
Trump demands CNN fire reporter for Iran intel assessment that White House confirmed is real
Donald Trump is just not going to let this go anytime soon.
Despite his administration confirming that an American intelligence assessment on the effectiveness of last weekend's airstrikes on three key Iranian nuclear facilities is indeed real, the president took to his social media platform on Wednesday afternoon and demanded CNN terminate the reporter who broke the story.
'Natasha Bertrand should be FIRED from CNN!' Trump exclaimed on Truth Social. 'I watched her for three days doing Fake News. She should be IMMEDIATELY reprimanded, and then thrown out 'like a dog'.'
After claiming that Bertrand falsely reported other stories, the media-bashing president went on to claim that the CNN correspondent 'lied about the Nuclear Sites Story' before accusing her of demeaning American troops with her reporting – an allegation he made earlier in the day about CNN as a whole.
'She lied on the Laptop from Hell Story, and now she lied on the Nuclear Sites Story, attempting to destroy our Patriot Pilots by making them look bad when, in fact, they did a GREAT job and hit 'pay dirt' — TOTAL OBLITERATION!' Trump added.
'She should not be allowed to work at Fake News CNN,' he concluded. 'It's people like her who destroyed the reputation of a once great Network. Her slant was so obviously negative, besides, she doesn't have what it takes to be an on camera correspondent, not even close. FIRE NATASHA!'
While the president and other senior members of his administration have railed against CNN's story, which was quickly matched by several other reputable news outlets, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth revealed on Wednesday that the intelligence assessment did exist. And that he was currently trying to find those who had leaked it to the media.
'We are doing a leak investigation with the FBI now, because this information is for internal purposes — battle damage investigation — and CNN and others are trying to spin it to try and make the president look bad when this was an overwhelming success,' Hegseth told reporters at the NATO summit in The Hague, standing beside Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
Hegseth went on to insist that the assessment, which suggests that the bombing raid may have only set Iran's nuclear program back a few months, was just a 'preliminary' and 'low-confidence' report about the damage caused and should not be seen as conclusive.
Since launching 'Operation Midnight Hammer' on Saturday evening, which led to an on-again/off-again ceasefire between Iran and Israel, the president has crowed that the airstrikes were an 'overwhelming success' that resulted in Tehran's uranium enrichment capabilities being 'completely and totally obliterated.'
However, almost immediately, national security and energy experts raised doubts that the bunker-busting bombs and Tomahawk missiles had fully decimated the deep underground facilities, adding that the Iranian government likely moved much of its enriched uranium before the bombings.
With the president already irate over cable news and broadcast networks airing skepticism over his claims that he had fully wiped out Iran's nuclear program, he grew even angrier on Tuesday after CNN reported on the battle damage assessment by the Defense Intelligence Agency, the Pentagon's intelligence arm.
'FAKE NEWS CNN, TOGETHER WITH THE FAILING NEW YORK TIMES, HAVE TEAMED UP IN AN ATTEMPT TO DEMEAN ONE OF THE MOST SUCCESSFUL MILITARY STRIKES IN HISTORY,' the president blared in an all-caps post. 'THE NUCLEAR SITES IN IRAN ARE COMPLETELY DESTROYED! BOTH THE TIMES AND CNN ARE GETTING SLAMMED BY THE PUBLIC!'
Still, even as the president and his top aides were slamming the media over its reports on the assessment, which noted that Trump's claims of a complete obliteration of Iran's nuclear facilities were overstated, the White House acknowledged that the report existed while adding that they disagreed with it.
'This alleged assessment is flat-out wrong and was classified as 'top secret' but was still leaked to CNN by an anonymous, low-level loser in the intelligence community,' White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told CNN. 'The leaking of this alleged assessment is a clear attempt to demean President Trump, and discredit the brave fighter pilots who conducted a perfectly executed mission to obliterate Iran's nuclear program. Everyone knows what happens when you drop fourteen 30,000 pound bombs perfectly on their targets: total obliteration.'
Besides trying to refute an assessment that they admit is real as 'fake news' while they simultaneously look to prosecute those who leaked it, the administration has also taken to accusing CNN of hating the troops for even reporting on it.
A day after calling the network 'scum' for its coverage of the airstrikes on Iran, he continued to seethe at CNN – which he has relentlessly attacked for years – while claiming they had 'demeaned' the United States military. 'I just want to thank our pilots. You know, they were maligned and treated very bad, demeaned by fake news CNN,' he fumed on Wednesday.
