All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - Tulsi Gabbard on Russiagate Hoax Evidence and How She’s Reforming Politicized Intelligence Agencies
Episode Date: September 15, 2025(0:00) Introducing Tulsi Gabbard, US Director of National Intelligence (1:21) The Russiagate Hoax Conspiracy and the dangers of highly politicized intelligence agencies (17:31) Russian interference in... 2016, cleaning up intelligence agencies, increasing accountability (25:54) How Tulsi is received in her home state of Hawaii after switching parties, the drastic change of the Democratic Party (30:16) Thoughts on bombing Iran, what impacts her views on foreign policy and war (35:15) The impact of designating drug cartels as terrorist orgs, safety at the Southern Border, China Thanks to our partners for making this happen! Solana: https://solana.com/ OKX: https://www.okx.com/ Google Cloud: https://cloud.google.com/ IREN: https://iren.com/ Oracle: https://www.oracle.com/ Circle: https://www.circle.com/ BVNK: https://www.bvnk.com/ Polymarket: https://www.polymarket.com/ Follow Tulsi: https://x.com/tulsigabbard Follow the besties: https://x.com/chamath https://x.com/Jason https://x.com/DavidSacks https://x.com/friedberg Follow on X: https://x.com/theallinpod Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theallinpod Follow on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@theallinpod Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/allinpod Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://x.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://x.com/TheZachEffect
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From Democratic Congresswoman to staunch Trump supporter.
Both loved and heavily criticized for her independent thinking.
She won't be bought. She won't be bullied.
The Director of National Intelligence.
Tulsi Gabbard.
Aloha.
It's just BS.
I've always been a very fiercely independent-minded person.
I know exactly what I need to do here and how deep the rot is
within the intelligence community that has to be rooted at.
to be rooted out.
Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Tulsi Gabbard.
Hello.
Nice to see you, Tulsi.
Thanks for coming.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Aloha, everybody.
we were all clamoring to kind of frame this and then Sack said I really just need to do the kickoff
because he really wanted to tee this up so I'm going to cede my responsibility in introducing
you because everybody knows who you are but David just there's just too much red meat
David's been frothing Tulsi doesn't need a big introduction but everyone knows she's a director
of national intelligence and in the words of President Trump is the the hottest member
the administration. I think he means in the sense of having released the biggest news story
of the year. And specifically files, you declassified and released a series of files related
to the whole Rushagate Hokes. And many of the documents are just stunning. I'll let you speak
to it. But I think, you know, there's still maybe a few holdouts out there in the world, not that many,
who still don't really understand. Who are you looking at right now? Who are you talking about?
in particular, but you don't seem to understand what this Russiagate hoax was about.
Can you just, maybe this is the place to start that we can drill into some of the details,
but just at a very high level, what exactly happened?
I mean, I think we saw for years there were all these accusations that somehow that
Trump was an agent of Putin of Russia.
Was that all just made up and who made it up?
How did that happen?
Yeah, I think just setting the baseline of like, why should you care?
why should people at home care about this?
And this really speaks to the power of the intelligence community
and the power of quote-unquote intelligence.
Is that as, you know, these headlines were turning out
about, you know, Trump is a Putin puppet
or he is colluding with Putin in order to get elected,
we're going back to the 2016 election here.
You know, if you're just watching the headlines from home,
you've got to believe that there's some credibility here,
that there's some intelligence that's actually driving this.
And that really is the significance of the documents that we uncovered, declassified, and released
that shows how intelligence and information can be actually manipulated intentionally
so that it shows something that is not reflective of the truth at all
and how it can be done in a deeply impactful way politicizing it
in what we essentially saw throughout President Trump's candidacy in 2016,
and throughout his four years in office,
the documents we uncovered really served as the foundation for the weapon that was used
to undermine his presidency,
to try to undermine the outcome of that 2016 election,
and really usurp the will and the voices of the people who elected Donald Trump.
So I'll try to run through this timeline in the topic,
in the top lines, just to paint the picture of, as you asked David, like, where and how did this
start? When we go back to that 2016 campaign, President Trump went through what was a very crowded
primary at the time. Almost no one thought that he could win. He became the Republican nominee
going up against Hillary Clinton. And during that time, Hillary Clinton kind of seated
the allegation that there was some collusion happening between Trump and Putin and Russia,
that Putin was somehow trying to get Trump elected.
