
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent became defensive when Rep. Brad Schneider (D-IL) challenged his claims about the Iran war being over.
During a House Ways and Means Committee hearing, Schneider asked Bessent whether Iran still poses threats to Israel and Gulf allies, given their nuclear and ballistic missile programs remain intact.
Bessent backpedaled, claiming, "The conflict is on pause."
Schneider pressed further, and Bessent snapped, "No. Don't be absurd."
The Wall Street Journal reported President Donald Trump privately told aides he would only end the ceasefire if Tehran kills American troops — contradicting White House claims of decisive victory.
The U.S. and Israel began the war on February 28, after strikes killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, with a ceasefire in effect since April 8.
The exchange grew heated when Schneider raised cost-of-living concerns about beef, coffee, housing, and insurance prices.
Bessent repeatedly interrupted before attacking Illinois, suggesting people flee the state.
Despite the discussions, both officials agreed no president should evade IRS audits.
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