'I first want to just address what was very blatantly manipulative from President Trump and Pete Hegseth, the defense secretary, saying that because of our reporting and other reporting about the preliminary US intel assessment, that is in some way disparaging members of the military involved in this mission,' CNN anchor Pamela Brown responded after Trump wrapped up his NATO press conference.
'That is false,' she added. 'That is absolutely false, and that is a straw man argument.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
24 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Zohran Mamdani has unleashed a political earthquake
The surprise electoral success of Zohran Mamdani, the 33-year-old democratic socialist running to be mayor of New York, most prominent city on Earth, is a political earthquake. The breadth and scope of his performance were predicted by no polls, no prognosticators, none of the wise men. The ramifications of this upset will be felt for years, across the US and the developed world. In the end, it wasn't even close. Mamdani's widespread appeal represents the total collapse of a Democratic party establishment that had weathered Donald Trump's first term with rhetorical resistance, and fumbled the beginning of the second with triangulating appeasement. This year, the favorability of the Democratic party has collapsed to record lows, not because of the popularity of the Trump administration or the Republican party, but because of its unpopularity with its own voters. Chuck Schumer caving to the president on an unpopular and devastating Republican spending bill was the last straw for many. The Democratic party and the resistance to Trump had been severed for the first time. There's anger across the country with its leadership, Democratic and Republican, in cities, suburbs, and rural areas. According to Americans, things are not going well. Prices are up, wages are down, and instability is at an all-time high. Nowhere is this more true than in our biggest city, New York, where the moderate Democratic mayor Eric Adams made a quid pro quo deal to keep himself out of prison on corruption charges in exchange for enforcing Trump's policies in a city where Trump had minimal political support. Enter Mamdani. Many major cities in the US, in recent years, had a two-party system, not between Democrats and Republicans, but between centrist Democrats and their progressive flank. The US, like all polities, has many organized political groupings, but due to byzantine electoral laws, only two official ones exist - the state-administered ballot lines. Nowhere is this more true than in New York, the crown jewel of the electoral socialist left in the United States for more than a century. Mamdani is the progeny of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), the US's largest socialist organization in a century. He is among the many young people inspired by Bernie Sanders' 2016 presidential campaign. The staying power of that campaign has asserted itself over the years. Most of the talented organizers and thinkers whom it shaped were in college or their early 20s. They were never going to stop being socialists. They just needed seasoning. Mamdani got involved in DSA as a young man and honed his skills leading campaigns in the nearly all-volunteer organization. He has spent most of his adult life as a DSA organizer. After New York City DSA had built sufficient infrastructure and he had learned the necessary skills, he was able to win election to the state assembly in 2020. But to Mamdani, democratic socialism isn't an identity or a set of principles. It is being part of and accountable to a democratic organization, the sort of working-class civil society that has atrophied in this country, but at one time built the backbone of the welfare state across western society and lent the muscle to the New Deal. Mamdani and DSA cannot be separated. It's a different, and for many Americans new, but a deeply old way of thinking about politics. Political organizations represent different classes, which are necessarily in conflict. To win for your class, you must be a representative of working-class democracy. Mamdani was built by DSA and the young leftwing milieu that emerged after the Sanders campaign. They cannot be separated. Not his charisma or campaign style. He is a product of the movement. His victory and its comprehensive level are shocking to nearly all. How did he do it? Combining new and old tactics. Mamdani had perhaps the most innovative social media campaign in American political history. Not jumping on tired memes, but showcasing his authenticity. He also borrowed old tactics. Mamdani harnessed the sort of retail diaspora politics that have always won in the world's most diverse city. He campaigned in dozens of languages, met leaders from ethnic groups from around the world, and sold his vision in the style of Fiorello LaGuardia. This way, he was able to harness both the insurgent left, often caricatured as downwardly mobile, overly educated, and overwhelmingly white, and the worldwide working-class diaspora that shapes the neighborhoods of New York. As he climbed the polls through steady mass organization, almost linearly, he began to face ever-increasing, and horrifying, attacks from capital and the powers that be, to the tune of a record $25m in outside spending. The one they honed in on was one that had been proven to take down leftwing leaders