What we saw then play out was now known as...
So what does it mean she's ceded?
What does that...
There were a lot of different ways that occurred.
If you go and look at some of the documents
that the FBI declassified,
that Durham Uncovered is now known as the Durham Annex.
There were a lot of different ways that it happened.
But we saw early signs of the weaponization of this
when the FBI under Comey,
basically got illegal,
they got warrants through the FISA court
to illegally surveil Americans, Carter Page,
in Cross Bear Hurricane,
and others around President Trump
and his campaign at that time.
November 2016, President Trump shocks the world
and wins the election.
The intelligence community and the assessments
and all these documents we've made public already
throughout this period of time during the campaign
leading up to the general election,
The intelligence community almost uniformly assessed that Putin did not have either the intent
or the capability to hack the outcome of the U.S. election.
There were different assessments that said this, but this trend was there.
President Trump wins the election. Members of the intelligence community then go and brief
members of Congress post-election, and their briefing was consistent with the intelligence
reports that basically said there's no evidence that there's that Russia or Putin had any
kind of impact on the outcome of the U.S. election. Fast forward to December 8th. One of the
organization, one of the elements that's under my oversight in the intelligence community creates
this product for the president every day called the president's daily brief. The numbers of people
who, within the cabinet even,
who are able to access
this brief is a pretty small
number. This is built for the president
and it is
a product of contributions
from across the intelligence community.
This December 8th President's
daily brief was consistent
with all of the other assessments
essentially saying
there was no interference in the outcome
of the election by Russia.
That brief
was pulled. It was never published.
It was pulled back from publishing hours before it would have hit then President Obama's desk.
The next day, December 9th, the Obama administration calls a National Security Council meeting,
all the senior leaders within the Obama administration.
The topic of discussion was Russia.
The tasks that came from that meeting that were delivered to then Obama's DNI, James Clapper,
and we have the emails that we declassified around this, said,
This is a POTUS tasking on Russia meddling with the election.
And what you'll see in those documents was not President Obama asking, look into the intelligence
and see if Russia meddled the election.
It was, provide me with an assessment saying how Russia meddled in the election.
John Brennan, James Clapper, Comey and the FBI, they all got their folks together then
to start building this document.
That was an intelligence community assessment.
And so just to be clear, was this in the sort of that lame duck window between the election and then President Trump taking office?
Yes.
That's like two or three month period?
Right.
Post-November 2016, President Obama's last day, January 20th of 2017.
So this document was being created by a very, very small group of people within these three agencies.
They got the NSA involved.
And ultimately, that document would state what President Obama wanted it to say,
which was that Russia and Putin aspired to help President Trump win the election
and did so through cyber means.
And the briefing doc, you mentioned, the president's daily briefing doc,
you can see that there was a draft written that then got pulled back.
Yes.
And that still sits somewhere.
So we know that that's what was written.
And someone said, pull that back.
we don't want to have evidence of this
going into the Oval
Exactly, and these were some of the documents
that we released. It's all, it's all on
ODNI.gov
where we have the draft
finalized President's Daily Brief from
December 8th and then the email
saying, pull this back
and it was never published until
we actually published it. Oh, that was in an email, pull it back?
Yes. So they're also stupid.
Would you like to apologize?
No, no, no, I mean, there's a few more pieces here.
Just kidding.
No, no, no.
I mean, I'll come.
I'll have the receipts.
We'll go to those in a moment.
Oh, okay.
This January 2017 assessment was published on January 6th.
It was very quickly leaked out to different members of the Media, Washington Post, New York Times, et cetera.
Then it was briefed to Congress.
But the key thing here is that the most classified and,
and compartmentalize pieces of intelligence they used as the basis for this total 180
intelligence assessment that was basically contradicting what the intelligence community
I assessed leading up to the election.
They hid those sources, even from the vast majority of members of Congress, because based
on intelligence community trade craft standards, they were deemed even at the time to be
not acceptable.
We had senior officials in the CIA who were tasked to work on this,
who objected to then CIA director John Brennan using these as sources
because they were not credible.
One of them was the steel dossier,
this manufactured political document that was filled with falsehoods.
So then you see after that this assessment, again, leaked to the media,
briefed to Congress.
This was the document that then led to everything that happened.
in the four years that President Trump was in office.
What we declassified and released
provided further reinforcement of how politicized this document was.
