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Thursday, April 23, 2026

Pete Hegseth rips into media for overshadowing ‘historic’ Iran strikes

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ripped into the media for failing to positively cover Donald Trump’s ‘historically successful’ strikes on Iran. 

The president over the weekend authorized 30,000 pounds of explosives to ‘obliterate’ Iran’s three largest nuclear sites dubbing it a total success.

But days later, a leaked report from the Pentagon’s Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) reportedly stated that the U.S. strikes only delayed Iran from getting a nuclear weapon by a couple of months. It also said that much of the enriched uranium was moved out ahead of the B-2 bomber hits.

Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in his first public remarks on the bombing, appeared to use the report in his criticism of President Donald Trump.

He claimed the president ‘exaggerated’ the impact of the strikes on three nuclear sites ‘because he needed to.’

Hegseth held a press conference at the Pentagon on Thursday morning to slam CNN, the New York Times and other outlets that disclosed the report’s findings calling it ‘preliminary.’

He accused the media of acting ‘irresponsible’ in its reporting and went head-to-head with one of the Pentagon’s most respected reporters in his passionate defense of the airstrike. 

After the 45-minute press conference ended, Trump praised his defense secretary, writing on Truth Social: ‘One of the greatest, most professional, and most “confirming” News Conferences I have ever seen!’ 

Follow along with Daily Mail’s live blog: 

Hegseth blasts media in defense of Trump’s Iran airstrike

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth defended President Donald Trump’s airstrike on Iran and blasted the media that reported on an intelligence assessment that cast doubt on its success.

‘Let me read the bottom line here,’ Hegseth said during a press conference at the Pentagon. ‘President Trump directed the most complex and secretive military operation in history and it was resounding success resulting in a ceasefire agreement and the end of the 12-day war.’

He then when on to criticize CNN, MSNBC, the New York Times and other outlets that reported on a preliminary intelligence report that said little damage was done to Iran’s nuclear program.

‘It is preliminary. It points out it is not coordinated with the intelligence community at all, there is low-confidence in this report, there are gaps in,’ he said.

More Supreme Court rulings coming Friday, including birthright citizenship case

The Supreme Court is finished issuing opinions for Thursday after releasing four.

Chief Justice John Roberts said Friday will the last day opinions are dropped with six remaing.

The cases remaining include:

  • A challenge by a trade group for the adult entertainment industry to a 2023 Texas law that requires pornography sites to verify the age of their users before providing access.
  • A challenge to a federal program that subsidizes telephone and high-speed internet services.
  • A challenge to the constitutionality of the structure of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, which is an independent panel of experts with the power under the Affordable Care Act to determine which preventive services insurers must cover
  • A dispute over a Louisiana congressional map
  • A First Amendment case involving a group of Maryland parents who are challenging a requirement that their children participate in instruction at their public schools in programs that includes LGBTQ+ themes
  • And the big one remaining: Three consolidated cases challening President Donald Trump’s executive order ending birthright citizenship

Court rules in visa case

The final court opinion released is in Riley v. Bondi.

Pierre Riley is a noncitizen who overstayed his visa and has an order for his deportation. The question is whether he can challenge the order.

The 4th Circuit ruled that Riley’s petition came too late because it was not filed 30 days after an immigration officer issued a final removal order in his case.

The Supreme Court disagreed with the 4th Circuit, ruling that the 30-day filing deadline is not jurisdictional and sent the case back for reconsideration by the lower court.

Court rules for Texas inmate

The Supreme Court next ruled in Gutierriez v. Saenz.

This is a case about a Texas inmate’s efforts to obtain DNA testing of evidence that he says will show he was not at the scene of the murder he was convicted of committing.

The court ruled 6-3 that he does, overturning the Fifth Circuit’s decision.

Supreme Court rules against Planned Parenthood

The Supreme Court also ruled with South Carolina in allowing states to cut off Medicaid funding to Planned Parenthood.

The court ruled 6-3 that patients can’t sue over being denied the right to see the provider of their choice – which, in this case, was Planned Parenthood.

Justice Gorsuch wrote the majority opinion in Medina v. Planned Parenthood. Justice Jackson filed a dissenting opinion, joined by Justices Sotomayor and Kagan.

The decision could empower many other states to kick Planned Parenthood out of their Medicaid programs. Federal law already generally prohibits the use of Medicaid funds for abortion but Planned Parenthood offers other services, such as breast cancer screenings and annual exams for women.

FILE PHOTO: An anti-abortion marcher carries a sign calling for the organisation Planned Parenthood to loose funding, during in the 46th annual March for Life at the Supreme Court in Washington, U.S., January 18, 2019. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts/File Photo

New round of Supreme Court rulings are in

The Supreme Court released a new round of opinions, the first in the case of Hewitt v. US.