across the world, like Jeremy Corbyn: antisemitism. All social justice-minded people are horrified by antisemitism, an ancient hatred. It's an accusation that would make anyone on the left, anyone of conscience, take notice. For this reason, used in a spurious way, it was an insidious attack that could break the left. However, in this election, the baseless smear backfired. There are several reasons for this. The first is overuse. It's quite blatant to continually accuse obviously deeply compassionate and humanistic people of an evil hatred without evidence. No one believes friendly and understanding social democrats in a secular urban milieu are pogromists or jihadists (despite nasty Islamophobic baiting about Mamdani's background), for obvious reasons. The second is the actual circumstances. Most accusations of antisemitism on the left have little or nothing to do with actual overt discrimination or hatred; they are almost entirely based on opinion of the state of Israel. As Israel continues its genocide of Palestinians and long-term eliminationist and revenchist ambitions, and ties itself closer to the far right in the US, Democratic voters in the US have made the rapid and historic transition to sympathizing with Palestinians over Israel by a nearly 3-1 margin. Even last year, this issue and money could win Democratic primaries. No longer. Lastly, Mamdani is in many ways a continuation of the Jewish left tradition in the United States. New York has long been the home of the most powerful electoral socialist left in the United States. The base for the Socialist party of America or the American Labor party, many time electoral winners, was the Jewish community. Jews in New York voted in the hundreds of thousands for socialists for decades. These are the same policies of so-called 'sewer socialism' (in which socialists ran cities like Milwaukee and boasted of excellent sewer systems), the same parties (DSA being the direct inheritor of the SPA), the same tradition, and even the same neighborhoods as a century ago. The foundation of the American left. An unbroken line. Mamdani is the inheritor of the tradition of Baruch Vladeck, and of the socialists and trade unions that built New York. Even the membership of DSA and the staff of his campaign reflect this. So, how did Mamdani win support? He brought back class as the defining issue of politics. Class as a political divide has declined across the industrialized world for decades, beginning in the US. While Sanders reinjected a class message and a degree of class polarization back within the Democratic coalition, there were still shortcomings. Bernie did worse among black voters across class. And Bernie and other democratic socialists relied heavily on the good graces of socially progressive upper-middle-class professionals, rendering socialists subordinate to or in coalition with their interests and organizations. After nearly a decade of work by the left, this class polarization seemed uncrackable. Until now. Mamdani underachieved prior leftwing candidates in professional progressive areas like the Upper West Side. But he smashed through the racial barrier that had divided the working class. Few expected this before the votes rolled in. His base would be downwardly mobile white professionals, of course. But his clear message and innovative campaign brought back real class politics, of the kind that seemed a myth in the contemporary age. According to the New York Times, Mamdani did better with voters of color than with white voters. While he shed reliably progressive votes among the Times-reading, machine-hating liberals of Manhattan, he won them back many times over among working-class people of color who had never taken a second look at leftist candidates before. In this, he reversed nearly 30 years of anti-materialist political science theories. This may seem like something confined to New York City, a progressive bastion in a deep blue state. But it points a path forward for the left and for advocates of social justice and liberatory politics. Donald Trump's most shocking and profound gains in 2024 came among young voters, particularly men, Latino voters, Asian voters, and urban voters in general. These are the exact demographics that came out in droves for Mamdani. The left has long shirked its responsibility to fight the far right, leaving it to the center as if the political spectrum were a rigorously enforced line rather than a fluid concept. But the center failed. And they sacrificed these demographics to Trump because these masses were fed up with the status quo. The center could never win them back. But the radical left actually could, through a targeted, economic, anti-establishment message. Mamdani's campaign did it, and brought people back from the far right on a massive scale, more than any anti-Trump rally could. In this way, campaigns like Mamdani's are actively practicing anti-fascism in a real way, by winning the targets of the Right back to the left. The left needs to study this shocking election and take thorough notes. The first is that Mamdani was a product of real, organic, working-class organization in DSA. The kind that has been dying out in this country for half a century and is disregarded by most. This lack of organization is the defining feature of our political time. The only way to the future is more people in DSA, more people in unions, more people in civic organizations, and the