It showed a few things, for example,
that in those sources that were hidden
that Putin didn't believe Trump would win the election in 2016.
He thought Hillary Clinton was going to win.
He thought that, hey, we know who she is.
We know how she operates.
she operates, we can try to figure out a way to deal with a Hillary Clinton presidency.
Russia and Putin claimed that they had extremely derogatory information about Hillary Clinton,
her health, her state of mind, allegedly illegal bribery, illegal activities going on.
If Putin and Russia were trying to help Trump win the election, they would have done so
at a critical time in October of 2016 in order to try to push him over the top.
believe he could win. There is so much evidence that disproves this manufactured, politicized
intelligence assessment ordered by President Obama that was very conveniently hid by John Brennan,
James Clapper, and James Comey. So again, why does this matter? We have seen a trend in some of the
biggest intelligence failures around politicized intelligence. And I'll just give this one example,
that goes back to the creation of this organization that I lead, ODI and I.
James Clapper was an intelligence community leader
during the time before our country went to war with Iraq.
James Clapper wrote in his book
about how Dick Cheney was telling the intelligence community,
I need you to come up with intelligence,
basically that will just create the narrative for us to go to war with Iraq,
that will give Colin Powell what he needed to go to bring to the UN
as evidence of weapons of mass.
mass destruction, of evidence that Saddam Hussein is colluding with Al-Qaeda.
And in James Clapper's own words, he said that he and his colleagues were so eager to do
what Dick Cheney told them to do that, quote, we created something that wasn't there.
This is, as someone who served in the Iraq War, along with so many of my brothers and sisters
in uniform, you can see the devastating consequences.
of politicized intelligence, the difference between war and peace, the difference between, in this
case of President Trump with his first administration, this threatens the integrity of our
republic and the voices of the people being shown through an election.
Tulsi, you must have been enraged.
Absolutely enraged. Absolutely. Because we were lied to then.
we were lied to in 2016 and 2017,
and over and over again,
you see how people in these positions of power
act with impunity,
putting themselves, their political interests,
their ambition ahead of the Constitution of the United States
and the responsibility and trust that they have to the American people.
Is the ambition, this sensation that they are puppet bastards,
that they can sort of control and shape outcomes,
yet they're sort of in the shadows and they're not accountable?
Like, what is it?
The lack of accountability, I think, is what drives them believing that they can get away with anything.
Because if you control information, you control intelligence, then you can control an outcome.
Yeah, what was the incentive or the objective to Chmoth's question about doing this after the election?
Because it seems so destabilizing.
I think that was, I don't have paper evidence of it, but one could surmise that the
intention was they all thought Hillary Clinton was going to win. President Trump won the
election. That was President Obama, you can imagine the feeling amongst the Democrats. I remember.
I was a Democrat in Congress at the time. Absolute devastation. What's the reaction to that?
Let's see how we can completely them. How could they completely undermine and destabilize and
in their minds disarm a President Trump while he's in office.
And this is some of the twisted thinking that I witnessed when I was in Congress at that
time, was that they believe, many of these Democrat leaders really believed that they were
doing the right thing for our country by trying to protect the American people from the
guy that they actually voted for to be president of the United States.
Right. I think part of it was to undermine Trump, and then part of it
was sort of exculpatory towards the fact that they had supported Hillary and Hillary turned
out to be a bad candidate and they lost and they wanted to find a reason why she lost that didn't
blame the Democrat Party for choosing the wrong nominee. I think that was part of the motivation
as well. But just to be clear, in this national intelligence assessment that you found in the
documents, the career staff, they said there's nothing to support this theory of Trump somehow being
an asset or agent of Russia.
So they did their jobs.
Some of them did.
Some of them didn't.
But it was the leadership, the political appointees
were obviously hyper-partisan
because they're appointed by the president.
So they're the ones who overruled their own career staff.
Okay, just be clear.
That's right.
And just to, sorry, last point,
just to put a bow on this,
we discovered some emails that were printed out
literally in the back of a safe.
I think they had been sitting there since 2017
that showed an email exchange
between then Obama's DNI James Clapper
and then the head of the national security agency
Mike Rogers
and the DNI Clapper
he really wanted to get the NSA
to sign off on this manufactured intelligence document
and Mike Rogers at that point in his email saying
hey, you're giving us too short of a deadline.
We don't have enough time to vet what is in this intelligence assessment
in order to add our name to this.
