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'That's irrelevant': Marco Rubio snaps at CBS host over Iran attack details

Secretary of State Marco Rubio did not take kindly to a suggestion on "Face the Nation" that the Donald Trump administration jumped the gun by bombing reported nuclear facilities in Iran in a surprise attack on Saturday.

Dispatched to explain the administration's rationale for possibly putting the U.S. on the brink of another war in the Middle East, the former Florida senator ended up butting heads with host Margaret Brennan when she pressed him on what intel was used.

"Let me follow up on a phrase you just used, 'weaponization ambitions,'" she prompted her guest. "Are you saying there that the United States did not see intelligence that the Supreme Leader had ordered weaponization?"

"That's irrelevant," Rubio shot back. "I see that question being asked in the media all the -– that's an irrelevant question, they have everything they need to build the weapon--."

After speaking over each other, Brennan pressed, "That is the key point in U.S. intelligence assessments. You know that."

"No it's not," he snapped to which she replied, "Yes it was," before she continued over his protestations, "The political decision had not been made."

'No, no," he protested. "Well, I know that better than you know that, and I know that that's not the case. You're not –– you don't know what you're talking about--."

"But I'm asking you whether the order was given?" Brennan pressed.

"And the people who say that –– it doesn't matter when the order was given," Rubio insisted. "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? 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, because it 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."

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CNN panel erupts after Republican spins bombing Iran as 'a de-escalation'

A CNN panel discussion devolved after right-wing pundit Scott Jennings described President Donald Trump's bombing of Iran as a "de-escalation."

During the Sunday discussion, analyst Xochitl Hinojosa noted that Trump had been "very clear" about not involving the U.S. in foreign wars until the attack on Iran.

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CNN analyst pours cold water on Scott Jennings' Trump bombing celebration

CNN conservative Scott Jennings got a reality check on Sunday morning after he outdid himself by praising Donald Trump for putting the U.S. on the precipice of another war in the Middle East.

During the panel segment that concludes CNN's "State of the Union," Jennings was given first shot by fill-in host Kasie Hunt to discuss the surprise attack on Iran that has infuriated Democrats and a handful of Republicans who believe the president overstepped his authority.

According to Jennings, "Why would you be surprised? I mean, Donald Trump has been clear-eyed and full of resolve about the Iranian threat for 20 years. He has always said you can't have peace if Iran has a nuclear weapon."

He added, "I would also say that my observations of him over the last few months are that things are running quite smoothly over in the White House."

"We have a commander-in-chief right now who is decisive and who. knows how to operate a government and operate a military operation with absolute precision," he gushed.

Former DOJ official Xochitl Hinojosa was quick to pop his celebratory balloon.

"I think there are a lot of questions here," she remarked to the conservative Jennings. "First of all, why did Trump –– the whole reason why we're in this situation is because he withdrew from the nuclear deal in the first place, and now he's trying to bring Iran back to the table and they wouldn't do that and so he decided to move forward with these strikes."

"But this was his doing in the first place," she lectured. "Obama had a deal, he [Trump] withdrew from it, he withdrew from the deal and now he's trying to get back into it, into something very, very similar."

"The second piece of this is, I think there's two real questions about where are we going next?" she suggested. "Whether or not this is going to lead into a war and whether or not Iran has already indicated that they do plan on retaliating. And Trump has said and threatened that he will then escalate as well."

"I think the third question is a legal part of this, which is whether this was constitutional and whether or not they needed approval from Congress," she pointed out.

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'I am so disappointed in Trump': Republican says Iran strike 'betrayed' MAGA

A Republican supporter and "hardcore MAGA guy" told C-SPAN that he was "so disappointed" in President Donald Trump after he escalated the conflict with Iran by ordering a military strike.

"I woke up this morning on my X account, and there's a short clip of Trump just ripping into Bush on the presidential debates, and, you know, complaining about how the country was lied to about the weapons of mass destruction," the caller named John explained Sunday on C-SPAN's Washington Journal program. "Well, you know, I mean, I feel the same thing has just happened again to us."

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'I thought this was a joke': Critics stunned by Vance 'dumb presidents' remark

Vice President J.D. Vance's praise of Donald Trump for launching an unprovoked attack on Iran led him to disparage previous presidents which both stunned and angered critics on Sunday morning.

During an interview with MNBC host Kristin Welker, Vance could not say enough good things about the president, stating at one time, "The Iranians are clearly not very good at war. Perhaps they should follow President Trump’s lead and give peace a chance. f they’re serious about it, I guarantee you the President of the United States is too.”

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'All tweeting the same': Thomas Massie hits GOP for pro-war talking points

"Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) blasted his Republican colleagues for coordinated pro-war talking points after President Donald Trump ordered a strike on Iran.

