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Leading Democratic members of Congress urged Donald Trump to explain his readiness to engage in conflict with Iran, following a confidential session that suggested to them the United States was on the verge of initiating another offensive.
The congressional members refrained from revealing what they discovered during a Tuesday meeting with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and CIA Director John Ratcliffe, yet emphasized the pressing need for the US president to clarify his military objectives to the American populace.
Chuck Schumer, the leading Democratic senator, stated, “This holds significance, and the administration ought to present its argument to the American populace.”
Following the briefing, Hakeem Jeffries, the Democratic House minority leader, commented that Trump ought to vindicate his stance.
“The president asserted that Iran’s nuclear initiative was entirely dismantled last year due to the administration’s measures,” Jeffries stated subsequent to the session.
“Therefore, if that assertion held true, what accounts for the immediate pressing need? This remains an unresolved query, and a genuine clarification is owed to the American populace,” Jeffries remarked just hours prior to Trump’s State of the Union address.
The session occurred concurrently with the US’s ongoing augmentation of its military resources in the area, with the recent deployment of two additional guided-missile destroyers.
Trump has dispatched an “extensive fleet” to the Middle East, representing the most substantial naval concentration in the area since the 2003 US incursion into Iraq.
The gathered contingent currently comprises 18 naval vessels, encompassing two aircraft carriers, 13 destroyers, and three littoral combat vessels. An individual privy to the details indicated that additional destroyers are anticipated to be sent.
Satellite imagery showed the USS Gerald R Ford, Washington’s most recent and largest aircraft carrier, docked in Souda Bay, Crete, on Tuesday. The navy reported the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier was located in the northern Arabian Sea.
The US has also markedly augmented its fighter aircraft presence in the region and incorporated additional Thaad and Patriot air defense mechanisms, deployed by the US in June to safeguard its holdings and partners from a barrage of Iranian ballistic and lesser missiles during Israel’s 12-day conflict with Iran.
Mark Warner, the leading Democrat on the Senate intelligence panel, expressed gratitude for the White House’s Tuesday “discussion,” yet emphasized that it was “the president’s duty to articulate our nation’s objectives, its stakes, and the means by which we will safeguard American concerns in the area.”
He added, “Perhaps we will receive that information this evening, but should we not, it is imperative that we hear it extremely soon.”
American negotiators are set to recommence discussions with Iran in Geneva on Thursday, marking their third encounter in recent weeks. However, Trump and his advisors have progressively voiced dismay over Tehran’s unwillingness to pledge to cease all uranium enrichment, even for civilian applications. The US president has warned that “unfavorable outcomes” will befall the Islamic republic if an agreement is not reached.
On Tuesday, Fox News anchor Bret Baier posted on X that the president had confided in him, “Iran ardently desires an accord . . . but simply cannot utter the hallowed declaration, ‘We will not construct a nuclear weapon.’”
Republican Tom Cotton, chairman of the Senate intelligence panel, earlier in the day informed Fox & Friends that the US is not obligated to “extend an offer [to Iran]; our proposition could be: comply with our stipulations, or we will attack you.”
On Tuesday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt reiterated Trump’s assertion that the US “annihilated” Iran’s nuclear initiative in June when it participated in Israel’s 12-day conflict with the Islamic republic, but cautioned that Tehran might attempt to revive that undertaking. “And that is precisely what the president aims to prevent from ever recurring.”
When questioned about Iran’s current threat level to the US, Leavitt responded: “Iran proclaims ‘Death to America.’ Therefore, you determine if that constitutes a menace.”
Capitol Hill Republicans, who have mostly supported Trump’s policy objectives, expressed confidence in the president’s judgment to act appropriately.
Republican senator Jerry Moran, also a member of the Senate intelligence panel, stated that the president’s military objectives are “undoubtedly a significant subject.” Moran, who was absent from Tuesday’s session, further remarked that he would favor receiving such details in a “confidential environment.” However, he conceded, “I possess no say regarding when that occurs.”
Announcing a substantial military operation during a State of the Union address would be without precedent for a US president. Nevertheless, as Aaron David Miller, a Middle East specialist and former US peace envoy at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, articulated: “That alone provides sufficient motivation for Trump to proceed.”