And if you don't want to give us more time,
then we just won't be a part of it.
And the response that James Clapper sent,
and you can find this again online,
was he essentially said, Mike, this is a team sport.
This is the time where you just have to say yes
and sign off on this.
Didn't he say we're going to stand behind this report in the best spirit of, quote,
this is our story and we're sticking to it, exactly.
So, Tulsi, while I don't believe Trump was a Russian asset,
is your position that the Russians did not try to interfere on the 2016 and 2020 elections?
Because the FBI and Trump himself, they all conceded that they did try to interfere.
The intelligence documents, and again, this is,
what we released was their intent was to try to sow chaos in the elections. And that was
throughout the assessments. So just to parse this, there was a group of people who believed he was an
asset. Trump asked on stage during the election, Russia, if you're listening, please hack Hillary's
email and send them to us and release it. Donald Trump Jr. then met with the Russians at Trump Tower
hoping to get that information, the FBI proved and a D.C. court indicted Russians for interfering in
the election. So interference occurred. The Trump family engaged with the Russians, but Trump himself
was not a plant, we all agree. He's not a Manchurian candidate, but the Russians have been
absolutely, you agree, trying to interfere in our elections, correct?
That has not been disputed at all.
I just want to be clear here on level set.
Well, all of the other stuff you said, I mean, about what happened, that stuff has all been litigated.
And unfortunately, the reality is when we say, oh, the FBI said this.
We were dealing with a very highly politicized FBI at the time that was so politicized.
They were willing to use what they knew was false information to obtain illegal surveillance warrants from the FISA court to spy on members of the
Trump administration, when you actually look through it, there was nothing actually there.
Okay.
Now, if you put yourself in the FBI shoes, Donald Trump Jr. says, I hope, I can't wait to get
what you have.
I hope it's what you're saying it is.
And Trump literally asks Putin to release Hillary's email.
Would the FBI not actually take a look into it?
Would you want them to, hold on, I'm talking to Telsey.
You had your chance.
You think his conspiracy.
You can be quiet for one moment, Sachs and let me finish.
Tulsi, would it not be the FBI's absolute duty to look into that?
Yes or no?
An honest FBI?
Yes.
Okay.
This was a dishonest FBI.
And again, it is, it is, it's, all of the FBI is dishonest?
You have to look at things within, within the bigger context.
Anyone who watches Donald Trump, he makes jokes every single day.
Should the FBI look into serious issues?
Yeah, of course they should.
But again, we're dealing with an FBI that has been proven time and time again
during that period of time to break the law.
They are supposed to enforce the law.
They broke the law because of their efforts to try to undermine President Trump's candidacy.
So they already had an objective clearly in mind.
So tell us a little bit about what you learned about Paul Manafort and his conviction, subsequent pardon,
and what his role was as the campaign manager for Trump the first time in his giving information to foreign.
I'm not familiar with the Manafort case.
Oh, okay.
What I have laid out is the truth of what has been uncovered through the declassification efforts.
Let me ask then the generalized question.
The question is about President Trump.
Can just quickly clean up this?
And the question is about the intelligence communities.
Trump asked the Russians to do something.
I would urge everyone who actually believes that to go back and watch the video of the rally.
It's a joke.
The context was that Hillary Clinton was being investigated because she had used a private email server
and was supposed to be turning over thousands of emails,
but she didn't because they destroyed the hard drive
and they broke it with hammers,
they bleached it and all the rest of it.
And he made a joke about if the Russia were listening,
I hope you can find the emails.
And everybody laughed and you have to be, I don't know,
kind of dumb or super partisan or hate Donald Trump
to think that him telling a joke on stage
was the basis for a grand conspiracy with Russia.
Okay, let me ask this question.
No, I would think that the FBI investigating the Russians and us convicting them in court.
We convicted them in court.
On the middle stage, 30,000 people, he's going to say, hey, Vladimir, can you do the following?
That's not how conspiracy's work.
I'm sorry to break it to you.
Let me ask.
What are you doing to?
But, Tulsi, what are you doing to clean it up?
She just told you.
She'd release the files in the end.
I want to look on a go-forward basis.
