
Hegseth slams media over Iran reports
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth slammed leaks of initial intelligence assessments regarding President Trump's strikes against Iranian nuclear sites. CBS News' Sam Vinograd and Olivia Rinaldi have the latest.
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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth slammed leaks of initial intelligence assessments regarding President Trump's strikes against Iranian nuclear sites. CBS News' Sam Vinograd and Olivia Rinaldi have the latest.
The Pentagon provided more details on the mission to strike several of Iran's nuclear sites approved by President Trump. The details were made public during a press conference with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Dan Caine. Mark Cancian, a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, joins CBS News with more.
President Trump is praising Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth after he held a press conference where he railed against the press and the initial intelligence assessment on the strikes against some of Iran's nuclear sites. CBS News' Taurean Small reports.
While U.S. and Israeli officials claim major setbacks to Iran's nuclear program, a leaked DIA report suggests only limited damage. Sam Vinograd joins us to sort through the mixed messages.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth pushed back against initial reports about President Trump's strikes against several Iranian nuclear sites. CBS News' Charlie D'Agata reports.
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and CIA Director John Ratcliffe claimed their agencies had new intelligence regarding the U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear sites. Ratcliffe said Iran's nuclear program was "severely damaged" and would "have to be rebuilt over the course of years" while Gabbard claimed "Iran's nuclear facilities have been destroyed." It disputes a preliminary assessment by the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency that said Iran's nuclear program was set back by a few months.
A CBS News crew traveled through Iran as a fragile ceasefire holds between Iran and Israel. Imtiaz Tyab reports on how Iranians feel about the future.
Trump administration officials are pushing back on an initial intelligence assessment that differed from President Trump's characterization of the U.S. strikes against some of Iran's nuclear sites. CBS News' Weijia Jiang and Imtiaz Tyab report.
The CIA director says "credible intelligence" indicates Iran's nuclear program was "severely damaged."
President Trump spoke to reporters at the NATO summit in the Netherlands amid the tenuous Iran-Israel ceasefire.
President Trump is sticking to his assessment that U.S. strikes "obliterated" Iran's nuclear weapons program. Other assessments are coming in to describe the extent of the damage, and for now, there is no consensus. Ed O'Keefe reports. Imtiaz Tyab has a first look at Tehran.
President Trump says U.S. strikes obliterated Iran's three nuclear sites, but a report characterizing an early U.S. assessment suggests the strikes only caused a months-long setback in Iran's nuclear ambitions. Charlie D'Agata has more.
A memo was distributed to FBI field office directors in the past 48 hours instructing them to focus resources on terror threats, including domestically, two sources told CBS News.
It took a CBS News crew more than 14 hours to drive south from Turkey to Tehran, a nearly 600-mile trip made longer by checkpoints and bad roads.
As the delicate ceasefire in the Israel-Iran conflict continues to hold, a CBS News crew received permission to enter Iran Wednesday to see how conditions are on the ground in its capital of Tehran. The Iranian government maintains tight control over its media and closely monitors foreign journalists. Imtiaz Tyab has more.
Several lawmakers are pressing for the passage of a measure that would require congressional approval for further military action against Iran. Democratic Rep. Mike Levin of California joins "The Takeout" to discuss.
President Trump said Iran's nuclear program has been obliterated, despite a preliminary intelligence assessment suggesting otherwise. Former chief Pentagon spokesperson Chris Meagher joins "The Daily Report" to discuss.
Zohran Mamdani declared victory Tuesday night in New York City's mayoral Democratic primary. Shelby Talcott, White House correspondent for Semafor, and Reese Gorman, NOTUS political reporter, join "The Takeout" to discuss the implications of Mamdani's win for the future of the Democratic Party.
The White House is pushing back on the findings of a preliminary intelligence report that downplayed the success of President Trump's strikes on Iran. CBS News' Charlie D'Agata and Nancy Cordes have the latest details.
CBS News has learned the FBI boosted counterterrorism resources after the U.S. struck Iran's nuclear sites. Michael Masters, national director and CEO of the Secure Community Network, joins "The Takeout" to unpack the threats facing the Jewish community amid tensions in the Middle East.
The suspect in the terror attack in Boulder, Colorado, will be tried on a dozen federal hate crime charges. He's accused of using Molotov cocktails to attack a group of people marching for the release of Israeli hostages. CBS News Homeland Security correspondent Nicole Sganga has more.
While attending the NATO summit in the Netherlands on Wednesday, President Trump rebuked an early report from the Defense Intelligence Agency that U.S. strikes against Iran set back its nuclear capabilities by months and did not "obliterate" it, as Mr. Trump has said. CBS News senior White House and political correspondent Ed O'Keefe reports from The Hague.
President Trump left the NATO summit on Wednesday after touting the ceasefire between Israel and Iran. There is cautious optimism in Iran that the ceasefire will hold. CBS News' Imtiaz Tyab reports from Tehran.
President Trump heading back to the United States Wednesday after NATO allies committed to increasing defense spending. Mr. Trump also said the U.S. will meet with Iran next week. CBS News' Ed O'Keefe reports from the NATO summit and Brian Katulis, senior fellow at the Middle East Institute, joins CBS News to discuss Iran.
Dan Shapiro, former U.S. ambassador to Israel, joins CBS News to discuss the ceasefire between Israel and Iran and the prospects of a possible deal between Israel and Hamas.
The government shutdown extends into Day 20 on Monday as the Senate plans its eleventh vote on a House-passed measure to end the impasse. Follow live updates here.
After Israel-Hamas clashes test Trump's Gaza peace deal, his top negotiators return to the region to shore up the ceasefire.
The Louvre, the world's most iconic museum, remained closed Monday after thieves stole priceless treasures from the Apollon Gallery, the home of the French crown jewels.
The Supreme Court will decide whether a federal law that prohibits unlawful drug users from having firearms violates the Second Amendment.
Trump wants Russia and Ukraine to freeze the war on the current battlelines, with Moscow holding a huge swathe of eastern Ukraine. Zelenskyy seems unwilling.
The group has been campaigning to universalize the U.S. church's zero-tolerance abuse policy in the Catholic Church.
An Amazon Web Services outage caused major disruptions around the world, disrupting services from Snapchat to online broker Robinhood.
Federal officials found a "suspicious stand" near the area used by Air Force One when President Trump travels to Florida, FBI Director Kash Patel said Sunday.
A federal probe of Medicare and Medicaid plans run by private insurance companies found that the plan operators often overstated how many mental health providers were available in their networks.