On March 17, Joe Kent resigned as director of the National Counterterrorism Center. His resignation letter said many things — it expressed moral opposition to the war, questioned Israel's role in drawing the United States into the conflict, and appealed to the president to reconsider. Those passages generated enormous attention, and enormous pushback. The White House called his claims false. Speaker Johnson said he was weak on security. The letter's politics, its tone, its characterization of American foreign policy — all of it became fodder for the kind of partisan combat that reliably buries the thing that actually matters.
The thing that actually matters is one sentence.
"Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation."
Everything else in Kent's letter is argument — strategic, moral, political, all of it legitimately disputable. That sentence is different. It is a statement of fact. It was made by the sitting director of the National Counterterrorism Center — the senior official whose professional responsibility was to assess exactly that question. It either accurately describes what the intelligence showed, or it does not. It has a truth value, independent of Kent's views on Israel, independent of his political associations, independent of whether you find him sympathetic or not.
The Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on March 18 was, in substantial part, an opportunity to establish that truth value. Did the intelligence show an imminent threat from Iran, or did it not?
No intelligence official who testified said Kent was wrong.
Before examining what they said instead, it helps to remember where we were just two decades ago. In 2002 and 2003, CIA Director George Tenet privately told President Bush that the case for Iraqi weapons of mass destruction was a "slam dunk." Two words. Spoken informally. Later leaked. That phrase generated years of congressional hearings, multiple investigations, books, documentaries, and a lasting institutional reckoning. The entire weight of democratic accountability came down on what Tenet meant, in private, about confidence in an intelligence assessment — because the country understood that the legitimacy of going to war depended on facts that could be examined, questioned, and held to account.
What Joe Kent did was categorically more significant. He made a formal, signed, public statement of fact — not a confidence characterization but a direct finding, from the official responsible for making it — and resigned rather than contradict it by staying. In 2003, we tortured ourselves over two words spoken in a private meeting. In 2026, the top counterterrorism official stated his finding in writing, on the record, and the institutional response was to attack his character and change the subject.
What Ratcliffe actually said
CIA Director John Ratcliffe offered the closest thing to a rebuttal. He said, in general terms, that he disagreed with Kent. But when he explained the substance of that disagreement, something important happened — or rather, something important did not happen.
Ratcliffe said Iran had been a hostile power for 47 years, had built missiles, had supported regional proxies, and therefore posed what he called an "immediate threat at this time."
He did not say "imminent."
That distinction is not a semantic quibble. It is the entire legal basis for the use of preemptive military force.
"Imminent" is the threshold — in American war powers doctrine, in international law, in the Caroline test that has governed anticipatory self-defense since the nineteenth century. An imminent threat requires specific, credible evidence of capability and intent on a recognizable timeline. It means something is about to happen, and analysts can point to why they believe so: intercepted communications, troop movements, specific operational planning. It is a legal standard with defined evidentiary requirements.
"Immediate" is not that. Operationally it means something happening right now — a gunman in the room, a bomb about to detonate. In Ratcliffe's usage it meant something else entirely: a country that has been hostile for nearly half a century. That is a chronic condition, not a threshold. Chronic hostility, however real, has never legally justified preemptive war. If it did, the existence of any longstanding adversary would constitute a permanent license for military action, and the word "imminent" would mean nothing at all.
What Ratcliffe did was produce the appearance of a rebuttal — "I disagree with Kent" — while declining to use the word that would have constituted an actual one. If he believed the intelligence showed an imminent threat in the legally defined sense, he had every reason and every opportunity to say so plainly, under oath, before the committee. He did not.
What Gabbard actually did
DNI Tulsi Gabbard took a different approach — and it is the one with the longest consequences.
Senator Jon Ossoff pressed her directly: was there an imminent nuclear threat posed by Iran? "Yes or no?"
Her answer: "It is not a responsibility of the intelligence community to determine what is or is not an imminent threat."
Ossoff replied: "It is precisely your responsibility to determine what constitutes a threat to the United States."
