
Tulsi Gabbard
Trump's intelligence chief whose Senate testimony on the Iran war omitted key findings.
Last refreshed: 30 March 2026
Is America’s top spy telling the Senate what the intelligence says, or what Trump wants?
Timeline for Tulsi Gabbard
Mentioned in: No Nowruz address from Supreme Leader
Iran Conflict 2026Mentioned in: Trump: war nearly won; no ceasefire
Iran Conflict 2026Mentioned in: IAEA reveals fourth Iran enrichment site
Iran Conflict 2026Mentioned in: GOP lacks votes for $200bn war bill
Iran Conflict 2026Mentioned in: IAEA contradicts Netanyahu nuclear claim
Iran Conflict 2026Who is Tulsi Gabbard?
What did Tulsi Gabbard say to the Senate about Iran?
Did Tulsi Gabbard say Iran’s nuclear programme was obliterated?
Background
Tulsi Gabbard is a former Democratic Party congresswoman from Hawaii (2013-2021) and Iraq War veteran who became known for opposing US military interventionism. She Left the party in 2022, endorsed Donald Trump in 2024, and was confirmed as Director of National Intelligence (DNI) in January 2025, making her The Nation’s top intelligence official.
Gabbard’s most significant testimony came before the Senate Intelligence Committee in March 2026, when she described the Iranian government as ‘appearing intact but largely degraded’ following US strikes. Critically, she did not reproduce in verbal testimony a written assertion that Iran’s nuclear programme had been ‘obliterated.’ Senator Mark Warner accused her of omitting facts that ‘contradict Trump.’
Her testimony became a flashpoint over intelligence independence. Democrats blocking a War Powers Resolution demanded hearings with senior cabinet officials including Gabbard, arguing the war’s objectives had become unclear. The episode crystallised a broader question about whether the DNI role has become a vehicle for political messaging rather than unvarnished intelligence assessment.