Well, the first step really is, and this isn't a.
essential thing is about transparency and accountability. So we have referred all of the documents
that we've uncovered to the Department of Justice because the two have to go together in order
for there to be real, real change. Let me build on Jason's question. Twelve years from now,
there could be a Democrat. Maybe it's AOC. You know, four more years of Trump and then eight
years of JD, but you know, you know, I'm getting to the point. And, you know, some people
may not like the AOC candidate, but that doesn't mean, as you said, that some nameless, faceless person
can subvert the will of the American people. So what needs to happen so that there's checks
and balances here? How do we make sure that people can't just not like somebody and then
decide to try to basically destroy them? How do we make sure that that doesn't happen?
It's a good and important question, and ultimately the ultimate accountability has to come from the American people and who we choose to vote for.
Who we have in these positions of leadership actually matters, and so for the United States Senate, for example, have the responsibility of confirming people to serve in the position that I hold and the CIA director, the FBI director, and so on.
we have to be very clear-eyed about the tools and the tactics that are used
that ultimately fundamentally are undermining our founding documents
and the Constitution, the integrity of our republic,
and ultimately our ability as we, the people, to determine who we want to serve
in our government.
You know, the weaponization, politicization, unfortunately, it continues.
There is a lot of, there is still rot within our intelligence community and those, again, who believe that they know better for the American people than we do for ourselves.
And that's really a dangerous thing.
This is not something that's easily solved.
It's not one institutional change that can occur.
We have to remain vigilant on all fronts in order to protect ourselves and to protect our Democratic Republic from these kinds of.
kinds of abuses.
How do you lead that change, Tulsi?
You're going into work and you don't know who to trust.
You don't know who is part of the institution that you were up against when you came in
to take this role.
How do you grapple with that and how do you think about prioritizing and kind of filtering
the workforce, the people that report to you, the information, the information?
By being vigilant.
You know, I've made some pretty big changes within
the Office of the Director of National Intelligence itself,
finding those pockets and those places that have been weaponized and politicized,
and really ultimately bringing a mission focus to the organization,
trimming down and slimming down our manning and personnel count
so that we have the right people and the right positions who focus on the mission itself.
Ultimately, every day it's just about doing the right thing,
because it's the right thing to do
and setting that culture of leadership
that focuses on our responsibility
of the American people
to the Constitution
and holding people accountable
when they are not fulfilling
that responsibility
that they have been entrusted with.
When you were a congresswoman,
you must have had a different mandate,
you were a different political party.
When you go back home,
what's the conversation like about the transition?
I don't know if you've talked about this publicly much,
but what's it like in talking about your evolution,
changing parties and having this role today
with the people that you used to represent?
You know, Hawaii has, it's been a strong democratic state
for a very, very long time,
but it's not, it's a unique state with a very unique culture.
People tend to be, honestly, a little bit more,
just Aloha, live and let live.
I just want to live my life.
and, you know, raise my family and, and it's, you know, mixed bag for me when I go home.
But I've been pleasantly surprised at times.
I was waiting in line one day at, like, a FedEx to go ship something.
And there's an older Japanese American man who was the manager, and he came out.
And he pulled me aside, and he just said, I really, really love everything you're doing.
Keep speaking the truth.
You know, there are others who
definitely have Trump derangement syndrome
and can't wrap their heads around how
you know, I represented Hawaii for eight years in Congress
as a Democrat and now I'm President Trump's
Director of National Intelligence.
But it also...
That's got to warp people's brains.
Maybe on its surface, but the thing is,
and look, I mean, I've listened to your guys' podcasts
for a long time and I think there's a lot of folks
who are having probably not like
the cerebral kinds of conversations you have,
but the conversations around
how the Democratic Party has drastically changed.
Drastically changed.
I hear you talk about it as well.
I mean, for me, I was, you know, 21 when I made a decision
to join the Democratic Party in Hawaii,
I was running for the State House
and had to choose a party.
And for me at that time, the Democratic Party
still represented, you know, the values of fighting
for the little guy,
fighting for working people,
protecting the environment and you know standing up for free speech even if you didn't like that
speech and to fast forward from then uh to to now it's um you know the party is is unrecognizable in just
about every way and um i ended up writing a book about why i left the democratic party because
fundamentally and it's not about well what do you believe about health care should we take this
approach or that approach it really is foundational
how the Democratic Party has completely gone away
from the party of JFK and Martin Luther King.
And the good news is you get to work for somebody
who's a former Democrat himself.
Exactly.
President Trump.
There are a number of us forward Democrats in the cabinet.
It's all Democrats.
