Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth alarmed two national security experts after making his latest "dangerous" decision. Last week, Hegseth fired Army Gen. Randy GeorgeDefense Secretary Pete Hegseth alarmed two national security experts after making his latest "dangerous" decision. Last week, Hegseth fired Army Gen. Randy George
Experts alarmed by Pete Hegseth's latest 'dangerous' decision: 'Will feel it immediately'
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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth alarmed two national security experts after making his latest "dangerous" decision.
Last week, Hegseth fired Army Gen. Randy George, the Army's chief of staff, over what the New York Times described as "hostility" between the Defense Secretary and senior military leaders. George's firing happened at a time when the U.S. appears to be considering an escalation in the war in Iran, one that could result in the country putting boots on the ground.
Retired Army Maj. Gen. Randy Manner and Nancy Youssef expressed alarm over the decision during a new interview on "Alex Witt Reports" on Sunday.
"It makes people less willing to give their candid military advice for fear that doing so could cost them their jobs, and the absence of a clear explanation for what's happening," Youssef said. "And that has an impact on the conduct of the war. Because if there's ever a time that top military commanders and the president need candid advice, it is during a war, certainly one as complex as this one. And so that's where I think we'll feel it immediately."
Manner said Hegseth's decision to fire George was "very dangerous" and could put U.S. troops in a bad situation.
"That is an extremely dangerous situation to be in. Only two other leaders in the world have seen that, and that was Stalin and Hitler, who purged the best officers that they had before each of the wars they engaged in," Manner said. "It's very dangerous. It does not help at all in terms of giving confidence to the American fighting man."
The satellite firm Planet Labs told customers, including major news outlets, that it was acting on the Trump administration’s request as it announced it was implementing “an indefinite withhold of imagery” in Iran and across the Middle Eastern countries where the widening conflict started by the US and Israel is unfolding.
The Saturday announcement, said UK rights campaigner Sarah Wilkinson, was a sign that images of the war will be censored “to hide the truth.”
Planet Labs sent an email to journalists who have regularly used the company’s satellite images to report on the US-Israeli bombing of Iran and Iran’s retaliatory actions on Saturday, saying that after receiving a request from the US government, it was “moving to a managed access model... and releasing imagery on a case-by-case basis and for urgent, mission-critical requirements or in the public interest.”
Washington Post reporter Evan Hill suggested the announcement would limit reporters’ access to information from “one of the most important US-based commercial satellite imagery providers on whom most media outlets rely.”
The announcement comes as Iran’s military capabilities have reportedly exceeded US expectations, with US intelligence reporting Iran has retained many of its missile and mobile launchers and casting doubt on the Pentagon’s claims that the US is severely diminishing Iran’s missile stockpile.
The White House’s request for a suspension of satellite imagery was the latest sign that “Trump’s war is going swimmingly,” said podcast host Mark Ames sardonically.
It also coincided with multiple threats over the weekend from President Donald Trump, who said this coming Tuesday would be “Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one”—with increased attacks on Iran’s civilian infrastructure unless Iran agrees to a deal on Monday.
A major bridge was destroyed by the US on Saturday, while Israeli forces bombed a significant petrochemical complex, reportedly sending pollution into the surrounding city. At least 13 people were killed in the two attacks combined. A projectile that struck the vicinity of the Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant also killed at least one person and raised concerns about a larger attack, which “could trigger a nuclear accident, with health impacts that would devastate generations,” as World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said.
Kenneth Roth, former executive director of Human Rights Watch, said the Trump administration’s demand for satellite images to be withheld “will make it much more difficult to monitor US-Israeli bombing there, which seems to be the point.”
Data and imagery collected starting on March 9 will be withheld by Planet Labs. The company previously instituted a 14-day delay on the release of satellite images to ensure they would not be “leveraged” by “adversarial actors.”
Also on Saturday, Al Jazeera reported that Israeli soldiers had “destroyed all of the CCTV cameras” around the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, a mission in the southern part of the country where three peacekeepers were wounded in a blast on Friday and several others have been killed since early March, including some by Israeli fire.
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While the U.S.-Israeli war against Iran has sent oil prices soaring, with the national average cost for a tank of gas recently eclipsing $4, experts are now forecasting $6-per-gallon prices as early as this summer, a forecast that one media and political strategist said, if accurate, would lead to an “extinction-level event” for Republicans in the midterms.
President Donald Trump kicked off the U.S.-Israeli war against Iran in late February, prompting Iran to shut off U.S.-aligned vessels from accessing the Strait of Hormuz, a critical shipping channel through which 20% of the world’s oil trade flows. As a result, oil prices have increased to levels not seen since Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, and show no signs of easing.
Increasingly, experts have forecast that national average gas prices could rise as high as $6 a gallon this year. Online prediction markets such as Kalshi are also now showing gas prices reaching $6 this year as more likely than not.
Should the gas price forecasts be proven accurate, Kurt Bardella, a NewsNation contributor and political strategist, predicted a bloodbath for Republicans this November.
“If this holds, it won’t be a ‘blue wave’ in November, it’ll be an extinction-level event that wipes out the GOP,” Bardella wrote in a social media post on X.
Grant Stern, executive editor of Occupy Democrats, added that $6-per-gallon gas “may not be the ceiling,” suggesting experts could be underestimating the war’s impact on oil prices.
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President Donald Trump was spotted Sunday taking a “bizarre tour” of Washington, D.C., including a stop at his golf course, and in lieu of attending any of the three Easter services held that morning at the church he’s “frequently” attended, The Daily Beast reported.
St. John’s Episcopal Church in Washington, D.C., often called the “Church of the Presidents,” has been attended at least once by every president since its construction in 1816. The church held three Easter services Sunday morning – none of which, the Beast reported, were attended by Trump.
“The 79-year-old president spent Easter Sunday taking a ‘ceremoniously slow’ presidential motorcade tour around Memorial Circle – close to the Arlington Memorial Bridge, where he hopes to build an arch honoring himself, according to pool reports,” the Beast’s report reads. “During his travels, he also stopped at Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Virginia.”
Trump did find time Easter Sunday, however, to issue a major threat against Iran in a profanity-laced social media post, while also lavishing praise on “Allah,” the Arabic word for God.
The president also found time Sunday to speak with multiple journalists, telling some that he was prepared to launch an unprecedented attack on Iran’s civilian infrastructure by Tuesday if the Strait of Hormuz – a critical shipping channel off the coast of Iran – remained closed to U.S.-aligned vessels.
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