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The Latest: US inserts itself into Israel-Iran war and strikes 3 Iranian nuclear sites

The Latest: US inserts itself into Israel-Iran war and strikes 3 Iranian nuclear sites

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The U.S. military struck three sites in Iran early Sunday, inserting itself into Israel's effort to destroy Iran's nuclear program in a risky gambit to weaken a longtime foe.
The decision to directly involve the U.S. comes after more than a week of strikes by Israel on Iran that have moved to systematically eradicate the country's air defenses and offensive missile capabilities, while damaging its nuclear enrichment facilities.
But U.S. and Israeli officials have said that American stealth bombers and a 30,000-pound (13,600-kilogram) bunker buster bomb they alone can carry offered the best chance of destroying heavily fortified sites connected to the Iranian nuclear program buried deep underground.
President Donald Trump announced the strikes. Iran's state-run IRNA news agency reported that attacks targeted the country's Fordo, Isfahan and Natanz nuclear sites. The agency did not elaborate. Iran's foreign minister said Iran reserves the right to retaliate.
Here is the latest:
UK is focused on de-escalation but also sent equipment to protect its interests
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said his focus was on curbing the war and negotiating a solution, as he warned of escalation spreading beyond the Middle East.
Starmer would not say whether the U.K. would be drawn into the war if Iran targets U.S. bases, but said it was moving military equipment into the area to protect its interests, people and allies.
'I'm not going to speculate about what may happen, because all of my focus is on de-escalation,' he said.
The U.K. has sent additional Typhoon fighter jets and Voyager tankers to Cyprus since the Israel-Iran war started more than a week ago. Iran had threatened to attack U.S., French and British bases in the region if those countries helped Israel.
Vance says he isn't worried about a 'protracted conflict' with Iran
U.S. Vice President JD Vance says America has 'no interest in boots on the ground' in Iran, saying that he doesn't believe the strikes on three Iranian nuclear sites would lead to a wider war.
'We have no interest in boots on the ground,' Vance said Sunday on NBC's 'Meet the Press.' 'I don't fear that this is going to become a protracted conflict.'
Vance still stressed that there is a chance for Iran to engage in talks about its future, saying that the attacks created the environment for a 'reset' of relations.
'We want to end their nuclear program and then we want to talk to the Iranians about a long-term settlement here,' Vance said. 'This a reset. This is an opportunity for the Iranians to take the smart path. We certainly hope that they will.'
Vance presses Iran to 'go down the path of peace'
U.S. Vice President JD Vance says that the U.S. 'didn't blow up' diplomacy with its attack on Iranian nuclear sites.
He told NBC's 'Meet the Press' on Sunday that talks over Iran's rapidly advancing nuclear program were never given a real chance by Tehran.
'And our hope … is that this maybe can reset here. The Iranians can go down the path of peace or they can go down the path of this ridiculous brinksmanship of funding terrorism, of trying to build a nuclear weapon and that's just not something the United States can accept,' Vance said.
He reiterated that the U.S. wasn't at war with Iran, has no interest in a protracted conflict or boots on the ground. Vance says he felt 'very confident that we've substantially delayed their development of a nuclear weapon,' and it would be 'many, many years' before Iran could develop a nuclear weapon.
BA cancels flights to the UAE and Qatar
British Airways canceled flights on Sunday from London to the United Arab Emirates and Qatar after the U.S. attacked Iran's nuclear facilities.
All flights from Heathrow Airport to Dubai and Doha were canceled for the day. The airline diverted a Dubai-bound airliner Saturday night to Zurich. Flight BA109 was turned around after reaching Saudi Arabia, the airline said.
The airline said it was offering flexible rebooking for customers scheduled to fly to the two cities through Tuesday.
Hegseth says US intervention in Israel's war with Iran is not open-ended
In concluding his briefing, the U.S. defense chief attempted to once again reiterate an unwillingness for America's intervention in Iran to turn into a protracted war and labeled the overnight strikes as 'intentionally limited.'
'I would just say, as the president has directed and made clear, this is most certainly not open-ended,' Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said, adding that it doesn't limit U.S. ability to respond and it will do so if necessary.
'The most powerful military in the world is postured and prepared to defend our people,' Hegseth said.
A Pentagon-provided map shows the path of B-2 bombers
A Pentagon-provided map of the flight path taken by B-2 stealth bombers indicates that their approach to Iran took them over the Mediterranean and then over Israel, Jordan and Iraq.
It is not immediately clear when those three countries were made aware of the flights. Israel has said the U.S. strikes were carried out in coordination with its military. The U.S. said the strikes did not involve Israeli jets.
The Pentagon released the map to journalists as it gave details of the mission, which it described as causing 'extremely severe damage and destruction' to three Iranian nuclear sites.
US and Iranian officials say both countries are exchanging messages
Hours after Iran's top diplomat disclosed that the line of communication between Washington and Tehran remains open, U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth echoed his remarks in a press conference.
'I can only confirm that there are both public and private messages being directly delivered to the Iranians in multiple channels, giving them every opportunity to come to the table,' Hegseth said.
US military increases protective measures for US troops in the Middle East
As the U.S. and the region await Iran's response to the overnight strikes, Hegseth said that military generals have elevated force protection measures across the region, especially in Iraq, Syria, and the Persian Gulf.
'Our forces remain on high alert and are fully postured to respond to any Iranian retaliation or proxy attacks, which would be an incredibly poor choice,' Hegseth told reporters.
A maritime center warns of risks to US-linked ships
A Mideast-based maritime center overseen by the U.S. military warned Sunday that there's a 'high' risk to U.S.-associated ships after the American strikes on Iranian nuclear sites.
'The threat to U.S.-associated commercial shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden is currently assessed as HIGH,' the Joint Maritime Information Center, which is overseen by the U.S. Navy, wrote in an advisory to shippers.
'This categorization follows U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities and Houthi rhetoric directly targeting the U.S.-associated maritime assets,' it said. Yemen's Houthi rebels on Saturday said they would attack U.S.-associated ships if America attacked Iran.
Pentagon stresses that 'regime change' was not goal of Iranian strike
The Trump administration said that its attack on three Iranian nuclear facilities was not about toppling the country's government.
'This mission was not and has not been about regime change,' Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said at a Sunday news briefing.
Air Force Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, stressed that the goal of 'Operation Midnight Hammer' had destroyed the nuclear sites in Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan.
'Final battle damage will take some time, but initial battle damage assessments indicate that all three sites sustained extremely severe damage and destruction,' Caine said.
Hegseth says US military used decoys and deception in Iran attack
U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said Sunday that despite a surprise attack overnight on Iranian nuclear sites, America 'does not seek war.'
Hegseth said it was important to note that U.S. strikes did not target Iranian troops or the Iranian people, a veiled effort to indicate to Iran that they don't want retaliation on American targets in the region.
Hegseth said that a choice to move a number of B-2 bombers from their base in Missouri earlier Saturday was meant to be a decoy to throw off Iranians.
He added that the U.S. used other methods of deception as well, deploying fighters to protect the B-2 bombers that dropped 14 bunker-buster bombs on Iran's most powerful nuclear site. He said that all of these tactics helped the U.S. drop the bombs without tipping off Iran's fighter jets or its air missile systems.