That's how Trump won his second term
was he rallied all those moderate Democrats
like yourself to become his cabinet.
It was really about common sense,
but I think there's some truth to it.
And it was, you know, Bobby Kennedy and I,
for the last few months of President,
Trump's campaign, we went and traveled all across the country together, and the final event that
we did together was in Wisconsin, I don't know, a couple weeks before the election. And it was really
incredible because it was in a district that normally votes pretty solidly Democrat. We were in this
big, beautiful barn, and there were probably at least a thousand people there, maybe more. And
at a certain point I asked the crowd, I said, you know, raise your hand if you're a Republican,
a whole bunch of hands went up. Raise your hand if you're an independent or a libertarian.
You know, a few hands went up. Raise your hand if you're a Democrat. And the reaction was so
fascinating because first there was like one or two hands that went up very timidly and they're
kind of looking around and then more hands went up and then more hands went up. And then the whole
crowd got on their feet and just started cheering and looking at each other and and folks came up to
me after and just said like I felt like I was getting a hug from everyone that was there and that we
there was no separation or difference between us. Tulsa you um thank you for your service and you spent
a lot of time serving the country you had reservations about bombing Iran and we did it anyway
how do you reconcile that today
and did we do the right thing?
I served in a medical unit in Iraq back
and I was there for all of 2005
and was in a position where every day was confronted
with the high cost of war
and ultimately that's what drove me to eventually run for Congress
to be in a position where I could help
to influence and impact those
decisions. And ultimately, one of the things that I found to be true and very detrimental to
our country and our own national interest is very rarely did leaders in our country ask the
fundamental question of what is our objective. What is our objective? What are we actually
trying to accomplish? If we're discussing a potential military operation or an act of war
or any policy, for that matter, what is our objective? Is it achievable? Does it serve the best
interests of the United States. And if it's a military operation, what is winning, how do you
define winning? What's our exit strategy? And so those are things that I've brought to every
foreign policy question and every aspect of my professional life and personal, you know,
kind of considerations of these different policies. And this is where, you know, I appreciate President
Trump's leadership in his approach to Iran, you know, my position has always been that Iran
cannot have a nuclear weapons capability, period.
President Trump was very clear.
But the reports were you were not in favor of it.
Reports, there were a lot of bullshit reports out there.
My job is to provide the president with intelligence so that he can make the best informed
decision.
Ultimately, what we saw in that operation, Midnight Hammer,
was a president who made a decision and executed a very precise military operation
with a very clear objective that was accomplished in the best possible way and a very clear exit.
Seems to have turned out okay, but...
Don't worry, because Sacks also, but by the way, Sacks also was against bombing around.
He was absolutely, did not want Nikki Haley to become president because his fear was,
and he talked about it on the podcast, that he didn't want.
to start up with Iran.
I just use the precise words.
I didn't want a war with Iran.
I still don't want a war with Iran.
But what is the condition that you can share with us, the public, on the strength, the
fortitude in Iran today with that government?
What is the state on the ground that you can share?
And what do you think the paths ahead are?
Well, I mean, you know, their nuclear capability was destroyed.
much of their infrastructure destroyed,
much of their military capability destroyed.
When you look at Israel's actions
throughout that 12-day war,
their economy is tanking.
Their energy sector is tanking.
So it's a,
Iran is facing a very challenging position.
What we saw is that the Iranian people,
at least then,
and at this point have not risen up against their own government.
But you can imagine, and this is openly talked about by a lot of experts,
is if you're facing a failing economy, lack of basic necessities, water,
basic infrastructure, there is legitimate concern about how people ultimately react
and how they will react to their own government.
And sorry, do you have a point of view on where that takes us?
What steps into the void there?
There are a lot of different factors.
Such instability in the Middle East historically has not gone as we thought it would or hoped.
Exactly, exactly, which is why it's so important to look at this from taking the regime change in Iran kind of history lessons learned into account, but really recognize that these things, we cannot be simplistic as we look at this challenge.
as well as any of the others that we face,
because there are always complexities
and so many different elements that are involved
that could turn things one way or another.
I was in favor of that strike if it was strategic
because I do not think they should be allowed to have a bomb.
I was in favor of it.
Great questions, guys.
I want to talk about the southern border for a second.
Very early into the administration,
you guys declared cartels,
terrorist organizations. Can you walk us through the logic of making that transition and what
it enables America to do and why we did it, what the goal of that is?