He is right. The intelligence community exists, in substantial part, to perform exactly this function — to give decision-makers an independent, expert assessment of whether a threat is real, specific, and urgent, so that the decision to use military force rests on something more than presidential intuition. The National Intelligence University, which trains the IC's future leaders, maintains an extensive body of scholarship on how analysts distinguish imminent from chronic, credible from speculative, a genuine threshold from a permanent condition. It is not a peripheral function. It is close to the central one.
Gabbard has ordered that university merged with another institution.
Most coverage has treated her statement as a clever deflection — a way of staying loyal to the president without technically lying under oath. That reading is not wrong. But it stops short of what she actually placed on the record.
By declaring that the IC has no responsibility to determine imminence, she did not merely avoid a hard question. She formally reassigned it. She removed Kent's professional finding from the category of judgments the IC is competent to make. She did not say he was wrong. She said the question was never his to answer — or hers, or any analyst's. Only the president determines whether a threat is imminent.
This is not the familiar debate about whether IC assessments are binding on the president — they never were. What Gabbard eliminated is something more fundamental: the IC's professional, evidence-based finding itself. An imminence determination is not a loose judgment call. It is a structured knowledge claim of the same order as forensic evidence — grounded in intercepted communications, verified troop movements, confirmed changes in weapons posture, analyzed against standardized professional thresholds. The president has always been free to act against such a finding. What is new is that Gabbard has declared, under oath, that producing the finding is no longer the IC's responsibility. They may gather facts. They may not render the conclusion those facts support. The judgment has been formally severed from the fact-finding — and that severance is what no prior DNI has placed on the record.
Notice what she did not then say: that there was any intelligence corroborating the president's determination. She provided the presidential authority without filling it with any supporting substance. The president determined there was a threat. Per his own intelligence director's sworn testimony, whether that determination has any basis in evidence is not the IC's job to establish.
Think about what that means in practice. The president said he acted because he "felt strongly" that Iran was about to attack American interests. Ratcliffe offered 47 years of historical hostility as corroboration. And the Director of National Intelligence swore, before the Senate, that the IC has no responsibility to say whether either of those things meets the legal threshold for imminent threat.
If that holds, the factual predicate for going to war is whatever the president says it is.
Why this matters beyond this particular war
Presidential power in America has always expanded the same way: not through dramatic constitutional rupture, but through assertions that survive in the record because no one with the authority to challenge them chose to do so. Jefferson bought Louisiana without constitutional authorization and the precedent held. Post-9/11 war authorizations stretched across decades to justify operations their original authors never imagined. Power grows through statements that go unchallenged by those formally empowered to challenge them.
The crucial difference between that history and what happened on March 18 is this: every prior expansion of executive war-making power — however contested, however legally dubious — operated on the shared assumption that facts had to exist and had to be presented. LBJ needed Gulf of Tonkin, however fabricated. Bush needed Tenet's slam dunk, however pressured. Reagan pointed to intercepted cables. In every case, the underlying premise held: the legitimacy of force depends on a factual predicate that others can examine, question, and contest.
What Gabbard put on the record dissolves that premise in this specific domain. She did not manipulate the factual record. She declared the factual record irrelevant to the determination at issue. You can challenge a bad intelligence assessment — investigate how it was reached, whether it was pressured, whether the analysts were honest. What you cannot easily challenge is a sworn statement by the Director of National Intelligence that the assessment was never required in the first place.
Ossoff challenged that statement correctly and precisely. The Republican majority controlling the committee did not. No resolution formally repudiating it has been introduced. The press noted it, mostly with irony. And the statement is now in the record — unchallenged by the people with the formal power to challenge it — which is exactly how informal assertions become the floor for the next expansion.
A future president, of either party, may cite this testimony. The Director of National Intelligence established, under oath, that the IC has no responsibility to determine whether a threat is imminent. The president determines that. The evidence is, formally and on the record, beside the point.
That is not a story about one official's careful navigation of a difficult hearing. It is a story about what just got put on the record — and what, so far, nobody with the power to remove it has chosen to do.
A note on corroboration
Kent's factual claim has been attacked on personal and political grounds. What follows is not a defense of Kent. It is a note that his finding was not his alone.
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The United Kingdom — America's closest intelligence partner, a member of the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing alliance — reached the same conclusion: there was no imminent threat from Iran.
