SmartNews

'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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'An astonishing double cross': Trump accused of betraying his supporters

Donald Trump's decision to launch an attack on Iran without approval from Congress was hammered by a Democratic senator on MSNBC early Sunday morning as he accused the president of a "double cross" perpetrated on U.S. voters.

Speaking with the hosts of "The Weekend," a fuming Sen. Peter Welch (D-VT) harshly criticized the president for exceeding his authority which could put the country on the path to yet another war after making campaign promises to not go down that path.

Asked about a bill he is sponsoring that would deny funding for "any use of military force in or against Iran without specific congressional authorization," Welch replied, "Number one, this was Trump at his most impulsive. Number two, Trump lied to the American people and to his voters promising he would not get us in yet another Middle East war."

"Number three, his own intelligence came to the conclusion that while Iran was enriching uranium, it didn't have the capacity to deliver a weapon," he added. "Number four, [Israeli Prime Minister Bibi] Netanyahu sabotaged the negotiations and Trump willingly acceded to the Netanyahu agenda, which is also about regime change in Iran."

"So this is an astonishing double cross by Donald Trump to his supporters and to his pledge to Americans," he continued. "In my view the last thing we need is a war, another war in the Middle East and I'm one of the many in Congress that are going to be demanding that we vote on this."

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'Not what you want to see': CIA expert flags White House tension after bombing

Appearing on MSNBC just hours after Donald Trump ordered a bombing attack on Iran, former CIA official Marc Polymeropoulos stated that amid all the uncertainty about how the attacked country will react is also lingering conflicts within the Trump administration over the move.

Speaking with the hosts of "The Weekend," Polymeropoulos suggested that it is common knowledge that CIA Director John Ratcliffe and DNI head Tulsi Gabbard are not on the same page.

Picking up from an earlier conversation during the show, the retired CIA agent was asked about the "tension" in the White House.

"What role will that play in how the administration thinks about what to do next?" host Jonathan Capehart asked.

"So again, let's start, Jonathan, with the premise that the intelligence community is incredibly important right now," Polymeropoulos replied. "Again, it's the idea of assessing Iranian regime reaction, it's also the notion of, you know, working with our allies overseas to thwart, detect. >> disrupt and deter Iranian terrorist reprisals."

"But we also have the, I think, well-reported dispute between Donald Trump and Tulsi Gabbard, his Director of National Intelligence that I think we haven't focused on and first of all, that's not ideal," he added. "Let's just keep that in mind. What we haven't focused on, though, is that John Ratcliffe, the CIA director, he is the one who made this analogy of the football field that the Iranians have run 99 yards down the field and just had not made that decision to move forward –– that seems to have resonated with Trump."

"But what that says to me is there's also tension between the CIA director and the DNI," he elaborated. "And you kind of put that together... that's not really what you want to see at a time of international crisis again, with the notion that the intelligence community is of absolutely paramount importance now."

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Trump warns Iran of 'force far greater than was witnessed tonight' in new tirade

Donald Trump bombed Iran on Saturday, and is now considering the potential for retaliation.

Trump announced over the weekend that the U.S. had bombed multiple sites in Iran, and one GOP lawmaker said the action was unconstitutional. Political onlookers blasted the president's decision, and one prominent Democrat even raised the potential for impeachment.

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'Trump admin is furious' as 'two judges say two different things': ex-prosecutor

"The Trump administration is furious" as it sees "two different judges saying two different things" in a major case, according to a former prosecutor.

Former State Attorney for Palm Beach County Dave Aronberg appeared on MSNBC on Saturday, where he was asked about Mahmoud Khalil, a Columbia University graduate and legal permanent resident who returned this weekend after he spent more than three months detained by the federal government under Trump.

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Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez calls Trump Iran move 'clearly grounds for impeachment'

U.S. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) on Saturday said that Donald Trump opened himself up to another potential impeachment.

Trump over the weekend announced that the U.S. dropped bombs on multiple sites in Iran, a move on GOP lawmaker called unconstitutional. Onlookers also blasted the president's decision to bomb the nation's nuclear sites.

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'Quirky': Rachel Maddow flags Trump's 'inexplicable' delivery of 'sober message'

Donald Trump's spelling and delivery of what should have been a comforting statement are what stood out to MSNBC's Rachel Maddow Saturday night.

Maddow took over the MSNBC hosting duties following the breaking news, which saw Trump announcing the U.S. had dropped "a full payload of BOMBS" on Iran sites. One GOP lawmaker declared the action was unconstitutional, and onlookers blasted the president.

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'We're at war': Onlookers erupt in rage at Trump as he announces bombs dropped

Donald Trump faced furious pushback from observers late on Saturday as the president announced a foreign military strike.

Trump announced the dropping of bombs on Iran on his social media site, Truth Social. He said the U.S. dropped a "full payload of BOMBS... on the primary site, Fordow."

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'This is not Constitutional': GOP congressman stands up to Trump on Iran strike

U.S. Rep Thomas Massie (R-KY) declared Saturday evening that his party's leader, the president of the United States, made an unconstitutional move.

Trump over the weekend announced his administration had dropped a "full payload of bombs" on Iran.

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