The case involved the First Step Act, which eliminated a mandatory minimum penalty for certain firearm offenders. The question before the court was what happens when an offender is sentenced before the enactment of the First Step Act but the sentence was then vacated.

The court ruled 5-4 that a sentence ‘has not been imposed’ for purposes of the provision and the act’s more lenient penalties therefore apply.

General Caine shows how bombs work

Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, offered a detailed narrative about military tactics and hardware used in Saturday’s airstrike.

He said it was years in the making after a Pentagon analysis in 2009 showed U.S. did not possess the type of weapon needed to attack a site like Fordow, which is buried deep under a mountain in Iran.

The 30,000-pound Massive Ordnance Penetrator, or MOP, was developed as a result. It is designed to burrow into the earth and destroy targets at the subsurface.

U.S. had early warning of Monday’s retaliatory attack

Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the United States had early warning about Iran’s retaliatory attack Monday on al-Udeid Air Base in Qatar.

That allowed the commanders there to mostly empty the facility, he noted.

Caine said fewer than 50 U.S. troops remained to defend the base using two Patriot missile batteries.

We believe that this is the largest single Patriot engagement in U.S. military history,’ he said.

‘I’m not going to tell you how many rounds were shot,’ he noted, ‘but it was a bunch.’

The precise number is classified, Caine revealed.

DOHA, QATAR - JUNE 23: In this frame-grab made from video, missiles and air-defense interceptors illuminate the night sky over Doha after Iran launched an attack on US forces at Al Udeid Air Base on June 23, 2025 in Doha, Qatar. The Qatari government said that it intercepted all of Iran's missiles, which were launched in retaliation for the US's recent attack on Iranian nuclear facilities. (Photo by Getty Images)

Watch Pete Hegseth and Jennifer Griffith go head-to-head

Trump slams reports Iran moved its uranium stores ahead of airstrike

President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth pushed back against reports that Iran moved its enriched uranium ahead of the airstrike.

Satellite footage showed vehicles leaving the nuclear sites on Saturday ahead of the U.S. bombing.

‘The cars and small trucks at the site were those of concrete workers trying to cover up the top of the shafts. Nothing was taken out of facility. Would take too long, too dangerous, and very heavy and hard to move!,’ Trump wrote on Truth Social.

Hegseth said he didn’t know of any intelligence showing the uranium stockpiles were moved.

‘I’m not aware of any intelligence that I’ve reviewed that says things were not where they were supposed to be … moved or otherwise,” he said during a Pentagon press conference.

Trump praises Hegseth

Donald Trump praised Pete Hegseth after the defense secretary spent the majority of his 45-minute press conference blasting the media and defending the president.

‘One of the greatest, most professional, and most “confirming” News Conferences I have ever seen!,’ Trump wrote on Truth Social.

‘The Fake News should fire everyone involved in this Witch Hunt, and apologize to our great warriors, and everyone else!’

Hegseth makes contradicting claim on Iran sites

General Caine says he was never asked to change an assessment

Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said he’s never been asked by the White House to provide a rosy assessment or change any of his reports.

‘No, I have not and no I would not,’ he said.

Caine was asked the question at a Pentagon press conference where Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth blasted media reports on an early intelligence assessment that cast doubt on the effectiveness of the Iran airstrike.

A reporter asked Caine: ‘Mr. Chairman, have you been pressured to change your assessment or give more rosy intelligence assessment to us by any political factor, either president or secretary and if you were, would you do that?’

‘That is easy, no, no, I have not and no, I would not,’ he replied. ‘My job as chairman is to offer range of options to the president and the national command authority to deliver risk associated with each of those and then take the orders of national command authority and go execute them. I have never been pressured by the president or secretary to do anything other than tell them exactly what I’m thinking and that is exactly what I’ve done.’

ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA - JUNE 26: Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Air Force Gen. Dan Caine speaks during a news conference at the Pentagon on June 26, 2025 in Arlington, Virginia. Top officials from the Department of Defense gave an update after three Iranian nuclear facilities were struck by the U.S. military last weekend and Iran countered by launching missiles at Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

General Caine shows bomb demonstration

Hegseth blasts political correctness when asked about female fighter pilots

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth pushed back against a charge he didn’t acknowledge the female pilots who were on the mission.

The defense secretary laughed when a reporter asked him: ‘Why not acknowledge female pilots that participated in the mission? The early messages congratulated the boys.’

‘When I say boy bombers – this is what the press does,’ he said.