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Jonathan Powell, a senior British diplomat with direct knowledge of the diplomatic track, confirmed that negotiations were producing serious results and that a significant offer was on the table at the time the strikes began. Powell, who attended the talks, judged that a deal was within reach.
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Vice President JD Vance met in person with Omani Foreign Minister Badr al-Busaidi on Friday, February 27 — the same day Abulsaidi described the zero-stockpiling offer on CBS Face the Nation as historic and potentially decisive. The day before, aboard Air Force Two, Vance had told the Washington Post: "I think we all prefer the diplomatic option. But it really depends on what the Iranians do and what they say." The article notes that talks had continued that Thursday in Geneva with no resolution, and that mediators had confirmed negotiations would resume the following week. Iran had done and said nothing in the intervening hours. The strikes began Saturday morning.
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The Wall Street Journal and Axios both reported, based on sourced accounts, that the operation had been planned since December and was structured around an intelligence window showing Iranian leadership convened in one place — a decapitation opportunity — not around any specific intelligence of an impending Iranian attack on American interests. The Axios report additionally noted that the strike was delayed specifically in order to convey that no attack was imminent, allowing Iranian leadership to feel secure enough to remain in place.
None of these sources have been contradicted. None were addressed by Gabbard or Ratcliffe in their testimony.
Kent said there was no imminent threat. The allied assessment, the diplomatic record, the inside-administration dissent, and the reporting on operational planning all point in the same direction. The IC's director swore before Congress that establishing whether any of that matters is not her office's job.
The president felt strongly. That, it turns out, is enough.
References
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Lieber, Dov, Alexander Ward, and Laurence Norman. "Why the U.S. and Israel Struck When They Did: A Chance to Kill Iran's Leaders." The Wall Street Journal, February 28, 2026.
https://www.wsj.com/world/middle-east/why-the-u-s-and-israel-struck-iran-when-they-did-a-chance-to-kill-its-leaders-b0dbbc88 -
Ravid, Barak. "U.S. and Israel Delayed Original Iran Strike by a Week, Officials Say." Axios, March 1, 2026.
https://www.axios.com/2026/03/02/iran-war-strike-israel-delay-trump -
Allison, Natalie. "Vance: 'No Chance' U.S. Will Be in Drawn-Out War in Middle East." The Washington Post, February 26, 2026.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/02/26/vance-no-chance-us-will-be-drawn-out-war-middle-east/ -
Swanson, Ian. "Oman Foreign Minister Expresses Dismay at US Strikes on Iran: 'This Is Not Your War.'" The Hill, February 28, 2026.
https://thehill.com/policy/international/5759623-iran-nuclear-deal-stockpiling/
[Confirms Abulsaidi met with Vice President Vance on February 27 and described the zero-stockpiling offer on CBS Face the Nation the same day.] -
Wintour, Patrick, and Julian Borger. "UK Security Adviser Attended US-Iran Talks and Judged Deal Was Within Reach." The Guardian, March 17, 2026.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/mar/17/uk-security-adviser-attended-us-iran-talks-and-judged-deal-was-within-reach -
Barnes, Julian E. "Joe Kent, a Top Counterterrorism Official for the Trump Administration, Resigns, Citing Iran War." The New York Times, March 17, 2026.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/17/us/politics/joe-kent-counterterrorism-resigns-iran-war.html -
"Read Joe Kent's Resignation Letter." The New York Times, March 17, 2026.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2026/03/17/us/joe-kent-resignation-letter-iran.html -
Sanger, David E., and Julian E. Barnes. "On Iran, Gabbard Turned Intelligence Duties Over to Trump." The New York Times, March 18, 2026.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/18/us/politics/tulsi-gabbard-iran-trump.html -
Parsi, Trita, interviewed by Charlie Rose. Charlie Rose Global Conversations, March 2026.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=whMm3zRURHs
[Parsi details Abulsaidi's CBS interview describing the zero-stockpiling offer and characterizes it as historically unprecedented relative to the 2015 JCPOA framework. He also confirms Trump expected the operation to conclude within four days.]
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