Trump Boasts ‘Nobody Knows What I'm Doing' as MAGA Civil War Rages
President Donald Trump has boasted that 'nobody knows what I'm doing' when it comes to Iran as a MAGA civil war rages over the prospect of a U.S. military attack.
Speaking with reporters for the first time since meeting with his national security council on Tuesday, the president refused to say whether the U.S. is moving closer to helping Israel strike Iranian nuclear facilities.
'You don't seriously think I'm going to answer that question,' Trump said, mockingly.
'Will you strike the Iranian nuclear component, and what time exactly? Sir, sir, would you strike it? Will you please inform us so we can be there and watch?
'I mean, you don't know that I'm going to even do it. You don't know. I may do it; I may not do it. I mean, nobody knows what I'm going to do.'
Trump's comments come as a MAGA civil war has been brewing for days between pro-Israel war hawks such as Laura Loomer and Mark Levin on one side, and America First firebrands such as Charlie Kirk and Jack Posobiec on the other.
Former Fox News host Tucker Carlson also entered the fray last week, calling Trump complicit and suggesting that the administration 'drop Israel [and] let them fight their own wars.'
Carlson also clashed with Texas Senator Ted Cruz this week, lashing out over Cruz's support for military intervention in Iran despite his apparent lack of knowledge about the country.
While a U.S. attack on Iran could have serious consequences for the region, Trump's rhetoric has shifted considerably in recent days, with the president admitting that his patience is wearing thin on finding a diplomatic solution to stop Iran from building its nuclear arsenal.
On Wednesday, Iran Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei hit back at the president for his 'absurd rhetoric' after Trump demanded Iran's 'complete surrender' and issued an ominous warning on X: 'The US entering this matter (war) is 100% to its own detriment. The damage will be far greater than any harm that Iran may encounter.'
But Trump doubled down on his push for Iran to surrender, telling reporters that Tehran should have negotiated weeks ago. Only now were they rethinking their strategy, he said.
'They even suggested coming to the White House,' he claimed.
A U.S. defense official told the Daily Beast it was moving the Nimitz Carrier Strike Group to the Middle East to protect U.S. forces in the region.
Vice President JD Vance also posted on X that after showing 'remarkable restraint,' Trump 'may decide he needs to take further action to end Iranian enrichment.'
As the president weighed options, some Democrats on Capitol Hill called for Congress to act.
Senator Tim Kaine introduced a resolution to prevent the U.S. from using military force against Iran without congressional approval while several others backed Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders' bill to prevent the use of funds for military force against Iran without congressional authorization.
But Democrats were deeply divided over the response to Iran. Senator John Fetterman, who has often bucked his party to fiercely defend Israel, said he would vote against Kaine's resolution.
He told reporters he was a 'hell yes' on the U.S. making preemptive strikes against Iranian nuclear facilities.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune rejected that the president would need authorization from Congress to strike Iran.
'I think right now the president's within his authorities,' Thune told reporters on Capitol Hill on Tuesday. 'He obviously has a lot of authorities as Commander in Chief to respond to incidents that happen around the world.'
Thune said if it goes on for a period of time, there would be discussions on what the role of Congress should be and whether it needed to take action.
'I think right now, let's hope and pray for the best outcome,' he said.
Senate Foreign Committee Chair Jim Risch emphasized on Tuesday 'this is not our war' and praised the president for threading the needle when it came to Iran.
While the House is not in session this week, in a rare moment of bipartisanship, Republican Rep. Thomas Massie was joined by Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna to introduce a resolution to prohibit the U.S. from getting involved in the conflict.
'This is not our war,' Massie wrote in a post. 'Even if it were, Congress must decide such matters according to our Constitution.'