Iranian president condemns US strikes
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian on Sunday condemned the U.S. attacks on three Iranian nuclear sites.
'This aggression showed that the United States is the primary instigator of the Zionist regime's hostile actions against the Islamic Republic of Iran,' Pezeshkian said Sunday. 'Although they initially tried to deny their role, after our armed forces' decisive and deterrent response and the Zionist regime's clear incapacity, they were inevitably forced to enter the field themselves.'
Pezeshkian urged the public to come together in the face of the attacks from Israel and the U.S.
Explosions heard in Bushehr, home to Iran's only nuclear plant
Explosions boomed Sunday afternoon in the Iranian port city of Bushehr, three semiofficial Iranian media outlets reported. It was not immediately clear what caused the blasts.
Bushehr is home to Iran's only nuclear power plant, which is run with Russian assistance. Iranian authorities have not reported any problem at the plant.
Meanwhile, explosions also struck the city of Yazd in central Iran, with some suggesting it came from Israeli airstrikes targeting a power plant and a military garrison.
Gaza medics report 51 Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes in last 24 hours
The Gaza Health Ministry says hospitals have received the bodies of 51 people killed by Israeli strikes over the past 24 hours. Another 104 have been wounded.
The new deaths brought the toll from the Israel-Hamas war to 55,959 since Oct. 7, 2023, the ministry said. Another 131,242 have been wounded. The ministry does not differentiate between civilians and combatants, but says more than half of the dead were women and children.
Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted 251 people in the Oct. 7 attack. More than half the hostages have been returned in ceasefire agreements or other deals, eight have been rescued alive and Israeli forces have recovered dozens of bodies.
Israel assessing damage from US strikes on Iranian nuclear sites
Israeli military spokesperson Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin said Israel was still assessing damage from U.S. strikes on Iran's nuclear sites.
At a press briefing, Defrin was asked whether enriched material had been removed from the Fordo site before the U.S. strike, and he replied that it was too early to know. Defrin said the strikes were carried out in coordination with the Israeli military.
France 'has learned with concern' about US strikes in Iran
The French foreign minister says his country did not take part in the U.S. strikes against Iran's nuclear facilities.
Jean-Noel Barrot said in a message on social media on Sunday that France 'has learned with concern' of the U.S. military action against three nuclear sites.
'It was neither involved in these strikes nor in their planning,' Barrot said, adding that France 'urges the parties to show restraint in order to avoid any escalation that could lead to an extension of the conflict.'
Barrot also reiterated France's opposition to Iran gaining access to nuclear weapons. 'France is convinced that a lasting solution to this issue requires a negotiated solution within the framework of the Non-Proliferation Treaty,' he said. 'It remains ready to contribute to this in conjunction with its partners.'
Iran's top diplomat says he'll meet Putin in Moscow on Sunday
Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, responding to a question from a Russian outlet, said he'll travel to Moscow later on Sunday to meet with President Vladimir Putin, after the U.S. struck Iranian nuclear sites.
'We enjoy a strategic partnership and we always consult with each other and coordinate our positions,' he said, referring to Russia.
Iran's foreign minister says diplomacy not an option after US strikes
'The warmongering and a lawless administration in Washington is solely and fully responsible for the dangerous consequences and far reaching implications of its act of aggression,' Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said in a news briefing at a conference in Turkey.
Araghchi said while the 'door to diplomacy' should always be open, 'this is not the case right now.
Araghchi said that there is 'no red line' that the U.S. has not crossed in its recent actions against the Islamic Republic.
'And the last one and the most dangerous one was what happened only last night when they crossed a very big red line by attacking nuclear facilities only,' he said.
Head of the Red Cross says 'the world cannot absorb limitless war'
The head of the International Committee of the Red Cross has warned that the escalation in the Middle East risks 'engulfing the region — and the world — in a war with irreversible consequences.'
'The world cannot absorb limitless war. Upholding international humanitarian law is not a choice — it is an obligation,' Mirjana Spoljaric said in a statement.
Images show damage on the mountainside at Iran's underground nuclear site at Fordo
Satellite images taken Sunday analyzed by The Associated Press show damage on the mountainside at Iran's underground nuclear site at Fordo after U.S. airstrikes targeted the facility.
The images by Planet Labs PBC show the once-brown mountain had parts turned gray and its contours appeared slightly different than in previous images, suggesting a blast threw up debris around the site. That suggests the use of specialized American bunker buster bombs on the facility. Light gray smoke also hung in the air.
Iran has yet to offer a damage assessment of the site.
Other satellite images suggest Iran before the strike sealed up its tunnel entrances at Fordo.
___
This entry has been corrected to show Iran likely sealed up the tunnel entries to Fordo before the Sunday strike by the U.S.
Iran's top diplomat throws cold water on calls to return to diplomacy with the US
Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi posted on X that the U.S. strikes overnight have blown up any possibility of diplomacy with the Americans or Europeans.
'Last week, we were in negotiations with the US when Israel decided to blow up that diplomacy. This week, we held talks with the E3/EU when the US decided to blow up that diplomacy,' Araghchi wrote on X. 'What conclusion would you draw?'
He added that British and European Union comments for Iran to 'return' to the negotiating table is unfeasible now. 'But how can Iran return to something it never left, let alone blew up?' he said.
Britain was notified in advance of US strikes on Iran
Cabinet minister Jonathan Reynolds told Sky News that Britain was notified as a key ally, though he didn't know the actual timing. He said the U.S. did not ask for support and Britain was not involved.
'Whilst the British government, the U.K., has not been involved in these attacks, we have been making extensive preparations for all eventualities,' Reynolds said.
He said the government was working on how to look after British nationals as well as its military bases, personnel and infrastructure in the region.
Bahrain warns drivers to stay off main roads after US strikes in Iran
Showing the growing concern in the Gulf Arab states, the island kingdom of Bahrain issued a notice Sunday to drivers to stay off main roads if possible.
Bahrain's Interior Ministry wrote on X: 'In light of recent developments in the regional security situation, we urge citizens and residents to use main roads only when necessary, to maintain public safety and to allow the relevant authorities to use the roads efficiently.'
Authorities also said they activated work-from-home protocols for some 70% of the country's government workers.
Bahrain is home to the U.S. Navy's Mideast-based 5th Fleet and long been a threatened target of Iran.
Israel says it took out 2 of Iran's F-5 fighter jets
Israel says it hit the aircraft at Iran's Dezful airport. The F-5s are part of Iran's aging fleet of fighter jets from the era of the shah. Israel released black-and-white footage showing one of the aircrafts being destroyed.
Israel previously hit F-14 Tomcats flown by the Iranian military in the war. However, it isn't clear if these aircraft were airworthy as many have been grounded over the years due to a lack of parts.
Israel also said it struck other sites, including around Isfahan's airport. Iran has not acknowledged losses of aircraft or other materiel in the war so far.
Meanwhile, Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard said it launched 40 missiles, including its Khorramshahr-4, during the attack on Israel on Sunday morning. Iran has said the Khorramshahr-4 can carry multiple warheads.
Israel gives latest number of its injured
The Israeli Health Ministry says Iranian attacks overnight and into Sunday have wounded more than 80 people.
The vast majority, more than 70, were lightly wounded, it said.
