Tulsi Gabbard's recent statements as Director of National Intelligence highlight a fundamental gap between official U.S. intelligence assessments and observable Iranian actions. Despite Iran significantly increasing its enriched uranium stockpile, officials continue to deny that the country is actively pursuing nuclear weapons. This enduring skepticism, rooted in past administrations, raises questions about the reliability of U.S. intelligence and the potential implications for national security, especially given Iran's pursuit of regional hegemony and willingness to face economic sanctions.
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard voiced a very long and fundamentally shameful oxymoron when discussing Iran's enriched uranium stockpile.
While the US intel community assesses that Iran is not building a nuclear weapon, its uranium stockpile has reached unprecedented levels.
Ambitious would-be hegemon like Iran jacks up its supply of enriched uranium for only one reason, contrary to US intelligence's assessment.
Iran wants nukes to bolster its drive toward regional hegemony and make its regime harder to dislodge, evidenced by their willingness to endure economic sanctions.
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