DNI Tulsi Gabbard told the Senate Intelligence Committee on 18 March that Iran's government "appears to be intact but largely degraded." Her verbal testimony omitted a written assertion — prepared by her own office and submitted to the committee — that Iran's nuclear enrichment programme had been "obliterated." Senator Mark Warner, the committee's vice chairman, stated she "chose to omit the parts that contradict Trump" 1. Senator Michael Bennet added: "The war is not ending, it is escalating" and the mission "has become less clear" 2.
The distinction between what Gabbard's office wrote and what she said aloud matters. Written testimony submitted to intelligence committees enters the official record; verbal testimony is delivered under oath and subject to questioning by senators who hold security clearances and access to raw intelligence. By omitting the "obliterated" claim rather than defending it, Gabbard signalled that the assertion could not survive scrutiny from committee members who can read the same source material. Defence Secretary Hegseth had claimed five days earlier that Iran's missile volume was down 90% and drone launches down 95% — language calibrated for press conferences, not for hearings where senators can cross-reference classified reporting.
Her characterisation of the Iranian government as "intact but largely degraded" defines the distance between current operations and any achievable end-state. Trump acknowledged on 14 March that popular revolution — his stated objective — faces "a very big hurdle" when the population lacks weapons . NBC News reported that military officials include off-ramp options in Trump's daily war briefings; he has not taken any . Three members of The Supreme Leader's inner circle are dead in 48 hours, yet the DNI's own assessment is that the government structure holds. The Administration has not articulated what "largely degraded" is supposed to produce if it does not produce collapse.
The hearing came the same day six Democratic senators forced a War Powers Resolution vote and one day after Joe Kent resigned as counterterrorism director, stating Iran "posed no imminent threat" . Congressional pressure is now building on two fronts: the legal authority to wage the war and the reliability of the intelligence used to justify it. Senate Republicans blocked the War Powers vote, but Democrats' threat of daily procedural action ensures the pressure does not recede. The last time a DNI's credibility became a sustained congressional issue — James Clapper's 2013 testimony on NSA surveillance before the same committee — the political consequences ran for years.
