Letters from an American - Hidden Costs
Episode Date: May 8, 2026Government restricts satellite imagery from the press, to hide the extent of damage Iran did to our bases in war. More insider trading surrounds latest Trump announcement re war. Patel drinking and gi...ving Ka$h Patel labeled bourbon bottles as swag.Get full, free access to Letters from an American here: https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribeYou can also find me: Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/hcrichardson.bsky.socialInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/heathercoxrichardson/?hl=enFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/heathercoxrichardson/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@heathercoxrichardson Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe
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May 6, 26.
It has not been a banner day for members of the Trump administration.
Evan Hill, Jared Lay, Alex Horton, Tara Kopp, and Dan Lamath of the Washington Post
reported that Iranian strikes since February 28th, when U.S. and Israeli air strikes began,
have caused far more damage to U.S. military sites in the Middle East than Defense Secretary Pete
Heggzeth and the U.S. government.
have admitted. While the damage from the Iranian strikes, which have killed and wounded service
members, is itself important, so is the underlying story that the U.S. government is hiding the true
cost of the war in Iran from the American people. The journalists note that it is
unusually difficult to get satellite imagery from the Middle East right now, because less
than two weeks into the war, the U.S. government asked two of the largest commercial
providers of satellite imagery, Vantor and Planet, to limit, delay, or indefinitely withhold
the publication of imagery of the region while the war is ongoing. The companies complied,
forcing the journalists to turn to high-resolution satellite imagery published by Iran's
state-affiliated media, cross-checking it with lower-resolution imagery from the satellite system
the European Union uses. Global Affairs journalist David Rothkopf wrote today in The Daily Beast,
Not since Vietnam have we seen a more systematic effort by an administration to lie about the nature,
costs, consequences, and results of a war than we have seen from the White House on Iran.
Early this morning, Barack Ravid of Axios, who often reports information from White House insiders,
wrote that the White House believed it was close to a memorandum of understanding with Iran
that would end the war and lay the groundwork for future negotiations over Iran's nuclear program,
although there was plenty of hedging in the article.
Once again, there were fortuitously timed trades before the story broke.
Adam Cobesi's Cobesi letter, which comments on global capital markets, noted that about 70 minutes before the Axio story, someone took about $920 million worth of crude oil shorts and bet the market would drop, meaning they promised to provide about 10,000 contracts for oil at the current price. Within two hours, oil prices had fallen more than 12%, making the entity a profit of about $100,000.
$125 million.
On social media, Trump's account continued to whipsaw between pressing for an end to the war
and threatening apocalyptic destruction if Iran doesn't agree to U.S. demands.
Assuming Iran agrees to give what has been agreed to, which is perhaps a big assumption, he wrote,
the already legendary Epic Fury will be at an end, and the highly effective blockade will allow
the Hormuz Strait to be open to all, including Iran. If they don't agree, the bombing starts,
and it will be, sadly, at a much higher level and intensity than it was before. Thank you for your
attention to this matter, President Donald J. Trump. The administration's shifting justifications
and claims about the Iran war are dizzying. Ben Finley, Matthew Lee, and Farnusha Miri of the Associated Press
wrote today. Yesterday, after calling the war concluded, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and
Defense Secretary Pete Heggzeth spent the day selling Trump's Project Freedom to open the
Strait of Hormuz, only to have Trump call Project Freedom off with a post on social media.
Moshe Gaines, Courtney Kubay, Andrea Mitchell, Natasha Lebedeva, and Daniel Arkin of NBC News
reported tonight that Trump's abrupt-about face
came after Saudi Arabia told the U.S.
it would not permit the U.S. military to use Saudi airspace
for the operation.
This afternoon, the U.S. fired on an Iranian oil tanker
as it tried to pass through the U.S. blockade
and Israel launched strikes on a suburb of Lebanon's capital, Beirut.
China's foreign minister, Wang Yi, said today
that China is deeply distressed by the U.
conflict and called for a ceasefire. We believe that a comprehensive ceasefire is urgently needed,
that a resumption of hostilities is not acceptable, he said. Iran's foreign minister Abbas Arraghi
was in China today where he met with Wang. Trump is due to visit China on May 14th. Trump wants a solution
to the Iran more before that meeting and the Iranians know it, giving them leverage over a deal.
This evening, the Speaker of Iran's Parliament, M.B. Golobov, posted,
Operation Trust Me, Bro, failed. Now, back to routine with Operation Fosios.
Hegzeth is not the only member of the administration in trouble in the news today.
After journalist Sarah Fitzpatrick wrote an April 17th story in the Atlantic
detailing FBI director Cash Patel's drinking and inability to perform his job,
Patel sued both the Atlantic.
and Fitzpatrick for defamation, asking for $250 million in damages.