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Newsweek
5 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Mahmoud Khalil Blasts Trump After Release: 'They Chose The Wrong Person'
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Pro-Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil has said the Trump administration "chose the wrong person for this" after he was freed from a Louisiana ICE detention center on Friday on a judge's orders. Khalil, a Syrian born former Columbia University student, was detained by federal immigration authorities on March 8 after the Department of Homeland Security alleged he was a national security threat, something he has strongly denied. Newsweek contacted the Department of Homeland Security and Columbia University for comment on Saturday via email outside of regular office hours. Why It Matters Since coming to power in January, the Trump administration has targeted foreign born university students who it claims have been involved with disruptive pro-Palestinian activism on campus, with a number having their visas revoked and being detained by ICE. Trump has sought to crack down on pro-Palestinian activism in universities more broadly following a series of Gaza solidarity camps on campuses around the country from April to July 2024. The administration moved to ban Harvard from enrolling foreign students after it rejected demands related to campus activism, though this was later blocked by a judge. What To Know Khalil was released on bail shortly before 8 p.m. ET on Friday after U.S. District Judge Michael Farbiarz concluded he is not a flight risk as he's married to a U.S. citizen, has no criminal record and a baby at home. He spent more than three months in custody after being detained in March outside his apartment on the Columbia University campus. Khalil was involved with pro-Palestinian protests at Columbia and was involved in mediating with university leaders. On June 11, Farbiarz ruled Khalil could not be detained or deported based on Secretary of State Marco Rubio's determination. However, two days later, Farbiarz said he would not order Khalil's release after the Trump administration said he committed fraud on his green card, which the former student's legal team then appealed. Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil speaking after his release from federal immigration detention on Friday, June 20, 2025. Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil speaking after his release from federal immigration detention on Friday, June 20, 2025. Matthew Hinton/AP Speaking to reporters after his release, Khalil said: "Hundreds of men who I left behind me shouldn't have been there in the first place. The Trump administration are doing their best to dehumanize everyone here whether you are a U.S. citizen, an immigrant, or just a person on this land doesn't mean you are less of a human." Asked by a reporter from The Guardian whether he had any message for the Trump administration, Khalil replied: "Trump and his administration they chose the wrong person for this. That doesn't mean that there is a right person for this. "There's no right person who should be detained for protesting a genocide, for protesting their university, Columbia University, that is investing in the genocide of the Palestinian people so this is my message." Khalil added that after returning home he would "hug my wife and son," stating he'd only been allowed to spend one hour with his son under supervised conditions whilst in detention. What People Are Saying DHS told Newsweek via email in a statement: "This is yet another example of how out of control members of the judicial branch are undermining national security. Their conduct not only denies the result of the 2024 election, it also does great harm to our constitutional system by undermining public confidence in the courts." Dr. Noor Abdalla, Mahmoud Khalil's wife, in a statement: "After more than three months we can finally breathe a sigh of relief and known that Mahmoud is on his way home to me and Deen, who never should have been separated from his father." Alina Das, one of Khalil's attorneys and co-director of the Immigrant Rights Clinic at New York University School of Law, in a statement: "No one should fear being jailed for speaking out in this country. We are overjoyed that Mr. Khalil will finally be reunited with his family while we continue to fight his case in court." What Happens Next Despite his release, the legal case against Khalil remains open and he could still face deportation from the U.S. if the Trump administration wins its case. For now Khalil has regained his green card and will be allowed to travel to visit family in New York and Michigan, for court hearings in Louisiana and New Jersey and for lobbying in Washington, D.C.