rebuilding of working class community. Our institutions are hollow, but Mamdani and his 50,000 youthful volunteers are proof that they can be rebuilt, and that people yearn to do so. In 2017, a DSA organizer and philosopher named Michael Kinnucan said: 'US civic culture is so hollowed out at the grassroots level that in any city in the US if your organization can get 40-50 committed people in a room occasionally you're probably operating one of the five or six most potentially powerful grassroots organizations in your city.' This idea was foundational to DSA, especially in New York City, and shaped Mamdani. For many, it seemed a fantasy. Five hundred thousand votes later, across nearly every language and nationality in the world, it's a warning. To defeat the right, the left must learn from Mamdani and DSA and rebuild mass working class organization. Sure, charisma helps, but at its core, this win was an eight-year project that must be replicated everywhere if we are to defeat fascism and stop the worst horrors of climate change. Mamdani is an Obama-level political talent, but most of all he is a call to return to real working class organization. This is something the hollow entities of the Democratic or Republican parties could never defeat, and something they learned Tuesday night. Ben Davis works in political data in Washington DC. He worked on the data team for the Bernie Sanders 2020 campaign


The Independent
34 minutes ago
- The Independent
White House posts cringe-worthy ‘Daddy's Home' video after NATO chief clarifies comments
The White House has welcomed President Donald Trump back from Wednesday's NATO summit in the Netherlands with a cringe-inducing social media video set to the 2010 song 'Hey Daddy (Daddy's Home)' by Usher. The clip, a montage of Trump stepping out of Air Force One back on American soil followed by choice scenes from the summit, is a reference to NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte jokingly nicknaming the president 'daddy' during their sitdown yesterday. The pair had been discussing the Israel - Iran conflict and the swift collapse of the ceasefire Trump had hailed as marking the end of the '12 Day War' after the two sides accused each other of violating its terms. 'They've had it,' Trump said. 'They've got a big fight, like two kids in a schoolyard. You know, they fight like hell. You can't stop them, let them fight for two, three minutes, then it's easier to stop them…' Rutte interjected: 'And then daddy has to, sometimes, use strong language.' The Dutchman was referring to the president's comments on the White House South Lawn a day earlier, when he had angrily told the press that neither Israel nor Iran 'knows what the f*** they're doing.' Trump responded by chuckling and adding: 'Strong language, yeah, every once and a while.' The president was later asked about the nickname and whether it implied he saw other countries as 'children,' causing Secretary of State Marco Rubio, standing behind him, to crack up uncontrollably. 'He likes me. If he doesn't, I'll let you know, I'll come back, and I'll hit him hard,' Trump responded. 'He did it very affectionately. 'Daddy, you're my daddy.'' Rutte later clarified that he was trying to compare the president's relationship with Europe to that of a father with his family. 'What I said is that sometimes, in Europe, I hear sometimes countries saying, 'Hey, Mark, will the U.S. stay with us?' And I said that sounds a little bit like a small child asking his daddy, 'Hey, are you still staying with the family?'' This is not the first time the billionaire real estate tycoon and father of five has been referred to as 'daddy'. In the final weeks of last year's presidential race, conservative pundit Tucker Carlson, with whom Trump has recently fallen out over the Iran intervention, gave an incredibly disturbing address on the Republican's behalf at a rally in Duluth, Georgia, in which he likened the United States to a 'bad little girl' in need of a 'vigorous spanking.' 'There has to be a point at which dad comes home,' Carlson told his audience, referring to Trump. 'Yeah, that's right. Dad comes home. And he's p***ed. Dad is p***ed. And when dad gets home, you know what he says? 'You've been a bad girl. You've been a bad little girl and you're getting a vigorous spanking right now. You're getting a vigorous spanking because you've been a bad girl. And it has to be this way.'' MSNBC analyst Chris Hayes reacted to Carlson's creepy analogy by observing: 'The Republican Party is now very much explicitly running on a campaign of male dominion. Trump's your daddy.'


The Independent
38 minutes ago
- The Independent
Trump vows to save Netanyahu from ‘witch-hunt' corruption trial
Donald Trump pledged to save Benjamin Netanyahu from the Israeli prime minister's corruption trial, calling it a "witch-hunt." Trump claimed Netanyahu is a "great hero" and "warrior" facing politically motivated charges, urging the trial's cancellation or a pardon. Netanyahu is currently undergoing cross-examination in a trial where he faces charges of bribery, fraud, and breach of trust, all of which he denies. Trump said the United States would intervene to save Netanyahu, drawing a parallel to how the US supposedly saved Israel from conflict with Iran. The charges against Netanyahu stem from three criminal cases, including allegations of illicitly receiving expensive gifts and attempting to influence media coverage.