President Trump saw, as you heard, anybody who attended even a single one of his rallies
during the election, he saw very clearly the devastating effect that, you know, MS-13 and
Trend de Aragua and these other cartels were having in our communities and on our streets in this
country, making the American people less safe and exacting a kind of violence and criminal
activity that was only getting worse. And this was the main thing that drove his decision to
designate the worst of the worst of cartels as foreign terrorist organizations because of their
activities here within our own country. So this then opens up.
the door for the ability to use different authorities to be able to protect the safety and
security of the American people.
You look at the, you know, obviously the trafficking of fentanyl is a huge thing.
So within my organization, we have the National Counterterrorism Center, who's, you know,
for the last 20 plus years, has been focused on Islamist terrorism, ISIS, Al-Qaeda, al-Shabaab, and
others who may be plotting against America and our people and our interests, now that has been
expanded to look at, you know, the counter-narcotics effort, the counter-cartels effort.
And what it's doing is actually bringing in and focusing on, hey, how are we engaging with,
you know, yes, it's the Customs and Border Protection folks, it's the DEA, but it's also your
local police and your sheriffs who are on the ground there working in these border states
and dealing with the very real effects of these cartels.
I remember I was in Texas
visiting one of these border communities
with the vice president a few months back
and the local ranchers there came in and talked to us.
Secretary Hegeseth was there as well.
And they were talking about how these cartels
are using such sophisticated weaponry,
the kind of stuff that, yes, we experienced some of IEDs, for example.
There was an IED that was planted on one of the roads
on this guy's ranch, in Texas, and one or two of his ranch hands were killed because of this.
We're seeing that these cartels intelligence collection capability, their counterintelligence
capability, their use of drones for both surveillance as well as using armed drones to go after
those who are threatening their operations.
It's a serious adversary that is highly adaptable and ultimately,
will do what they feel is necessary
in order to continue
their illegal activities
at harm of the American people.
If we lost 3,000 people on 9-11,
tragically from Al-Qaeda,
we're losing 100,000 Americans to fentanyl.
If they're not a terrorist organization,
please tell me what one is.
I mean, I am 100% in favor
of you crossing the border
and fucking killing them.
Immediately with prejudice.
I applaud the administration for doing that.
It's far too many.
And when we talked about this issue with Rick Caruso of the people who are on the street over here,
they're on the street because of fentanyl, not because they can't get at home.
I applaud you guys for doing that.
It takes true courage to do it.
The historical context of this is, you know, if you look back at what happened with Britain and China,
in the 1800s, there was a period where, you know, Britain wanted to desperately weaken the Chinese.
And what they did was they started the opium wars.
And it's incredibly analogous to this moment where you see all of these foreign actors,
that are trying to weaken the United States from within.
And so this is why I think the cartel thing is not talked about enough.
Closing the southern border was critical,
but designating these organizations as the organizations that they are allows exactly, as you said,
a really 360-degree view of what is going on,
because they are sophisticated, they have incredible capability,
they have an unlimited balance sheet, it turns out.
And bad intent.
It's very scary.
It's very scary.
It's a strategic issue in China.
Are they making this decision?
to support fentanyl supply chains
because it's destabilizing to the United States?
I'm reviewing in my mind what I can say
and what I can't say with regard to classified intelligence.
This is a point, so I have not seen intelligence
that reflects the statement that you just made.
This, the precursor issue coming out of
China with regards to fentanyl continues to obviously be a point of negotiation and the president's
ongoing negotiations with China. Ultimately, you know, getting after, and China's not the only
one that's providing precursors, but what we're seeing is a downstream or maybe like a down
tick in fentanyl coming across our borders as well as the cartels in Mexico struggling to
create fentanyl because they're not able to access these precursors as,
easily as they have been over the last several years. So when you look at that, President Trump
going after the precursor issue, as well as actually securing our borders, I mean, the significance
and the impact of that really cannot be overstated in how it's positively affecting, again,
the ability for people to live here in our own country more safely.
Folks on that, I just want to thank
Telsi Gabbard.
Amazing.
We're director of National Intelligence.
Thank you.
Thanks, Kelsey.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
We've got a lot of Tulsi fans out there.
You got to stand out.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Well done, Telsus.
Thank you.
Appreciate you.
That was awesome.
Thank you. Thank you, everybody.
Absolutely incredible.