CNN
10 minutes ago
- CNN
June 20, 2025 – Israel-Iran conflict
Update: Date: Title: Content: Our live coverage of the escalating conflict between Israel and Iran has moved here. Update: Date: Title: There's 'no question' the US will be dragged into a regional war if it strikes Iran, former CIA director says Content: There is 'no question' the United States would be plunged into a regional war if it strikes Iran, former CIA director Leon Panetta told CNN. The former head of the intelligence agency said the US made a 'terrible mistake' by going into Iraq two decades ago, starting a war that lasted years. 'It's a lesson that the president needs to learn, because if he goes in and attacks Iran, then there's no question that the United States would be in a regional war at that point,' Panetta told CNN's Kaitlan Collins. Panetta, also a former defense secretary, warned that Iran is bound to retaliate. 'So make no mistake about it. It may be an airstrike, but it would definitely involve the United States in a war with [Iran],' he said. Update: Date: Title: Explosions heard in Isfahan, Iranian state media says Content: Explosions have been heard in the central Iranian city of Isfahan, Iranian state media reports. The news comes shortly after the Israel Defense Forces said it had begun a new wave of attacks in Iran. Semi-official news agency Fars reported that the air defense system in the city had been activated. Isfahan is the home of Iran's largest nuclear research complex, which has been previously targeted by Israeli strikes. Update: Date: Title: 2 killed in strike on residential building in Qom, Iranian state media reports Content: A strike on a residential building in the central Iranian city of Qom killed two people and injured four others on Saturday, according to reports from state media. The strike, which hit the building's fourth floor, was reported shortly after the Israel Defense Forces said it had begun a new wave of attacks in Iran. The holy city of Qom is close to Iran's secretive Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant. One of those killed was a 16-year-old, according to a statement from Morteza Heydari, spokesman for the Qom Provincial Administration, made to Iranian media. Video geolocated by CNN shows impact damage to a building in southwestern Qom. In the video a fire can be seen burning on the upper floors of a multistory building. At the same time, semi-official Nour News reported air defenses were active over the capital Tehran, 130 kilometers (80 miles) to the north. Update: Date: Title: Video shows building on fire in Holon after latest Iranian strikes on Israel Content: Video released by Israel's national emergency services showed a building on fire in the city of Holon, near commercial hub Tel Aviv, following Iran's latest missile strikes on the country. Israeli fire and rescue services confirmed in a statement on Telegram that they were working to extinguish a blaze on the roof of a three-story building in Gush Dan, the wider metropolitan area around Tel Aviv, which includes Holon. The statement did not specify the city. The fire was caused by shrapnel after a missile was intercepted, according to the statement. Emergency agency Magen David Adom said no injuries were reported. Update: Date: Title: Israel says it has begun a new wave of attacks in Iran Content: Israel has begun a new wave of attacks in Iran, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said Saturday, local time. 'The Air Force has now begun a wave of attacks against missile storage and launch infrastructure in central Iran,' the IDF said in a statement. Update: Date: Title: Iran files complaint with United Nations against nuclear watchdog chief Content: Iran has filed a complaint with the United Nations secretary-general and president of the Security Council against Rafael Grossi, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). In his letter, Iranian UN ambassador Amir Saeid Iravani took issue with Grossi's 'approach regarding Iran's peaceful nuclear activities' and what he said was a 'failure' to condemn Israel's military action, according to the semi-official Iranian news outlet Fars News. The complaint comes after Mohammad Eslami, the head of Iran's atomic energy agency, on Thursday threatened legal action against Grossi for alleged 'inaction' during Israel's attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities. That threat came after Israel attacked Iran's Arak nuclear facility in overnight strikes. 'It is necessary to fulfil your constitutional duties by immediately ending this inaction and condemning these actions of the Zionist regime that are contrary to international regulations,' Eslami's letter read, according to Fars, adding that Iran 'will pursue appropriate legal measures, especially in relation to the inactions taken by your Excellency.' The IAEA head said later on Thursday that the agency was continuing to 'closely monitor and assess the situation regarding the Israeli attacks on nuclear sites' in Iran and that inspectors will remain in the country, ready to be deployed to nuclear sites when possible. Update: Date: Title: Israel and Iran's UN ambassadors vow to keep fighting Content: Both Iran and Israel's UN ambassadors say that their countries will continue to fight during a tense