‘The chairman mentioned a female bomber pilot, that’s fantastic, she’s fantastic, she’s a hero. I want more female bomber pilots. I hope men and women sign up to do brave things,’ he added.

Then he blasted the media for being politically correct.

‘When you spin it because I say boys and bombers is a common phrase, I will keep saying things,’ he said, adding: ‘I am proud of that female pilot.’

‘I don’t care if it is a male or female in the cockpit and American people don’t care. It is obsession with race and gender in this department that has changed priorities and we don’t do that anymore. We don’t play your little games.’

ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA - JUNE 26: U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth (L) accompanied by Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Air Force Gen. Dan Caine (R), speaks during a news conference at the Pentagon on June 26, 2025 in Arlington, Virginia. Top officials from the Department of Defense gave an update after three Iranian nuclear facilities were struck by the U.S. military last weekend and Iran countered by launching missiles at Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

Hegseth goes head-to-head with Fox News reporter Jennifer Griffin

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth blasted Fox News’ Jennifer Griffin for her coverage of the airstrikes in Iran.

‘Jennifer, you have been about the worst – the one who misrepresents the most intentionally what the president says,’ he told her.

Hegseth criticized her after she asked him about reports Iran had removed its enriched uranium from its nuclear sites ahead of the airstrike.

Griffin, a longtime and well-respected national security reporter, looked shocked at Hegseth’s accusation and pushed back at his charge.

‘I was first to describe the B-2 bombers, the mission, with great accuracy, I take issue with that,’ she told him.

Hegseth backed down and acknowledged her reporting.

‘I appreciate you acknowledging that most successful mission based on operational security this department has done, I appreciate that,’ he said.

Jennifer Griffin of Fox News argues with Hegseth

Gen. Caine praises air crews

Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, described the crew who flew the bombers that launched the airstrike in Iran.

He said the oldest soldier was a 28-year-old captain and the youngest was a 21-year-old private. All were from the active-duty Air Force and Missouri Air National Guard.

Caine said he talked with the crews and they told him how they landed back at Whitman Air Force Base in Missouri to ‘incredible cheers of their families.

‘A lot of flags and a lot of tears. One commander told me these are moments in the lives of our families they will never forget.’

Hegseth: First reports are ‘almost always wrong’

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said ‘first reports are almost always wrong’ as he continued to blast a preliminary intelligence assessment that said the Iran airstrikes didn’t decimate that country’s nuclear program.

‘First reports are almost always wrong. They’re almost always incomplete,’ he said.

He told the press: ‘Your job is to step back and assess them, that is why we urge caution about putting entire stories on biassed leaks to biased publications trying to make something look bad.’

The defense secretary pointed to the massive firepower that struck three Iran nuclear sites, including one at Fordow.

‘Anyone with two eyes, some ears and a brain can recognize that kind of firepower with that specificity at that location will have a devastating effect,’ he said.

Hegseth added: ‘If you want to know what is going on at Fordow, go and get a big shove.’

ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA - JUNE 26: U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth (L) accompanied by Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Air Force Gen. Dan Caine (R), speaks during a news conference at the Pentagon on June 26, 2025 in Arlington, Virginia. Top officials from the Department of Defense gave an update after three Iranian nuclear facilities were struck by the U.S. military last weekend and Iran countered by launching missiles at Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

Nato chief denies using grovelling ‘Daddy’ nickname for Donald Trump

Nato chief Mark Rutte has been forced to backtrack on an embarrassing remark – where he apparently called US president Donald Trump ‘daddy.’

During a meeting of the defence bloc in the Hague yesterday, Rutte and Trump met following the US president’s crass comment on the Iran-Israel war.

It was there that the US President he said: ‘We basically have two countries that have been fighting so long and so hard that they don’t know what the f*** they’re doing.’

Rutte said on Wednesday that ‘Daddy has to use strong language’ to get Israel and Iran to sort things out, to which Trump agreed.

‘You have to use strong language. Every once in a while you have to use a certain word,’ the president said.

‘Brightest explosion I’ve ever seen’: Chairman of the Joint Chiefs

Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, praised the work of soldiers who flew bombers that launched the airstrike in Iran.

He described their reaction to the bombing, saying they called it ‘the brightest explosion I’ve ever seen.’

‘We know that the trailing jets saw the first weapons function and pilots stated this was the brightest explosion I’ve ever seen, it literally looked like daylight,’ he said at press conference at the Pentagon.

‘They were male and female aviators on this mission and a crew member told me when I talked to them on video the other day that this felt like the Super Bowl,’ he added.

He went on to say he had ‘chills’ as details about the mission were unveiled.