"It was a good week for the neocons in the military-industrial complex who want war all the time," Massie told CBS host Margaret Brennan on Sunday. "I wouldn't call my side of the MAGA base isolationists. We are exhausted. We are tired from all of these wars, and we're non-interventionists."

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Ron Johnson: Iran strike 'strengthens my resolve' to pass bill cutting Medicaid

Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) insisted that President Donald Trump's attack on Iran made him more determined to pass a bill that could strip health care from more than 10 million Medicaid recipients.

"Does this change anything for you, knowing that we are now looking at a world where our adversaries are on the march?" Fox News host Maria Bartiromo asked Johnson during a Sunday interview.

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Hegseth 'is going to feel pressure' to keep Trump from looking bad: insider

Despite triumphant proclamations from Donald Trump, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio that the surprise attack on Iran was a rousing success, there are concerns within the White House that blow-back is coming.

According to a report from Politico, not everyone in the administration was on board with the bombing of three sites in Iran linked to uranium enrichment.

Add to that, Trump made some broad statements about the damage done and now it falls to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to make it look like the president came out on top.


As Politico's Dasha Burns, Nahal Toosi and Jack Detsch reported on Sunday, "President Donald Trump was triumphant Saturday night during his Oval Office address but within the administration the mood was less sanguine as officials braced for a potential Iran counterattack."

According to one insider, “We don’t know how much this is going to get us into something protracted. Right now the message is we want to get rid of the nuclear capacity and focus on negotiations.”

Another person who took part in the White House debate offered that there are legitimate fears of a retaliatory "mass casualty event," and confessed, "There’s a lot of risks here for escalation,” before adding, "there’s going to be more pressure on the United States to get involved.”

As for Hegseth, the ball is now in his court

According to Politico, "Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth 'is going to feel pressure and somehow prove that the strikes are as successful as Trump claimed they are,”'the person added, saying that the Pentagon assessed this year that the U.S. military would need to do 30 days of sustained strikes to destroy Iran’s nuclear facilities, owing to their underground depth and spread out layout."

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'How many?' Maria Bartiromo stumps Trump border czar on 'Iranian sleeper cells'

Border czar Tom Homan indicated that he didn't know how many "Iranian sleeper cells" were set to attack the U.S. after President Donald Trump ordered a strike on Iran's nuclear facilities.

"With the FBI picking up surveillance of Iranian operatives in sleeper cells here in America," Fox News host Maria Bartiromo told Homan on Sunday, "even before this attack, more than 400 terrorism encounters occurred in the past four years of the Biden administration's wide open border policy, including hundreds of foreigners on the U.S. terrorist watch list encountered."

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'Catastrophic' bombing came as Trump blindly wandered into 'trap': critic

Anti-nuclear groups and progressives in U.S. Congress were among those condemning President Donald Trump's bombing of three nuclear sites in Iran, which were launched Sunday morning local time and came despite widespread disapproval in the U.S. of the country becoming involved in Israel's recent attacks on the Middle Eastern country.

Trump announced Saturday night in Washington, D.C. that six B-2 bombers had dropped 12 30,000-pound bunker buster bombs on Fordo, Iran's most protected underground uranium enrichment site. Other targets included a plant at Natanz and one near Isfahan.

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'Grounds for impeachment': NBC host confronts JD Vance on Iran strike

NBC host Kristen Welker told Vice President J.D. Vance that lawmakers were reacting to President Donald Trump's Iran strike by calling for his impeachment.

"Many Republicans supportive, but Congressman Thomas Massie saying this was unconstitutional," Welker said on Sunday. "Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez saying it's grounds for impeachment, saying the president should have gotten congressional approval first."

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'Quite significant': Pentagon description of Iran bombing site raises questions

Immediately following a Sunday morning Pentagon press conference regarding the Saturday bombing attack on Iran ordered by Donald Trump, longtime New York Times Pentagon reporter Helene Cooper noted the wording used for one site by Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Dan Caine.

Sitting on a panel on MSNBC's "The Weekend," Cooper was asked for her takeaways from comments made by Caine and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

Despite Donald Trump's claim after the attack that, "Iran's key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated," Caine seemed to disagree.

Ac Cooper noted, "Some of my independent reporting now –– this is not coming from either Hegseth or Caine obviously –– but it's not, there's some indications now that people are not so sure that this site has been completely destroyed, that it was severely damaged."

She then added, "And Caine did say 'severely damaged,' but he did not use the word 'destroy,' and I think that's quite significant."

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'Bold and brilliant': Pete Hegseth slathers praise on Trump for Iran strike

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth praised President Donald Trump for his "bold" and "brilliant" leadership in his first press conference since the U.S. military conducted a strike on Iran.

"It was an incredible and overwhelming success," Hegseth told reporters on Sunday. "The order we received from our commander-in-chief was focused, it was powerful, and it was clear. We devastated the Iranian nuclear program."

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