United Nations Security Council meeting. Both Iran and Israel's UN ambassadors say that their countries will continue to fight during a tense UN Security Council meeting. #cnn #news You can also watch the video on YouTube Shorts here. Update: Date: Title: Israeli military identifies missiles launched from Iran and tells public to shelter Content: Israel's military said it identified missiles launched from Iran and that defense systems are working to intercept them. The military called on the public to 'enter a protected space' and stay there until further notice. Leaving is only allowed after an 'explicit directive,' the military statement added. In a separate statement the military said it is working to intercept and 'strike where necessary to eliminate the threat.' Update: Date: Title: Gabbard says testimony on Iran intelligence taken "out of context" to sow division with Trump Content: Hours after President Donald Trump said publicly that Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard was 'wrong' in her assessment of Iran's efforts on obtaining a nuclear weapon, Gabbard asserted on X that media outlets were unfairly sowing division between her and Trump. 'The dishonest media is intentionally taking my testimony out of context and spreading fake news as a way to manufacture division,' Gabbard said in a post to social media that highlighted video of her prior testimony on the issue on Capitol Hill. She continued, '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. President Trump has been clear that can't happen, and I agree.' What she testified: On Capitol Hill in March, Gabbard had testified that the US intelligence community 'continues to assess that Iran is not building a nuclear weapon, and Supreme Leader Khamenei has not authorized the nuclear weapons program that he suspended in 2003.' More context: CNN has previously reported that US intelligence assessed Iran was up to three years away from being able to produce and deliver a nuclear weapon to a target of its choosing, according to four people familiar with the assessment. The International Atomic Energy Agency, a top international watchdog, said last week that Iran had amassed enough uranium enriched at levels just below weapons-grade to potentially make nine nuclear bombs, which it termed 'a matter of serious concern.' The challenge for Iran is producing not merely a crude nuclear weapon — which experts say Iran could potentially do within the space of months if it decided to — but also producing a working delivery system, which could take much longer. Update: Date: Title: Hundreds of Americans have fled Iran and others face difficulties leaving as Trump weighs US military action Content: Hundreds of Americans have fled Iran as the conflict with Israel has escalated, an internal State Department report said. The detail in the Friday situation report underscores that US citizens in Iran are at risk as President Donald Trump weighs US military action. The exact number of Americans in Iran is not known, and the State Department does not require US citizens to register their presence abroad. Unlike in Israel, where the US is working to establish transportation options out of the country for the estimated hundreds of thousands of Americans there, no such options are available for US citizens in Iran. The US does not have a diplomatic presence there. 'We do not anticipate offering direct US government assisted departure from Iran,' State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce noted at a press briefing Friday. The situation report described some Americans facing difficulties leaving Iran. 'Security alerts also note Americans seeking to depart should be prepared to encounter checkpoints and questioning from authorities,' the report states. 'Numerous US citizens have described delays and harassment along their exit route.' The report also notes that two Americans were reportedly detained while attempting to depart the country. One source trying to get a US citizen family member out of Iran expressed frustration at the State Department earlier this week, saying the agency seemed to defer everything to seemingly overwhelmed US embassies. This person wanted to see the department apply more pressure to Iran's neighboring countries to approve Americans' entrance. They also suggested dispatching embassy officials closer to the Iranian border to help. Update: Date: Title: Local hospitals report 33 injuries after Iranian strike on Haifa Content: A total of 33 people were physically injured by an Iranian strike on Haifa in northern Israel Friday, according to figures shared with CNN by local hospitals. One person is in serious condition and two others are in moderate condition after the attack, the city's Rambam hospital said. A further 16 mildly injured patients were treated at Rambam, it said. A spokesperson for the Bnai Zion Medical Center in Haifa said that it admitted 14 people in 'light condition' after the strike. According to a Friday update by Israel's emergency services, 685 people have been taken to the hospital with physical injuries since Israel began its 'Rising Lion' operation last week and Iran retaliated with its own missile strikes. Of those, 643 people were 'lightly injured,' Magen David Adom (MDA) said in a statement. A total of 24 people have been killed in Israel since the conflict began last week, MDA said. Update: Date: Title: Trump tells reporters they're in danger while discussing potential Iran retaliation Content: President Donald Trump warned reporters they were personally in danger as he discussed possible Iranian retaliation on Americans stemming from the conflict with Israel. When asked by a reporter whether he would expect Iran to launch attacks against Americans if he ordered military action, Trump said: 'We're always concerned about that, and we have to take them out and be very strong.' 