Israeli strikes on Gaza kill 4, health officials say
A hospital in central Gaza says it received the bodies of four people who were killed in an Israeli airstrike on Sunday in the Nuseirat refugee camp.
The Awda hospital said it also received 22 people wounded in an Israeli attack on a gathering waiting for aid trucks south of Wadi Gaza area.
Meanwhile, aid group World Central Kitchen said it resumed cooking and distribution of hot meals in Gaza on Saturday, the first time after six weeks of a forced hiatus.
The chief of the UN nuclear watchdog says he'll convene an emergency meeting on Monday
The head of U.N.'s nuclear watchdog posted on X that given the U.S. intervention in the Israel-Iran war, he will be convening an emergency meeting of the Board of Governors on Monday.
Rafael Grossi, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, has been the target of much Iranian criticism in recent days for what they describe as conflicting statements that incited Israel's initial attack.
The Associated Press

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We will talk with Secretary of State Marco Rubio, plus Virginia Democratic Senator Tim Kaine and two House members with very different political ideologies united now when it comes to U.S. intervention in a war between Iran and Israel. All this and more is just ahead on Face the Nation. Good morning, and welcome to Face the Nation. Following the U.S. bombing of three nuclear sites in Iran yesterday, Trump administration officials are breathing a sigh of relief that the highly classified bombing mission appears to have gone off without a hitch. But there is also concern now about what happens next when it comes to Iran. Operation Midnight Hammer involved top secret planning and a head fake, as two strike forces of B-2 bombers departed the U.S. flying in opposite directions late Friday night. On Saturday, defense officials confirmed to CBS News that there were in fact B-2s headed to Guam, flying west from their home in Missouri. But those were decoys. 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What intelligence do you have at this point about their capabilities to respond, the intent of their proxies? Is there any kind of command-and- control structure left to activate them? MARCO RUBIO (U.S. Secretary of State): Yes, well, we will see what Iran decides to do. I think they should choose the route of peace. We have been – we have done everything. We have bent over backwards, OK, to create a deal with these people. Steve Witkoff has traveled the world extensively, met with them – well, not even met with them, met through the Omanis with them and discussed back and forth. We even put an offer to them that they wanted elements of it in writing. And we offered it to them, a very generous offer, by the way. We have done every – and we're prepared right now. If they call right now and say, we want to meet, let's talk about this, we're prepared to do that. The president's made that clear from the very beginning. His preference is to deal with this issue diplomatically. But he also told them we had 60 days to make progress or something else was going to happen. And I think they thought they were dealing with a different kind of leader, like the kinds of leaders they have been playing games with for the last 30 or 40 years. And they found out that's not the case. So this mission was a very precise mission. It had three objectives, three nuclear sites. It was not an attack on Iran. It was not an attack on the Iranian people. This wasn't a regime change move. This was designed to degrade and/or destroy three nuclear sites related to their nuclear weaponization ambitions. And that was delivered on yesterday. What happens next will now depend on what Iran chooses to do next. If they choose the path of diplomacy, we're ready. We can do a deal that's good for them, the Iranian people and good for the world. MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: If they choose another route, then there will be consequences for that. MARGARET BRENNAN: Let me follow up on a phrase you just word – weaponization ambitions. Are you saying there that the United States did not see intelligence that the supreme leader had ordered weaponization? SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: That's irrelevant. I see that question being asked in the media all the time. That's an irrelevant question. They have everything they need to build a weapon. MARGARET BRENNAN: No, but that is the key point in U.S. intelligence assessments. You know that. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: No, it's not. MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes, it was. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: No, it's not. MARGARET BRENNAN: That the political decision had not been made. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: No, I know – well, I know that better than you know that. And I know that that's not the case. MARGARET BRENNAN: But I'm asking you whether the order was given. (CROSSTALK) SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: You don't know what you're talking about. And the people who say that – it doesn't matter if the order was given. They have everything they need to build nuclear weapons. Why would you bury – why would you bury things in a mountain 300 feet under the ground? MARGARET BRENNAN: Right. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Why would you bury six – why do they have 60 percent enriched uranium? You don't need 60 percent enriched uranium. The only countries in the world that have uranium at 60 percent are countries that have nuclear weapons… MARGARET BRENNAN: Right. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: … because they can quickly make it 90. They have all the elements. They have – why are they – why do they have a space program? Is Iran going to go to the moon? No. They're trying to build an ICBM, so they can one day put a warhead on it. MARGARET BRENNAN: No, but that's a question – that's a question – that's a question of intent. And you know, in the intelligence assessment, that it was that Iran wanted to be a threshold state and use this leverage. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: How do you know what the intelligence assessment says? How do you know what the intelligence assessment says? MARGARET BRENNAN: I'm talking about the public March assessment. And that's why I was asking you if you know something more from March, if an order was given. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Well, that – but that's also an inaccurate representation of it. That's an inaccurate representation of it. That's not how intelligence is read. That's not how intelligence is used. Here's what the whole world knows. Forget about intelligence, what the IAEA knows. They are enriching uranium well beyond anything you need for a… MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: … for a civil nuclear program. So why would you enrich uranium at 60 percent… MARGARET BRENNAN: Right. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: … if you don't intend to one day use it to take it to 90 and build a weapon? MARGARET BRENNAN: Right. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Why are you – why are you developing ICBMs? Why do you have 8,000 short-range missiles and 2,000 to 3,000 long – mid-range missiles that you continue to develop? Why do you do all these things? MARGARET BRENNAN: Understood. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: They have everything they need for a nuclear weapon. MARGARET BRENNAN: OK. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: They have the delivery mechanisms. They have the enrichment capability. They have the highly enriched uranium that is stored. MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: That's all we need to see… MARGARET BRENNAN: Right. Well, and that's – so it was the… SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: … especially in the hands of a regime that's already involved in terrorism and proxies and all kinds of things that are on – they are the source of all instability in the Middle East. MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. And no one's disputing – no one's disputing that. I'm not doing that here. And they were censured at the IAEA for that enrichment and for violating their nonproliferation agreements. I was simply asking if we had intelligence that there was an order to weaponize, because you have said weaponization ambitions, which implies they weren't doing it. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Well, we have intelligence that they have everything they need to build a nuclear weapon. MARGARET BRENNAN: Got it. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: And that's more than enough. MARGARET BRENNAN: OK. Can – I want to ask you, on the policy front, there are personnel throughout the Middle East from the United States in Bahrain, in Kuwait, and other bases. If those countries are attacked by Iran because of their association with the United States, will the United States defend them? SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Well, that's exactly why they're there. That's a great point, actually. Do you know why we have bases in Bahrain and Qatar and UAE and in all these places? All of those bases are there because those countries are afraid that Iran will attack them. If Iran was not a threat to the region, if the Iranian regime – because let me be clear, I'm talking about the Iranian people. If the regime was not a threat to the region, we wouldn't have to have any of these bases. Those bases are there because those countries are petrified that these – that the Iranian Shia clerics that run that country will attack their country. MARGARET BRENNAN: Will the United States defend them if they are? SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: As you know, they've got a very difficult history. Well, that's why we're there. That's why we're there. MARGARET BRENNAN: So, yes, we will defend them? SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: But they'll attack us, is what they're threatening to do. So we'll defend our people, obviously. We'll defend our people. Well, they'll attack our bases. And those are our bases, and we're going to defend our personnel. We're prepared to do that. But we'll do more than just defend. We'll impose costs on Iran if they attack American personnel, whether they do it directly, or whether they do it through some of these proxies that they try to hide behind. And that includes the Houthis, so… MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Another proxy of theirs. So – but let's hope they don't choose that route. Let's all hope that they actually decide, OK, let's go negotiate, because we want a diplomatic and peaceful solution. We have achieved our objectives. We're ready to negotiate this in a peaceful, in a diplomatic way. We've been prepared to do that for days. They are the ones that played games… MARGARET BRENNAN: OK. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: … as they have done for 40 years, as they have done to multiple presidents. They tried to play games with President Trump, and they see what happens. This is not a game-playing president. MARGARET BRENNAN: I… SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: When he says he's going to do something, he will do it. MARGARET BRENNAN: I hear you saying here you want to de-escalate when you are talking about diplomacy. You are looking for Iran to pick up that offer that was put on the table you mentioned by Steve Witkoff. Can you just clarify, does that mean the U.S. would still allow for Iran to have a civilian nuclear program if it does not enrich on its own soil? SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: But that – but that's never been an issue. There's countries all over the world that have a civil nuclear program. No one here is saying that Iran can't… MARGARET BRENNAN: But that's still the offer on the table? SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Sure. That's always been there. MARGARET BRENNAN: OK. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Any country in the world has a right to have a civil nuclear program. What they don't have a right to do is to enrich it at 60 percent, hide it under a mountain… MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: … and develop long-range and short-range and mid- range missiles and sponsor terrorist proxies all over the world. They don't have a right to do that, and that's what they've been doing. And no one's dealt with it, and it's continued to linger. And they've played games with multiple presidents and multiple countries around the world, and they've gotten away with it for 40-something years. This is very simple. The president wants to resolve this diplomatically and peacefully. He gave them a chance to do that. They delayed. They had all these kind of delay tactics. They wouldn't even meet with us directly. We had to go through third countries. MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: This is very simple. Let's meet directly. Let's work on agreements that we can – that are good for Iran, good for the Iranian people, in particular, good for the safety and security of the world and the United States. That's always been our preference. That continues to be our preference. But they're the ones that were playing games with this. And these are the consequences. We had to achieve those objectives. We had three objectives yesterday, Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan. We conducted a brilliant military operation under the command of President Trump, and obviously great credit to Secretary Hegseth and General Kurilla and General Caine and all of our - - all the airmen and phenomenal people in the U.S. military. No other military in the world could have done this. We achieved those objectives. MARGARET BRENNAN: No. It was astounding. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: What happens next is up to the regime, OK? MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: The regime wants peace, we're ready for peace. MARGARET BRENNAN: OK. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: They want to do something else, they're incredibly vulnerable. They can't even protect their own airspace. MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, clearly. Clearly, they could not. But what is the U.S. assessment of how much nuclear material at those sites was moved prior to the attack? There has been talk for days about bombing of Fordow. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Well, look, we – we don't – no one will know for sure for days, but I doubt they moved it, because you really can't move anything right now, and they can't move anything right now inside of Iran. I mean, the minute a truck starts driving somewhere, the Israelis have seen it, and they've targeted it and taken it out. So our assessment is, we have to assume that that's a lot of 60 percent enriched uranium buried deep under the ground there in Isfahan. And that really is the key. What they should do with that is, they should bring it out of the ground and turn it over. Multiple countries around the world will take it and down-blend it. That's what they should do with that. And what they should do is say, we're not going to have any enrichment capability in our country. Instead, what we're going to have is a civil nuclear program, like dozens of countries around the world have, where we build reactors that create electricity and we import enriched material. And we've made very generous – I'm not going to get into all the details of the offers. MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: But there are other avenues here that would be acceptable to them, if that's what they wanted. If what they want is a civil, peaceful nuclear program, the route has always been there. The problem is that everything they're demanding has nothing to do with a peaceful program. They are all the things you would want if you want to retain the option of one day weaponizing the program… MARGARET BRENNAN: OK. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: … which has been their clear intent. To me, that's indisputable. I have followed this issue for 15 years… MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: … including the intelligence on it for 15 years, OK? I have followed it. And the intelligence, these are assessments, and sometimes they've been wrong. I have seen them revised multiple times. These guys want a nuclear weapon one day. They do. MARGARET BRENNAN: OK, to that point… SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: And it isn't going to happen, not while Donald Trump is president. MARGARET BRENNAN: Understood. You've said this is not about regime change, but you are describing a regime that you have said for decades, I mean, for upwards of 40 years, has chanted "Death to America," has done all the things you just described. Isn't a diplomatic deal with them a lifeline? Aren't you offering to negotiate with the same people you're saying did all these things? So, therefore, are you actually looking for regime change? SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: But that's not the point. Well, that misses the point. I don't like that they chant those things. But one thing is that they chant those things. Another thing is that they chant those things, and they have terror proxies are all over the world, and they have long-range missiles that can reach the United States one day, and they have the potential to be one step away from a nuclear weapon. MARGARET BRENNAN: One day. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Yes, well one day could be tomorrow. Could be a week from now. Could be a month from now. MARGARET BRENNAN: Do… SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: You know, all it takes is the flip of a switch. By the way, they're not going to broadcast that to the world. MARGARET BRENNAN: So… SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: By the time we figure out that they're doing it, you have all the pieces in place. OK?. MARGARET BRENNAN: So are there still targets you want to hit? SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: It's like you have a loaded – a gun here and the ammunition. It only takes one second. We have other targets that we could hit, but we achieved our objective. The primary targets we were interested in are the ones that were struck tonight in devastating fashion,the ones that were struck, I guess, yes, tonight over there their time, in devastating fashion. And we've achieved that objective. There are no planned military operations right now against Iran unless, unless they mess around and they attack American or American interests. Then they're going to have a problem. Then they're going to have a problem. And I'm not going to broadcast what those problems are. MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: But suffice it to say, know this. The United States flew halfway around the world, right into the heart of Iran, over their most sensitive locations. These things got rocked. MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: And then we left, and we were out of their airspace, we were over the ocean before they figured out what had happened. MARGARET BRENNAN: Understood. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: And there are plenty of other targets. We don't want to do that. That's not our preference. We want peace deals with them, and that's up to them to decide. MARGARET BRENNAN: You said defend American interests. Would the United States military take action to keep, for example, the transit point the Strait of Hormuz open? If there are attacks on oil installations, would the United States consider that a direct act by the state, even if it was carried out by a militia? SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Well, I'm not going to take options away from the president. That's not something we're talking about right now in terms of being immediate. But if they do that, the first people that should be angry about it are the Chinese government, because they take – a lot of their oil comes through there. So they should be the first ones that are saying, if they mine the Straits of Hormuz, the Chinese are going to pay a huge price and every other country in the world is going to pay a huge price. We will too. It will have some impact on us. It will have a lot more impact on the rest of the world, a lot more impact on the rest of the world. That would be a suicidal move on their part, because I think the – the whole world would come against them if they did that. MARGARET BRENNAN: Will the Chinese and Russians stop trading with Iran? SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: You have to ask the Chinese and the Russians. MARGARET BRENNAN: You haven't' asked them? SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Probably not. I mean, they're getting – you know, they're – well, the Russians are getting a bunch of these – you know, these drones that they're using are coming from Iran. MARGARET BRENNAN: Exactly. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: They're coming from Iran. So I saw the foreign minister, instead of meeting with Steve Witkoff, is headed to Moscow to meet with Putin, which was a prescheduled meeting, which is fine. You know, they can go meet. And you the – the Russians, at the end of the day, I mean, they buy drones from them. But, look, this is very simple. They – we want to have an agreement with them, a diplomatic agreement, in which they have a civil nuclear program, but are not enriching and don't have weapons-grade material or weapons- grade capabilities laying around. It's that simple. MARGARET BRENNAN: But they're… SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: That's our interest here. MARGARET BRENNAN: Understood. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Who they trade with, who they deal with, those are other topics. Our objective here is very straightforward. They're not going to have a nuclear weapon. They're not even going to get close to a nuclear weapon. They're not even going to be in the neighborhood of a nuclear weapon, because these people are dangerous. This is the radical Shia clerics who run that country. MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: And they are the source of all instability in the region, all of it. MARGARET BRENNAN: And you're offering to negotiate with them. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Without this regime, there is no Hamas, there is no Hezbollah. Well, because we don't want them to have a nuclear weapon. MARGARET BRENNAN: OK, but let me – but… SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: But that's the core objective. But the – no, no, but I'm going through the things they've done, because that's why they can't have a nuclear weapon, OK? They sponsor Shias. MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes, I'm just trying to… SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: I'm sorry. They sponsor these Shia militias, Hamas, Hezbollah, all these other terrorist groups. These people aren't getting – are never going to get anywhere close to a nuclear weapon, not while Donald Trump is president. MARGARET BRENNAN: For the Americans – for the Americans at home who are going, are we at war, you know, I'm trying to suss out some of the facts here. So why would – why would Iran agree to any peace deal if the United States has already pulled out of one that they had, as President Trump did in 2018, and now launched two surprise attacks? Both Israel and the United States have done so. There is such a massive trust deficit there. How could you possibly come to an agreement? SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Yes, but the trust deficit started with Iran. MARGARET BRENNAN: I know. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Well, the trust deficit – the ones that shouldn't be trusted are the Iranians, because they're the ones that sponsor terrorism. Did they forewarn us before they blew up the embassy in Lebanon and killed over 200 American servicemen? Did they forewarn us before they built IEDs and blew the legs and arms off of American servicemen in Iraq? I mean, these are the people that are doing this forever. They're the ones that no one should trust. They're the ones that have lied about their nuclear program. They're the ones that have hidden things from the international organisms. MARGARET BRENNAN: But that sounds – all sounds like we're – but that all sounds like we're headed towards regime change or the desire to get these people out of power. Are you… SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: No, but – no, no, no, no, no. No, a serious foreign policy is one that's focused on identifying what our national interest is. You don't have to like the regime. There are a lot of regimes around the world that we don't like, OK? But, in this particular case, what we are focused on is not the changing of the regime, OK? That's up to the Iranian people if they want to do that, but that's not what we're focused on. Our national interest is about one thing, and that is Iran not getting anywhere near the capability to weaponize and have nuclear weapons. They're not going to get anywhere near that capability. The president has made that clear from day one. Our preference for solving that problem, that very specific problem… MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: … is through diplomacy. We've said that. We've given it every opportunity. They played games. They tried delay tactics. They're trying delay tactics now on the Europeans because of the snapback provisions. MARGARET BRENNAN: When did the president make this… SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: And you talked about the JCPOA. That was a crazy deal. MARGARET BRENNAN: When did the president make this decision? Because he said he was giving two more weeks of diplomacy on Friday, and, on Friday, these jets took off. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: Well, the president retains the opportunity to pull out of this at any moment, including 10 minutes before. But the president ordered options. The president – look, the decision, in my view, was made when he wrote a letter to the supreme leader and he said over the next 60 days we want to do a deal with you and solve this problem of nuclear weaponization and we want to do it peacefully. MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. OK. SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: If, after 60 days, we don't see progress or it isn't solved, we have other alternatives. He made that very clear. MARGARET BRENNAN: All right, Mr. Secretary… SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: I think what some people struggling with here is that we today have a president who does what he says he's going to do, and that's what happened here. MARGARET BRENNAN: Mr. Secretary… SECRETARY MARCO RUBIO: And, hopefully, the Iranian regime got that message. MARGARET BRENNAN: … we're going to hit a commercial break, so I have to wrap you there. Thank you very much for your time. We will be back in a minute. (ANNOUNCEMENTS) MARGARET BRENNAN: We're back now with two reports from the region. Debora Patta is in Tel Aviv. (Begin VT) BENJAMIN NETANYAHU (Israeli Prime Minister): Your bold decision to target Iran's nuclear facilities with the awesome and righteous might of the United States will change history. DEBORA PATTA (voice-over): It's mission accomplished, according to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who congratulated President Trump for the overnight strikes on Iran. (SIRENS BLARING) DEBORA PATTA: Two hours later, Iran retaliated with a barrage of at least 30 ballistic missiles. At least three broke through. Buildings were reduced to rubble in Haifa and here in Tel Aviv. This scene has been cordoned off after a direct hit from Iran's retaliatory strike, some of the worst damage in this area. The missile decimated an apartment block and homes in this neighborhood, but there were no fatalities. Israel has said its main goal was to destroy Iran's nuclear capability. As world attention is diverted to Iran, Gaza is sinking into an even greater catastrophe, with the Hamas-run Health Ministry reporting over 200 deaths in the past 48 hours alone. The injured wait to be treated on hospital floors. Children's screams fill the emergency rooms. (SCREAMING) DEBORA PATTA: Gaza remains stuck in a bloody limbo of misery and death. (End VT) DEBORA PATTA: Israel remains on high alert. Most of the country is shut down, and only essential services are permitted to operate. MARGARET BRENNAN: Thank you, Debora Patta, in Tel Aviv. We go to Erbil, Iraq, with Holly Williams. HOLLY WILLIAMS: Iran's foreign minister said this morning that the U.S. has committed a grave violation of international law and Iran has to respond. Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, warned last week that any U.S. military intervention would be met with irreparable harm. It's thought that he is now in hiding in a bunker. Now, U.S. military bases here in the Middle East are obvious targets for Iranian retaliation, and they are scattered across this region, along with around 40,000 American troops. A second carrier strike group is on its way to the Middle East to boost U.S. firepower. It is widely thought that Israel did not have the firepower to target the Fordow nuclear site, where Iran's been enriching uranium and which is buried inside a mountain. But now that the U.S. has bombed it, the question is, what comes next? One outcome is that Iran capitulates and agrees to give up its nuclear program. But another outcome is that Iran may be more motivated than ever before to develop nuclear weapons to protect itself from further attack. One Iranian lawmaker posted on social media overnight, apparently speaking to that possibility, saying – quote – "Knowledge cannot be bombed." MARGARET BRENNAN: That's Holly Williams in Iraq. We will be right back. (ANNOUNCEMENTS) MARGARET BRENNAN: Coming up next, we will be talking with two of the most vocal critics of the U.S. engaging in foreign conflict, especially without congressional authorization. But these two are very far apart when it comes to the political spectrum. California Democrat Ro Khanna and Kentucky Republican Thomas Massie are standing by, and we will bring you that conversation in a moment. (ANNOUNCEMENTS) MARGARET BRENNAN: And we will be back with more. Stay with us. (ANNOUNCEMENTS) MARGARET BRENNAN: Welcome back to FACE THE NATION. Democratic Ro Khanna joins us from San Francisco, and here in studio is Kentucky Republican Thomas Massie. And good morning to both of you gentlemen. I'll start with you, Congressman Massie. You know, I know – this is an unlikely pairing. You are on completely different ends of the political spectrum, but you both worked on this war powers resolution to prohibit U.S. forces from engage in hostilities against Iran without authorization from Congress. The president just blew right past that. REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS MASSIE (R-KY): Well, you know, I think I represent part of the coalition that elected President Trump. We were tired of endless wars in the Middle East, and tired of wars in east – eastern Europe, and we were promised that we would put our veterans, our immigration policies and our infrastructure first. And so what Ro and I did, we did this last week when, you know, they were rattling the sabers, because we saw this coming. We put forward this war powers resolution. I've teamed up with Ro Khanna before on this, to his credit, when Joe Biden was president. We tried to rein in the executive and reassert Congress' authority – soul authority to declare war and to – and to engage or authorize the engagement of acts of war. MARGARET BRENNAN: Something we talked to other lawmakers about as well in the Senate, and I know there's efforts to support you, but the speaker of the House, who is from your own party, has really rejected this. He says, "the Article One power of Congress really allows for the president to do this. It was a limited, necessary, targeted strike," he says. REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS MASSIE: Well, he's probably referring to the War Powers Act of 1973, but that's been misinterpreted. There were no imminent threat to the United States, which was what would authorize that. And I think that's peculiar to hear that from the speaker of the House. Look, Congress was on vacation last week when all this was happening. Speaker – MARGARET BRENNAN: You haven't been briefed on any of the details. REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS MASSIE: We haven't been briefed. They should have called us all back. And, frankly, we should have debated this war powers resolution that Ro Khanna and I offered, instead of staying on vacation and doing fundraisers and saying, oh, well, the president's got this under control, we're going to cede our constitutional authority. MARGARET BRENNAN: Ro Khanna, Congressman Khanna, and we didn't hear from the secretary, the explanation as to why now. We haven't heard that from anyone other than a reference to the president had a roughly 60-day timeline on diplomatic talks. But we also know he had more talks scheduled when Israel launched this attack. So, it's just – it's not exactly clear the emergency. You will be briefed, along with other members of Congress, Tuesday. What are the questions you have? REPRESENTATIVE RO KHANNA (D-CA): Well, first of all, the tragedy in this country is that we keep entering these overseas wars. We triumphantly declare the mission is accomplished the day after. And then we're left with Americans burdening the consequences for decades. Now, Thomas is absolutely right in showing courage. I mean the headlines all across this country says, the United States enters war with Iran. He is actually representing a lot of the people in the MAGA base. People like Steve Bannon, Tucker Carlson, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Theo Von, who has had them on, who is saying, we don't want this war. And I heard your interview with Secretary Rubio. He's saying, well, we want a peace deal. MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. REPRESENTATIVE RO KHANNA: We want to make sure that Iran can enrich uranium through civil purposes. Well, we had that. We had that in the JCPOA. And there was not a single violation that the IAEA found during that time. So, my question, I guess, is, now you're going to force Iran to go covertly into developing this nuclear material. Now you've put American troops at risk. Now you're wasting billions of our dollars because we're sending more troops to the Middle East. What did you accomplish, and why are you oblivious to the American people who are sick of these wars? MARGARET BRENNAN: But, Congressman, are you open to the idea that there could be intelligence that is disclosed to you in this classified setting on Tuesday that could justify this, or is any military action, in your view, you know, war? REPRESENTATIVE RO KHANNA: Well, I'm always open to new intelligence, but the procedures should have been that Congress be briefed before we decided to enter war and that we actually had a vote on it. You had Tulsi Gabbard, who just months ago, the director of intelligence, saying that was not the case. MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. REPRESENTATIVE RO KHANNA: The reality is, and – and we should just speak up, there are people who want regime change in Iran. And they are egging this president on to bomb. I hope cooler heads will prevail. We need to pass Thomas Massie and my war powers resolution to make it clear that we're not going to get further entrenched into the Middle East. MARGARET BRENNAN: And – and, Congressman Massie, it's interesting because you were talking about a part of the party you represent. The secretary of state comes from a different part of that same party, as you know. And – and I did hone in on the question about intelligence, and wat it showed. He called it an ambition to weaponize. Weaponization ambition. That's different than they're making a nuclear weapon. REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS MASSIE: Yes. MARGARET BRENNAN: But are you open to intelligence and persuasion here? REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS MASSIE: I'm open as well. But, look, in the first Iraq war, the second Iraq war, and the war in Afghanistan, Congress first got the briefings. Congress met and debated. It should have been declarations of war, but at least they did an authorization of the use of military force. We haven't had that. This has been turned upside-down, this process. MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, you heard from Mitch McConnell, the former Republican leader, the Senator, saying it was a bad week for the isolationists. He was talking about Tucker Carlson and he was talking about Steve Bannon. Do you think that the president is making a choice here, or is he trying to have it both ways? Both saying, I'm going to please the hawks of the party by bombing, but them I'm going to say I want a peace deal and make the isolationists happy by saying, you know, I'm not committing to anything more than one and done? REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS MASSIE: Well, I'll concede this, it was a good week for the neocons in the military industrial complex who want war all the time. I wouldn't call my side of the MAGA base isolationists. We are – we are exhausted. We are tired from all of these wars. And we're non- interventionists. I mean this is what – this was one of the promises. I mean are you going to call President Trump's campaign an isolationist campaign? What he promised us was, we would put America first. And I – and I think there are still voices in this administration, you've still got J.D. Vance, you've still got Tulsi Gabbard, you've still – RFK Jr., you've still got calmer heads that could prevail. MARGARET BRENNAN: They were not persuasive in this case, clearly. REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS MASSIE: Well, somebody was persuasive. APAC is very persuasive, for instance, the Israeli lobby in Congress. If you – if you look at my colleagues' feeds now, there's – they all look the same. They're all tweeting the same message, that we've got to support Israel and we've got to do this. My question is, does, you know, three bombings and we're done with Iran's nuclear