The Atlantic and Fitzpatrick stood by the story, which had two dozen sources.
Fitzpatrick noted that after she published the piece,
additional informants came forward to corroborate her findings.
Today, Ken Delanian and Carol Lennig of MS Now reported that the FBI has launched
a criminal leak investigation into who talked to Fitzpatrick.
Sources told the reporters that such an investigation called an insider threat investigation
usually involves government officials who may have given away state secrets or classified documents.
Focusing on leaks to a reporter is highly unusual, they say.
Although it remains unclear what steps the investigation has taken,
Delanyan and Lenig note that it could allow FBI agents to obtain
Fitzpatrick's phone records and examine her social media contacts.
One of the sources told the reporters that FBI agents feel deep concern about the probe.
They know they're not supposed to do this, one source told the reporters, but if they don't go
forward, they could lose their jobs. You're damned if you do and damned if you don't.
FBI spokesperson, Ben Williamson, denied the story, telling Delanyan and Lenig, this is completely
false. No such investigation like this exists and the reporter you mention is not being investigated
at all. Every time there's a publication of false claims by anonymous sources that gets called out,
the media plays the victim via investigations that do not exist. Under Patel, the FBI has already
investigated a New York Times reporter who wrote a story about an FBI security detail assigned to Patel's
girlfriend, and searched the home of a Washington Post reporter. Today, the FBI rated the offices
and business of Virginia State Senator L. Louise Lucas, 82, a black woman who led the movement to
redraw Virginia's districts after Republicans redo districts in Republican-dominated states.
The Fox News Channel was on the scene, suggesting it had been tipped off by the FBI.
Meanwhile, Fitzpatrick published a new story today in the Atlantic, reporting that Patel travels
with a supply of personalized branded bourbon, with the label Cash Patel FBI director and an FBI
shield. She explains, surrounding the shield is a band of text featuring Patel's director title
and his favorite spelling of his first name, K-A-dollar-sign-H. An eagle holds the shield in its
talons, along with the number nine, presumably a reference to Patel's place in the history of FBI
directors. In some cases, the 750 milliliter bottles bear Patel's signature, with a number nine there as well.
In what sure reads like a journalist burying a subject with evidence, Fitzpatrick lists the places
and occasions on which Patel has given out bottles of the whiskey and explains that he has transported,
reported the whiskey on a Department of Justice Plain,
including to the Olympics in Milan, Italy.
When a bottle went missing during a training seminar
with Ultimate Fighting Championship athletes in Quantico, Virginia,
Patel was angry enough that he threatened
to make his staff take polygraphs and face prosecution.
Fitzpatrick notes that several current and former FBI employees,
including multiple senior leaders,
told me that
the director regularly handing out his own personally branded bourbon, including to civilians outside
the bureau, was unheard of. They explain, the FBI has traditionally had a zero-tolerance
approach to unauthorized use of alcohol on the job and for its misuse while off-duty.
handing out bottles of liquor at the premier law enforcement agency,
it makes me frightened for the country,
George Hill, a former FBI supervisory intelligence analyst, told Fitzpatrick.
Ron Filipkowski of Midas News noted,
The journalist who is being sued by Cash Patel
and reportedly being investigated by the FBI
is out with a new story.
Is there a Pulitzer for being a being a person?
fearless badass? If so, she should win it. Josh Wingrove of Bloomberg reported today that acting
Attorney General Todd Blanche will ask the Supreme Court to let the Department of Justice,
or DOJ, intervene in the case of columnist E. Jean Carroll, who won an $83.3 million jury verdict
against Trump for defamation after he lied that he had not sexually assaulted her.
the Department of Justice is supposed to represent the American people, Trump's appointees are using
the department as Trump's personal law firm. If the Supreme Court allows the DOJ to step in,
swapping the U.S. government for Trump in the case, the case would have to be dismissed because
plaintiffs can't sue the federal government for defamation. Judges from the appeals court have already
refused to permit such a swap, but Blanche is giving it another shot.
Finally, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnik was in front of the House Oversight and Government
Reform Committee today for a closed-door interview about his relationship with sex offender
Jeffrey Epstein. He was not under oath for his testimony, a requirement Democrats want for those
testifying before the committee, and committee chair James Comer, a Republican of Kentucky,
does not. Lutnik said he had cut all ties with Epstein in 2005, only to have information come out that,
in fact, the two maintained contact until at least 2018, years after Epstein's 2008 conviction for
soliciting prostitution from a minor. Asked why he had taken his wife and their four young children
to Epstein's private island in the Caribbean in 2012.
Totnik told the committee that he didn't remember and that it was inexplicable.
Indeed.
Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson.
It was produced at Soundscape Productions, Deadham.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.