'You're even in danger, talking to me right now,' Trump said to the reporters. 'Do you know that you are in danger talking to me right now? So I should probably get out of here,' Trump added. Update: Date: Title: Iran expressed concerns about "inaction" of E3 in condemning Israel at Geneva meeting Content: Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi expressed 'concerns' about the UK, France and Germany's 'inaction' in condemning Israel's attacks when he met with their foreign ministers in Geneva on Friday, according to Iranian state-affiliated media. Iran's ISNA news agency quoted Araghchi as saying he also stressed to the ministers that Iran would continue to 'exercise its legitimate right of self defense against the Zionist regime, with the objective of stopping the aggression and preventing future recurrences.' The minister said he told his counterparts Iran's nuclear program is peaceful and remains under the supervision of the United Nations' nuclear watchdog. 'If the attacks are ceased and the aggressor is held accountable for its blatant crimes, Iran will be ready to consider diplomacy,' Araghchi said, according to ISNA. Update: Date: Title: Trump says 2-week timeframe is the "maximum" to decide on US involvement in Iran Content: President Donald Trump indicated that his two-week timeline for a decision on US military involvement in Iran is the 'maximum' amount of time — and that he could make up his mind sooner. 'I'm giving them a period of time. We're going to see what that period of time is. But I'm giving them a period of time, and I would say two weeks would be the maximum,' Trump told reporters in New Jersey. It's the president's first comments on the self-imposed deadline since his press secretary yesterday read aloud his statement setting that time frame for a diplomatic solution. Trump suggested, however, that he is not considering the possibility of US ground troops as he weighs an attack on Iran's nuclear sites. 'I'm not going to talk about ground forces. The last thing you want to do is ground forces,' he said when asked if that was on the table. He also appeared to suggest he does not believe Israel has the capacity to take out all of Iran's nuclear facilities alone: 'They really have a very limited capacity. They could break through a little section, but they can't go down very deep. They don't have that capacity. And we'll have to see what happens. Maybe it won't be necessary.' Officials and experts have suggested using the US' unique bunker-busting capabilities toward those ends. Trump also said he will 'always a peacemaker,' but 'sometimes, you need some toughness to make peace.' Update: Date: Title: "Diplomacy just for the sake of talks" will not work, Israel's UN ambassador says Content: Israel's ambassador to the United Nations struck a dismissive tone when asked about the possibility of a diplomatic breakthrough with Iran, saying 'diplomacy just for the sake of talks' would no longer work. Ambassador Danny Danon told CNN's Boris Sanchez the Iranians have been 'the masters of deception for so many years.' He added that diplomacy would not work until Iran commits to 'actually take out their capabilities, to neutralize them completely, to not enrich uranium.' 'But I'm not sure that they are there yet,' Danon said. Danon, who has described the Iranian attack that hit Israel's Soroka hospital as a war crime, was asked about his response to those who argue Israel has committed war crimes by striking hospitals in Gaza. 'You cannot make that equation because, you know, we chased terrorists and we allow people to evacuate those places,' he said. The ambassador said Israel gives civilians advance notice, including in Iran, and that the military tries to 'minimize civilian casualties.' Update: Date: Title: Trump says Gabbard is "wrong" on Iran nuclear intelligence Content: President Donald Trump took direct aim at his director of national intelligence on Friday, saying Tulsi Gabbard 'is wrong' about Iran's efforts on obtaining a nuclear weapon. The comment comes as Gabbard's standing in the administration diminishes, according to sources who spoke with CNN this week. Trump was asked Friday about his intelligence community's assessment that Iran is not close to building a nuclear weapon. 