ambitions – MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS MASSIE: Is that the two weeks to slow the spread of 2025? Is this, you know, we were told two weeks to slow the spread then. Now we're told it's just going to take three bombings. MARGARET BRENNAN: So – REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS MASSIE: But what happens when Israel gets bombed again? Is – is Trump going to sit by and say, no, we're not going to further engage in this war? MARGARET BRENNAN: I tried to get answers from the secretary on that question. But when you say the pro-Israel lobby, APAC, do you see a difference between Israel's interests and American interests? REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS MASSIE: Absolutely. Yes. I mean, look, the – Iran – the reality is, they don't have a missile that can reach the United States. They're not near to getting a missile that can reach the United States. I think this – what has happened, what has transpired this week has been planned for months. That – that, you know, this administration, and maybe even the administration prior to that, said, you go in and soften them up, take out their air defense capabilities, and then we'll send in the big bombers. MARGARET BRENNAN: So, Congressman Khanna, you – I know you have raised objections on this program in the past about Israel's operations in Gaza, for how it has conducted that war against Hamas. That was a different context. But now you very well may be asked to provide more weaponry to Israel to defend itself. Do you oppose that as well? REPRESENTATIVE RO KHANNA: Well, first, let me just say that it's a totally unfair smear to call people isolationists. The vast majority of Americans who don't world war and want diplomacy. Diplomacy and engagement is not isolationism. But, look, on Israel, I have supported aid and support defensively. And even the war powers resolution says that if Iran is striking Israel, they – you – we can provide defense so that Israel isn't hit. MARGARET BRENNAN: Got it. REPRESENTATIVE RO KHANNA: What I opposed was giving Israel offensive weapons to go and kill more people in Gaza, I think that war needs to end. But I think the bottom line, Margaret, is, what have we achieved here? We have – we're going to push Iran to now be like Pakistan and North Korea, go in and try to develop a nuclear bomb covertly. We have put more American troops at risk. We're going to spend more resources put – MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. REPRESENTATIVE RO KHANNA: Going and getting more entrenched in the Middle East. And we've created a generation of hate. It's like, can this country learn? MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. REPRESENTATIVE RO KHANNA: We keep voting for people for president who say we're not going to get into wars. MARGARET BRENNAN: OK. REPRESENTATIVE RO KHANNA: And then they keep getting pushed by the Washington beltway to get us into this mess. MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, Congressman Khanna, Congressman Massie, thank you. In a rare, bipartisan meeting of the minds, at least on this issue. We'll be right back. (ANNOUNCEMENTS) MARGARET BRENNAN: We go now to Democratic Senator Tim Kaine, who joins us from Richmond, Virginia. Good morning to you, Senator. SENATOR TIM KAINE (D-VA): Good morning, Margaret. MARGARET BRENNAN: I know you sit on the Armed Services Committee and the Foreign Relations Committee. But what we just heard from the Pentagon was that Congress was notified after this strike on Iran was concluded, after the U.S. jets were back and in safety. Is this sufficient? SENATOR TIM KAINE: Margaret, no. Congress needs to authorize a war against Iran. This Trump war against Iran. We have not. Congress should be consulted with it. We were not. And Congress needs to be notified, not after the fact, but in advance. We were not. That's why I filed a war powers resolution that will ripen and be brought to a vote on the floor of the Senate this week. Senator Schumer is working with Leader Thune to make that happen. The United States should not be in an offensive war against Iran without a vote of Congress. The Constitution is completely clear on it. And I am so disappointed that the president has acted so prematurely. The foreign minister of Israel said Friday night that its own bombing campaign had set the Iranian nuclear program back, quote, "at least two or three years," closed quote. There was no urgency that suggested, while diplomatic talks were underway, that the U.S. should take this unilateral action by President Trump's orders yesterday. MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, the vice president was on another network earlier this morning and said, "we are not at war with Iran. We are at war with Iran's nuclear program. There seems to be a lot of legal parsing on the definition of the word"war" here. What do you make of that description. SENATOR TIM KAINE: I think it's – it's B.S. And I think anybody hearing it would conclude the same thing. When you're – when you're bombing another nation, ask them if they think it's war. They do. Would we think it was war if Iran bombed a U.S. nuclear facility? Of course we would. And the U.S., you know, we – we've invaded two neighbors of Iran, Afghanistan and Iraq, to topple their regimes since 2000. Those were wars. This is the U.S. jumping into a war of choice at Donald Trump's urging without any compelling national security interests for the United States to act in this way, particularly without a debate and vote in Congress. We should not be sending troops and risking troops' lives in an offensive war without a debate in Congress. MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, just on the facts, though, the president has not authorized ground forces. In fact, he's said he really doesn't want to send in ground forces. When it came to what was just described to the public by the Pentagon, it was really characterized as limited in scope. It sounds like you believe those early hour descriptions are going to turn out to be false. SENATOR TIM KAINE: I do. The war powers resolution says that a member of Congress can challenge the president if the president initiates hostilities against a foreign nation. It doesn't use the – even though the – the title is war powers resolution, the statute says if you initiate hostilities without congressional authorization, even a single member of the House or Senate can force a vote on the Senate floor. There is no doubt that the U.S. sending this massive set of Tomahawk missiles and B-2 bunker-busters on three Iranian nuclear sites is hostilities. Now again, some in the Senate may say this is great and we want to vote for it. I happen to think that getting into a third offensive war in the Middle East in the last 25 years is absolutely reckless and foolish. And I'm going to be doing everything I can to convince my colleagues of that. I may or may not succeed. But Congress should have the debate and vote on this before we escalate the risk to American troops, which this action has done. MARGARET BRENNAN: We know that prior to this action Northern Command had already directed additional security measures on all U.S. military installations. You've got a lot of military installations in Virginia. What do you know about the threat to the homeland at this point? SENATOR TIM KAINE: We're going to have a briefing Tuesday, Margaret, and I'll learn more then. But what I do know, I also have a lot of Virginians deployed in the Middle East. There are about 40,000 U.S. troops deployed all over the Middle East, sailors on Navy ships in the Mediterranean and the Red Sea, folks in land bases in Syria and Iraq. And, yes, this action dramatically raises the risk to them. And the question is, for what? If the Iranian nuclear program – Vice President Vance says it's a war against their nuclear program. Of course, we had curtailed that diplomatically a few years ago until Donald Trump tore up the diplomatic deal. But even if you needed to wage war, when the Israeli foreign minister is saying we've set the nuclear program back at least two or three years. Why launch this strike, escalating risks to Americans and American troops over the weekend with no real discussion with Congress, no real debate before the American public. I don't want to be lied into another war in the way we were with Iraq in 2002. MARGARET BRENNAN: Thank you, Senator. We'll be back in a moment. (ANNOUNCEMENTS) MARGARET BRENNAN: We go now to the former commander of CENTCOM, which controls U.S. forces in the Middle East, our CBS News contributor, retired general, Frank McKenzie. Welcome back to FACE THE NATION, General. And – and your former colleagues at CENTCOM extremely busy over these last few hours. From the operation as you've heard it described, what are the questions that – that come to your mind about "Midnight Hammer" and being able to assess its success? GENERAL FRANK MCKENZIE (Former Commander of CENTCOM): So, it looks like it was a successful operation from what we know now. It will take a little while to build the battle damage assessment. And that will come out here in the next – in the days ahead and we'll get a much better picture. But I think we've done significant damage. Significant, perhaps irreversible damage to the Iranian nuclear program. I think right now, though, at CENTCOM, everyone is focused on the next step. And the next step will be, will there be an Iranian response? What will that response look like? What can we do to defend our forces, our embassies, our citizens in the region. And what options can we give the president should we choose to respond as a result of an Iranian