President Donald Trump is steering through a growingly delicate moment within his own administration, and the last thing he needs is further internal turmoil.
Just weeks after facing pressure to dismiss Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem following a contentious congressional hearing, Trump’s team was jolted again by another abrupt shakeup, exposing deeper fractures over his management of the war in Iran at a time when he is still trying to drum up support from a wary public.

That tension surfaced openly this week when National Counterterrorism Center Director Joe Kent — a key ally within Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard’s orbit — abruptly resigned, citing sharp disagreements with the administration’s rationale for the war.
“I cannot in good conscience support the ongoing war in Iran. Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation, and it is clear that we started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby,” Kent wrote on X.
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Kent’s departure sent a jolt through an administration already struggling to present a unified front, and placed fresh scrutiny on Gabbard, who has long been viewed as an uneasy fit inside Trump’s national security circle.
That pressure followed her into a pair of high-stakes appearances before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Wednesday, March 18, and Thursday, March 19, where she was tasked with a delicate balancing act: defend the administration’s intelligence posture without fully owning a war she has historically opposed.
Gabbard, once one of the most outspoken critics of U.S. military intervention, avoided directly undercutting Trump during her testimony but her performance reflected the tightrope she’s now walking.
At the outset, she reminded lawmakers she was not there to offer her “personal views or opinions,” instead leaning on intelligence assessments that aligned with the administration’s public messaging, according to Politico.
But when pressed, she repeatedly sidestepped key questions, including whether the intelligence community agreed that Iran posed an “imminent” threat to the United States.
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“I don’t particularly care about Tulsi Gabbard and whatever she’s doing. I know she has a title there, but I also know she was not involved with the Iranian situation at all. Ratcliffe and his CIA run that show,” the podcaster proclaimed, referring to CIA Director John Ratcliffe.
O’Reilly said Gabbard “lost all credibility with Donald Trump” after opposing the removal of Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro in a swift military operation last year.
The growing criticism underscores a deeper challenge for Trump as the war in Iran continues — not just in maintaining public support, but in keeping his own administration aligned behind a strategy that has already begun to show signs of strain.