Dan Caine

Trump claims media outlets will start firings

President Donald Trump claimed several media outlets will be firing reporters who wrote about a preliminary intelligent report casting doubt on the success of his Iran mission.

‘Rumor is that the Failing New York Times and Fake News CNN will be firing the reporters who made up the FAKE stories on the Iran Nuclear sites because they got it so wrong. Lets see what happens?,’ he wrote on Truth Social.

CNN and the New York Times put out statements standing behind their staff and their reporting.

Pentagon unveils poster showing the damage to the nuclear sites after bombings

How Trump used FOURTEEN bunker buster bombs and 30 Tomahawk missiles to ‘obliterate’ Iran’s nuclear sites

Donald Trump ‘completely obliterated’ Iran’s top secret Fordow nuclear site with 14 massive 30,000-pound ‘bunker buster’ bombs.

Two other nuclear sites in Iran were also ‘wiped out’ with 30 Tomahawk missiles launched from U.S. submarines 400 miles away.

The details were first revealed by Sean Hannity of Fox News, who spoke to the president shortly after the strikes.

Read more below as the Pentagon unveils more evidence that the nuclear labs were destroyed.

White House marks Trump’s return from NATO summit with provocative Usher music video

Hegseth blasts media for ‘irresponsible’ coverage

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth accused the media of reporting on a preliminary intelligent report casting doubt on the success of President Donald Trump’s Iran airstrike for ‘political purposes.’

He also blasted those who leaked the report to the press. The FBI is investigating the leak.

‘Time and time again classified information is leaked or pedaled for political purposes to try to make the president look bad,’ he said.

‘So many aspects of what our men and women did, because of hatred of this press corps are undermined because people are trying to leak and spin continually it wasn’t successful. It is irresponsible.’

Hegseth accused the press of undermining the military.

‘You are undermining success of incredible pilots and incredible refuelers and incredible defenders who accomplished their mission, setback a nuclear program in ways other presidents would have dreamed,’ he said.

Iran’s supreme leader comes out of hiding to bizarrely claim victory over Israel

Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has said the United States hit Tehran’s nuclear sites but achieved ‘nothing significant’, as he vowed his country would ‘never surrender’ to its enemies.

Khamenei condemned what he called Donald Trump’s ‘showmanship’ and claimed that the US President ‘exaggerated’ the impact of the strikes on three nuclear sites ‘because he needed to.’

‘Anyone who heard [Trump’s] remarks could tell there was a different reality behind his words – they could do nothing,’ the 86-year-old Iranian leader said.

The supreme leader also declared victory over Israel, despite scores of top officials and nuclear scientists being assassinated by Iran’s arch enemy over the course of the 12-day conflict.

Both Iran and Israel had already claimed they won the short-lived confrontation, the deadliest and most destructive in their shared history, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hailing on it a ‘historic victory’ for Israel.

Khamenei broke his silence on the US strikes in a video broadcast on Iranian state television from his bunker hideout, his first appearance since June 19 and first public comments since a ceasefire was declared.

Trump official in ‘line of fire’ for leaked Iran bombing intel as they’re left out of major security briefing

Tulsi Gabbard is rumored to be in Donald Trump’s ‘line of fire’ as she has been sidelined ahead of a much-anticipated intelligence briefing to Congress to detail Trump’s recent strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities.

Now, the spy chief will be absent on Thursday as Trump officials offer Congress evidence of how successful the strikes were. Trump has angrily insisted CNN and The New York Times were wrong in saying they had minimal effect.

Hegseth to media: It’s in ‘your blood to cheer against Trump’

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ripped the media during his press conference at the Pentagon, saying it’s in ‘your blood to cheer against Trump.’

Hegseth passionately defended Saturday’s air strike on Iran and blasted the media for reporting on an early intelligence assessment that cast doubt on its success.

‘I mean specifically you, the press corps, because you cheer against Trump so hard, like it’s in your DNA and in your blood to cheer against Trump. You want him not to be successful so bad, you have to cheer against the efficacy of the strikes. You have to hope they were not effective.’

Exclusive:Trump’s approval rating revealed after Iran strikes divide the nation

For all the twists and turns of the ’12 Day War’ between Israel and Iran – including President Donald Trump’s decision to drop bombs on three Iranian nuclear sites – the president’s approval rating remained extraordinarily stable.

A new Daily Mail/J.L. Partners poll found that Trump’s approval rating stood at 47 percent.

It was also 47 percent on June 6, before Israel made the decision to start bombing Iran on June 12, with the goal of obliterating the Islamic regime’s nuclear program.

And it was 47 percent on June 18, three days before the U.S. got involved.

The president’s disapproval rating stayed at 53 percent throughout.

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