attack? So, they're extremely busy down there right now. And what – but one of the key things they want to do is, you want to make it very clear to Iran that we possess significant combat power in the theater and will be able to use it against them should they attack us. MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, that's – that's the hope that they don't do something. Are you surprised that there has been no retaliation in the past few hours? And where would you be looking as an areas of concern? There are a lot of Americans who have family members in the region. GENERAL FRANK MCKENZIE: Absolutely, Margaret. So, for one thing, I think the Iranian decision making is a little crippled right now because of the loss of senior leaders. And as you're well aware, the Iranians don't have good succession planning. People tend to go into jobs and stay there for a long period of time while they enrich themselves and their families. So, cronyism is what – how you get to the top in their system, which is bad news if suddenly that person is no longer there. There's no one ready to step in. So, the supreme leader probably has trouble talking to people and getting his orders followed. Now, to your question about where they might strike. I think we're certainly vulnerable in Iraq. I think we're certain venerable in Syria. And I'm certain that Central Command has done all the things we need to do to harden ourselves against those potential attacks. The same for our other bases across the region. I don't know that it would be localized to the region, though. Iran has long harbored the desire to attack us in the United States. They typically have not been effective when they've done that. We've caught them in a couple of plots that are very public that you're well aware of. So, I think all those things are on the table. But it may take the Iranians a little while to work through this process because nobody's excited about going to a meeting in Iran right now. MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, you're talking about some of the intelligence actions taken by the Mossad to convene some of these leaders and then kill them all at once. When it comes to what the secretary of state said earlier in this program, I asked him specifically if the U.S. would take military action to reopen the Strait of Hormuz if Iran tried to close it. We know that's been talked about, at least in the public space in Iran right now. What would that operation look like? Rubio said they're not exactly talking about it in this moment, but they are worried about the – the Iranians mining it. GENERAL FRANK MCKENZIE: The Iranians do have the capability to mine the Strait of Hormuz. But we have very good plans to clear that if we had to do it. We work on those plans all the time. It would be a – it would be a blow to world commerce for a period of time. But at the end, the Strait would be cleared. And I'm pretty confident the Iranian navy would all be sunk at the end of that operation. MARGARET BRENNAN: So, the CIA – the former CIA director, Bob Gates, the former secretary of defense, who was on this program very recently. And I asked him about bombing the Iranian nuclear program. He said, when he had looked at it, he thought it would at best delay Iran's nuclear ambitions, not end them. You have looked at this problem set in great detail. Do you agree that military force is not enough to end the program? GENERAL FRANK MCKENZIE: Ultimately, you need a policy decision from Iran to end the nuclear program. So, I think the secretary's right in that – in that – in that position. Now, if – if you don't get a policy decision from Iran, you've got to commit yourself perhaps to revisiting striking the nuclear program as the Iranians begin to spread out and – and – and continue to pursue the nuclear option. Here's the one thing, though. We have pretty good knowledge of what goes on in Iran. And that good knowledge is going to continue. So, they're not likely to be able to do something in secret that would suddenly creep up on us. We – we – we tend to keep very close track of this. MARGARET BRENNAN: But it comes up again and again and the concern, as we were talking about with our lawmakers, this creeping towards a broader war, this creeping towards America getting drawn into a war that Israel started to take out Iran's nuclear program, I'm not asking about the intent of the state itself, but what is the end goal here? How do you judge success? Have you even heard the Israeli government, or the U.S. government, say what success is? GENERAL FRANK MCKENZIE: Well, I think we've been pretty clear that we don't want Iran to possess a nuclear weapon. They are close to possessing a nuclear weapon. I heard all the exchanges back and forth with the – the other guests on your show this morning about how close they might or might not have been. But I think that's the one absolutely non-negotiable thing here. And you can get that through an Iranian policy decision and not pursue a nuclear weapon, or you can get that through removal of that capability to such a level that they can't do it. The second case is not the preferable case, obviously. But you – but there are ways to do this. And I – the one thing I would add about the strike that occurred here over the last few hours, it was carefully crafted, narrowly designed against the nuclear program to give Iran room to maneuver, diplomatic room to maneuver, if they want to seek a way out. So, I think that was very clever. Let's see what happens. The principal goal of Iranian state craft is today, as it has always been, survival of the regime. MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. GENERAL FRANK MCKENZIE: Under certain of these scenarios, if you go forward and the war widens, I think the survival of the Iranian state is very much on the table. And that's something they're going to want to avoid, Margaret. MARGARET BRENNAN: But as you were just saying, there's – there's no clear succession plan that the U.S. knew of, at least recently, and they can't get ahold of the boss, he's in a bunker. So, how do you actually get a policy decision, and then can orders actually be given? GENERAL FRANK MCKENZIE: So, it's a – it's a very difficult time for Iran right now, I – I – I acknowledge all your points. But the – the commander (ph) remains alive, at least as far as I know, he remains alive. He's probably having trouble having meetings. He's probably having trouble getting his orders followed. But he still asserts that he's in charge, as of a couple of days ago. And we – I don't think we've made any effort to strike him, nor have the Israelis. MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes. Well, right. And CBS had been reporting that President Trump advised the Israelis not to take out the supreme leader. We'll leave it there. And we'll be right back. (ANNOUNCEMENTS) MARGARET BRENNAN: That's it for us today. Thank you all for watching. Until next week. For FACE THE NATION, I'm Margaret Brennan. (ANNOUNCEMENTS)

Investors Brace for Market Fallout From U.S. Strike on Iran Nuclear Sites
Investors Brace for Market Fallout From U.S. Strike on Iran Nuclear Sites

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Investors Brace for Market Fallout From U.S. Strike on Iran Nuclear Sites

Investors on Sunday were bracing for a flight to safety after the U.S. struck three Iranian nuclear facilities Saturday evening. "Iran's key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated,' said President Trump in a televised address on Saturday night. A full assessment of the damage is pending, 'but initial battle damage assessments indicate that all three sites sustained extremely severe damage and destruction,' said General Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, on Sunday. Investors were relatively sanguine last week as Israel and Iran exchanged missile strikes and President Trump mulled getting the U.S. involved. The major stock indexes jumped to start the week amid optimism about a diplomatic solution, but slid as the conflict dragged on and finished the week little changed. Some analysts expect a sharp sell-off when markets open on Monday as investors rush to safe havens like Treasurys and gold. "I think the markets are going to be initially alarmed," Mark Spindel, chief investment officer at Potomac River Capital, told Reuters. Cryptocurrencies, which trade 24/7, suggested Monday morning would be a rough one for risk assets. Bitcoin slid more than 2% Sunday morning to trade below $100,000 for the first time since early May, while Ethereum tumbled more than 8%. A panic on Monday could present investors with a buying opportunity, said Wedbush analysts in a note on Sunday. 'This US strike was a matter of when, not if,' they wrote. Iran's nuclear program was, "the biggest threat to the region," so if the attack has decimated that program, 'this ultimately removes an overhang on the market.' American stocks on Monday could follow the lead of Middle East equities, which were rallying on Sunday as investors bet U.S. involvement would hasten an end to the conflict. The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange 35 Index gained 1.5% and the Egyptian EGX 30 rose 2.7%. Still, oil prices are expected to jump when crude futures begin trading on U.S. exchanges Sunday evening. How Iran retaliates—if at all—will likely determine how high prices go. Analysts say surging oil prices would aggravate U.S. inflation, possibly delaying Federal Reserve rate cuts and pressuring stock valuations. Read the original article on Investopedia Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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