Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, appears before the Senate Intelligence Committee during a hearing in Washington on Wednesday, March 18, 2026. Gabbard said only the president can decide what constitutes an imminent threat. (Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times)
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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has taken on many ancillary roles in Washington: chair of the Kennedy Center. The de facto chief architect of the city’s landmark properties. And now, the nation’s chief intelligence analyst.
This revelation came from Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence. She had the unenviable task at a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on Wednesday of squaring Trump’s comments about an urgent nuclear threat from Iran with a letter from one of her trusted aides that the country posed no “imminent threat.”
Her answer? Only the president can decide what is an “imminent” threat. In other words, she was turning one of the key roles of the intelligence community’s 80,000 employees — to make nonpolitical judgments about threats to American security — over to Trump.
Gabbard’s comments were necessitated by the decision of Joe Kent, her close adviser, to quit his counterterrorism position over his opposition to the war in Iran and his belief that Israel had pressured the United States into the conflict.
Democrats, long critical of Kent and his penchant for conspiracy theories, jumped on his comments about the war — creating at least a short-term communications crisis for the Trump administration. “I cannot in good conscience support the ongoing war in Iran,” Kent wrote in a letter to Trump. “Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation.”
Gabbard does not quickly turn on her allies, and she showed little desire to throw Kent under the bus or attack him. But she has remained in her position by being a careful student of Trump, and knows how to stay on his good side. And critiquing the president’s view of the threat from Iran was clearly not the way to keep your job.
So she came up with her line that it is Trump, not the intelligence community, that determines what constitutes a threat.
It was Sen. Jon Ossoff, D-Ga., who pressed Gabbard the hardest on whether there was “imminent nuclear threat posed by the Iranian regime.”
“Yes or no?” he demanded.
Gabbard was ready with an answer. “It is not a responsibility of the intelligence community to determine what is or is not an imminent threat,” she said.
The senator, speaking over Gabbard, rejected the answer: “It is precisely your responsibility to determine what constitutes a threat to the United States.”
In fact, while the president has broad authority to interpret intelligence any way he deems proper, Ossoff was right: At the National Intelligence University, which trains the intelligence agencies’ future leaders, there is a large body of literature about the art and science of providing warning (although Gabbard has ordered the university merged with another government school).
John Ratcliffe, the CIA director who has no love lost for Kent, chose a different tactic in answering questions about the threat posed by Iran.
“I think Iran has been a constant threat to the United States for an extended period of time and posed an immediate threat at this time,” Ratcliffe said.
Ratcliffe, far more adept than his predecessors at facing congressional questioning and still staying on Trump’s good side, also said that Iran was a destabilizing force in the Middle East, “one that has frankly been watered, fed and nurtured by policies of prior administrations” that “allowed them to become the threat that they are.”
Intelligence officials took pains at a hearing on Wednesday to avoid answering direct questions about what intelligence they provided to the president before the decision to strike as well as direct assessments of how the war was going.
But Gabbard offered the smallest bit of insight in her opening statement when she said that the Iranian leadership had been “largely degraded” by U.S. and Israeli attacks but that the government “appears to be intact.”
Still, there were some noticeable differences between what Gabbard read aloud and what she submitted to lawmakers.
In her statement, Gabbard said Iran’s nuclear enrichment program was “obliterated” in strikes last year, echoing Trump. There have been “no efforts since then to try to rebuild their enrichment capability,” her written statement said.
In her oral testimony, Gabbard said something quite different. Intelligence agencies assessed that before the current war, she said, “Iran was trying to recover from the severe damage to its nuclear infrastructure.”
Called out on the discrepancy by Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, the top Democrat on the committee, Gabbard said she had truncated her comments because they were running long. Warner snapped back that she “chose to omit the parts that contradict the president.”
House lawmakers will have their own opportunity to ask questions Thursday, when the intelligence chiefs appear before them.
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This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
By David E. Sanger and Julian E. Barnes/Tierney L. Cross
c. 2026 The New York Times Company
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