Mike Johnson says the Gang of Eight briefings proved Iran posed an imminent threat. Joe Kent, the man whose job was to assess exactly that, says it’s a lie.
Johnson is just a regular politician, with no expertise, who receives briefings. Kent is a seasoned expert who ran the National Counterterrorism Center. One of them resigned as an act of integrity. The other one spun even more lies into an embarrassing press conference.
Johnson’s exact words:
Iran was building up ballistic missiles at such a rapid pace that we knew that their plan was to fire them upon Americans.
Oh? But Johnson also said the imminent threat was that Iran was “very close to the enrichment of nuclear capability.”
These are two different claims, and he apparently doesn’t know what he’s saying. That’s a clue. One is a military attack. The other is a development program. Johnson can’t tell the difference, and that makes Johnson’s credibility a big problem for America.
Trump Obliteration Trap
Here’s what makes Johnson’s claims literally impossible. Trump declared on June 24, 2025:
It was my great honor to Destroy All Nuclear facilities & capability, and then, STOP THE WAR!
All done. No threat. Pete Hegseth went further, announcing that Iran’s “nuclear ambitions have been obliterated.” The White House published an entire fact sheet titled
Iran’s Nuclear Facilities Have Been Obliterated.
Did Johnson protest then? No. So what was the sudden imminent threat in February 2026?
If Trump destroyed all nuclear capability in June 2025, there can be nothing to be imminent about nine months later. If Iran reconstituted in months what Trump said was permanently destroyed, then Trump lied about obliteration and Johnson covered it up for the better part of a year.
Pick one. There is no third option.
CNN reported in June 2025 that an early intelligence assessment found the strikes did not destroy the core components of Iran’s nuclear program. I mean, we know Trump lies like the sky is blue.
The enriched uranium stockpile was not destroyed. The centrifuges were largely intact. The DIA assessment was that the strikes set Iran back “maybe a few months, tops.” Republican Rep. Michael McCaul, the honorable chairman emeritus of House Foreign Affairs, tried to backpedal as if the plan was “never meant to completely destroy the nuclear facilities.” The White House called CNN’s reporting “flat-out wrong” and called the source a “low-level loser.”
Harsh words for someone who doubted Trump and Johnson, obliterating anyone who dared to say the Iran nuclear threat wasn’t eliminated. They said case closed no doubts allowed.
Now it’s March 2026 and Johnson is citing imminent nuclear threat as justification for a second, larger war. The administration’s own timeline convicted them. They said obliteration. They got degradation. They lied about the difference. And now they need the threat to be imminent again, the very same threat they said they eliminated.
A Tale of Two Americans
| Joe Kent | Mike Johnson | |
|---|---|---|
| Role | Director, National Counterterrorism Center | Speaker of the House |
| Function | Produces and evaluates threat assessments | Receives curated briefings from the executive branch |
| Intelligence access | Direct access to raw intelligence product | Heard some briefings, read some summaries prepared by those seeking authorization |
| Professional background | Army Special Forces, CIA paramilitary officer, 11 combat deployments | Small town lawyer |
| Risk assessment training | Career built on distinguishing real threats from noise | None. Nada. Unqualified. |
| Personal cost of war | Wife killed by ISIL suicide bomber in Syria, 2019 | Reelection |
| Claim | “Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation” | “There was clearly an imminent threat” |
| What they did about it | Resigned | Lied |
Johnson’s response to Kent is that Kent “wasn’t in those briefings.” This is backwards. Kent didn’t need to be in the briefings. He was upstream of them. The NCTC produces the threat assessments that inform what the Gang of Eight is told. Johnson was briefed by the people who wanted the war. Kent was the person who would know whether the briefing was true.
Four Things Are Not the Same
Johnson collapses the logic of four distinct categories into one because the legal justification for bypassing Congress requires the word “imminent”:
- Having enrichment capability is not the same as having a deliverable weapon.
- Having a deliverable weapon is not the same as having intent to use it.
- Having intent to use it is not the same as imminent attack.
Iran had the first, partially.
It did not have the second, third, or fourth.
The Defense Intelligence Agency’s own May 2025 assessment said Iran could develop a long-range missile capable of reaching the U.S. by 2035, if it chose to pursue one. The Arms Control Association stated in March 2026 that there is “no imminent threat” and Iran is “not close to weaponizing its nuclear material.” In March 2025, the US intelligence community assessed that Iran was “not building a nuclear weapon.” The distance from Tehran to Washington is about 10,000 kilometers. Iran’s top missile range is 2,000 kilometers.
Johnson’s claim is demonstrably false.
A non-expert view, based on a briefing he probably didn’t even understand, that Iran was about to “fire ballistic missiles upon Americans”, does not survive a basic sniff test. Johnson is not assessing risk. He is incapable. He is performing hyperbolic, emotionally-driven, legal drama as a conclusion, so that Trump doesn’t have to go to Congress and explain their disaster.
Competent Complicity
Kent has issues too, which shine an interesting light on his narrative. He is not a reliable narrator in general because he promoted Trump election conspiracy theories. He had ties to Trump-promoting extreme-right figures. NBC reported that he had pressured intelligence analysts to corrupt their Venezuela assessment so it would match the delusions of Trump. Democrats opposed his confirmation for very good reasons.
And that’s exactly what makes his “line crossed” resignation devastating. He was all in on Trump corruption of intelligence. Even he can’t go further? This is not a principled critic who was always against the war. This is a loyalist, a Trump-sanctioned appointee, a man who owes his career to this president. That bites when he is saying the intelligence does not support Trump.
When the true believer breaks ranks, the institutional lie becomes visible.
Johnson, by contrast, is too ignorant to know how far from reality he floats. He is performing because he isn’t able to be professional. He is a puppet, playing congressional leader, whose constitutional role is oversight. He is using his access to classified briefings as a credential to shut down the person whose professional function was to evaluate whether the briefing was accurate. That’s not oversight. That’s an integrity breach of government, amplification of disinformation.
The administration said obliteration. The intelligence said degradation. The NCTC director said no imminent threat. The Speaker of the House said trust me I’m a small town lawyer with no expertise and a closet full of skeletons.
We have seen this film before. The last time the word “imminent” did this much legal work, Colin Powell was holding a vial at the United Nations.
