrollable power is no longer an asset for us. It is a problem.' Growing concern about Israel's 'destabilising' role threatens the legacy of the Abraham Accords, the series of agreements under which the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan normalised relations with Israel. Hailed as a landmark moment for Israel's integration into the Arab world after decades of hostility, the accords were Donald Trump 's signature foreign policy achievement in his first term. US officials had hoped Saudi Arabia would eventually follow suit but expectations have dwindled since Israel's war in Gaza, which drew sharp denunciations from Riyadh. Gulf states were drawn to the accords partly because they enabled them to forge a united front against Iran. Tehran's nuclear ambitions, missile development and sponsorship of proxy militias were seen as the region's primary threat. The accords also facilitated intelligence sharing and military cooperation at a time when Washington seemed to be disengaging from the region. That Israel now risks replacing Iran as the chief source of instability is an irony. It reflects rising anxiety over what Gulf states, which have preferred to seek a diplomatic solution with Iran, increasingly see as Israel's boundless military ambition.


The Independent
2 hours ago
- The Independent
Trump admin officials release ‘new intelligence' claiming Iran's nuclear program set back ‘years'
President Donald Trump 's administration released 'new intelligence' on Wednesday claiming Iran 's nuclear program has been set back 'years.' The new information comes after a leaked early assessment suggested military strikes on three Iranian nuclear facilities over the weekend only set the country's nuclear program back by mere months. The preliminary assessment, which was first reported by CNN, contradicted Trump's claims that the U.S. 'obliterated' Iran's nuclear program. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt called the assessment 'flat-out wrong' in a statement to CNN. 'The leaking of this alleged assessment is a clear attempt to demean President Trump, and discredit the brave fighter pilots who conducted a perfectly executed mission to obliterate Iran's nuclear program,' Leavitt said. CNN's story was quickly matched by several other reputable news outlets and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth revealed Wednesday the intelligence assessment did exist. CIA Director John Ratcliffe and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard have since announced what they claim is new information revealing further damage to Iran's nuclear program. 'CIA can confirm that a body of credible intelligence indicates Iran's Nuclear Program has been severely damaged by the recent, targeted strikes,' Ratcliffe said in a statement Wednesday. He continued: "This includes new intelligence from a historically reliable and accurate source/method that several key Iranian nuclear facilities were destroyed and would have to be rebuilt over the course of years.' Gabbard also took to X to share the 'new intelligence,' which she says confirms what Trump 'has stated numerous times: Iran's nuclear facilities have been destroyed. If the Iranians chose to rebuild, they would have to rebuild all three facilities (Natanz, Fordow, Esfahan) entirely, which would likely take years to do.' The national intelligence director then criticized what she called the 'propaganda media,' claiming it 'selectively release[d] portions of illegally leaked classified intelligence assessments (intentionally leaving out the fact that the assessment was written with 'low confidence').' Following the leak, the Trump administration has planned to limit the sharing of classified intelligence with Congress, Axios reported, citing four unnamed sources. The move comes as several top national security officials are set to brief senators on classified materials Thursday, according to The Washington Post. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, CIA Director John Ratcliffe and General Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, will be at the meeting, the Post reported, citing Trump officials. Gabbard will not be in attendance. The Post previously reported that Gabbard and Hegseth are not part of a small group of officials that Trump has turned to as key advisers on the Israel-Iran conflict, which spokespeople for the Cabinet members have denied. The publication cited current and former U.S. officials as well as people close to the Trump administration in its reporting.