'Well then, my intelligence community is wrong,' Trump told reporters in New Jersey, asking the reporter who in the intelligence community had said that. Told that it was Gabbard, Trump said, 'She's wrong.' Gabbard testified to Congress in March that Iran was not actively pursuing a nuclear weapon — a direct contradiction of Israel's claims that Iran was racing toward a bomb. More background: Though Gabbard has been among the most visible voices for the president's national security policy, she has struggled behind the scenes to carve out her own place in the Trump White House, CNN reported this week. Recently, Trump has come to see her as 'off message' when it comes to the conflict in the Middle East, according to one senior White House adviser. CNN's Katie Bo Lillis and Kristen Holmes contributed reporting to this post. Update: Date: Title: Trump said it would be "very hard" to ask Israel to end its Iran strikes as he pursues diplomacy Content: President Donald Trump said it would be difficult for him to request Israel stop its airstrikes in Iran, even as he pursues a diplomatic solution to end the conflict. 'I think it's very hard to make that request right now if somebody is winning,' the president told reporters in New Jersey, where he will attend a fundraiser at his golf course.'It's a little bit harder to do than if somebody is losing. But we're ready, willing and able. And we've been speaking to Iran and we'll see what happens,' the president said. Trump repeated a bit later that it would be a hard ask, given Israel's military successes so far. 'It's very hard to stop, when you look at it — Israel's doing well in terms of war,' he said. 'I think you would say that Iran is doing less well, it's a little bit hard to get somebody to stop.' Trump dismissed European efforts to engage diplomatically with Iran, saying they hadn't helped efforts to end the conflict. 'They didn't help,' he said. 'Iran doesn't want to speak to Europe. They want — they want to speak to us. Europe is not going to be able to help on this one.' Update: Date: Title: US State Department "can't speculate" on whether Trump will push for Iran-Israel ceasefire talks Content: US State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce said she 'can't speculate' on whether the Trump administration will press for a ceasefire between Iran and Israel to allow US-Iran nuclear talks to move forward. 'I'm not going to characterize what's happening now, or the reaction by the president or the secretary of state to what those negotiations might be,' Bruce said at a news briefing Friday. The Iranians have said that they will not return to talks with the United States until Israel stops its military strikes. Bruce reiterated that US President Donald Trump 'still holds out the hope for negotiations.' She also underscored that Iran and its proxies 'should not target US interests or personnel, and if they do, the consequences will be dire.' Update: Date: Title: Explosions rock several areas of Iran's Khuzestan province, semi-official media says Content: Israeli attacks caused explosions in several parts of the southwestern Iranian province of Khuzestan on Friday, according to Iran's semi-official Mehr News Agency. Three cities, Ahvaz, Mahshahr and Andimeshk, were targeted in the attacks, Mehr News Agency reported, though the attack on Mahshahr did not reach the city, instead causing an explosion in an area outside of it. Residential houses were damaged in the Ahvaz attack, according to the agency. An empty shed may have been the target of the attack, it said.
Yahoo
11 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Iran: Justifying 'outrageous' Israeli attacks on Iran is complicity
Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has called on the international community to condemn Israel's attacks on his country. "Any justification for this unjust and criminal war would be tantamount to complicity," the minister told the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, shortly before a planned meeting with top EU officials. The attacks were "an outrageous act of aggression by a regime that has been committing a horrible genocide in Palestine for the past two years," Araghchi said. "The world, every state, every UN mechanism and body has to be alarmed and has to act now to stop the aggressor, to end impunity, and to hold the criminals accountable for their unending atrocities and crimes in our region," he said. When it came to the possibility of negotiations, Araghchi pointed out that Iran was "attacked in the midst of an ongoing diplomatic process" with the United States. Planned talks over Iran's controversial nuclear programme were cancelled days after the conflict began. Israel says Iran was close to being able to build a nuclear bomb - a charge Iran has always denied. Araghchi referred to Israel's airstrikes targeting nuclear facilities, saying: "Our peaceful nuclear facilities have also been targeted despite despite their being under full monitoring of IAEA [International Atomic Energy Agency] and despite the fact that attacking such facilities are absolutely banned under international law." He pointed out "the danger of environmental and health catastrophe as the result of radiological leakage." According to official figures, 24 people in Israel have been killed and more than 1,200 injured by Iranian attacks since the start of the conflict between Iran and Israel. According to the US-based human rights network HRANA, more than 650 people have been killed and more than 2,000 injured in Iran as a result of the attacks. The network relies on sources on the ground and publicly accessible sources. The Iranian government itself does not publish figures on injuries and fatalities.