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Trump says US intelligence ‘wrong’ about Iran not building nuclear bomb

Trump says US intelligence ‘wrong’ about Iran not building nuclear bomb

Iranian director of national intelligence, according to Donald Trump, was “wrong” when she claimed that the nation’s suspended nuclear weapons program was not being developed and that Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei had not re-authorized the nation’s nuclear weapons program.

Trump made the comments after she again and again this week doubted Tulsi Gabbard’s March 25 report to Congress, which reiterated the assessment of the US intelligence community. Trump claimed that Iran was just beginning to develop nuclear weapons, but Trump said to reporters on Tuesday that the intelligence community’s findings were in conflict with his own assertions.

Trump went even further in his Friday speech.

What information do you have that Iran is developing nuclear weapons, asks a reporter? There is no evidence, according to your intelligence community.

The president responded, “My intelligence community is flawed. Who in the intelligence community said that?

The reporter responded, “Your DNI]director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard.”

Trump responded, “She’s wrong.

Later on Friday, Gabbard appeared to support Trump.

In a social media post, she wrote that “America has information that Iran is at the point where it can produce nuclear weapons within weeks to months.” I concur with President Trump’s statement that “it can’t happen.”

However, her earlier assertion that Iran is not developing weapons does not match that statement. Iran’s nuclear program is not being uncovered by any well-known US intelligence analysis.

According to senior political analyst Marwan Bishara, it is unusual for a US president to openly refute the country’s intelligence community, with critics accusing Trump of flagrantly disregarding evidence to support potential direct US involvement in the conflict.

Bishara asserted that “this is not just one person, one team saying something.” The United States’ entire intelligence community is involved. It’s amazing that he would dismiss them.

Trump also made an appearance on Friday, downplaying the possibility of an Iranian-Israeli ceasefire agreement, saying he “might” support it, and adding, “I think you would say Iran is doing less well in terms of war.”

“It’s challenging to make that request at this time. He continued, “It’s harder when someone is winning than when they are losing.”

Heidi Zhou Castro, a reporter for Al Jazeera, stated in a report from Washington, DC that Trump was “really making a point that he won’t try to ask Israel to stop bombing Iranian targets with its aerial bombing.”

Trump appears to be treading very directly on Israel’s side as the world moves along, and she said that even though he is giving himself two weeks’ worth of final decision, “it seems like he is very squarely on Israel’s side as things are going on.”

Trump stated on Thursday that it would take two weeks to decide how to respond to the conflict in the US. According to experts, the choice is likely to have a profound impact.

One of the few nations that can compel Israel to end its long-range regional war is the US, according to the US.

The US military’s involvement is seen as crucial to Israel’s stated goal of completely destroying Iran’s nuclear program, which includes the destruction of the underground Fordow enrichment plant.

Washington’s 30-million-pound (13, 000 kg) Massive Ordnance Penetrator and the B-2 bombers needed to deliver it would be required for a successful attack on the facility.

Trump downplayed the potential contribution of Europe to delaying the escalation in a speech to reporters on Friday. Following the meeting in Geneva of Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, top diplomats from France, the UK, Germany, and the EU,

Source: Aljazeera

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