• Virtual Treason and Genuine Incompetence

    Let us be precise about what happened.


    The New York Times and the Washington Post reported that classified American intelligence assessments show Iran has retained roughly 70 percent of its prewar missile stockpile, roughly 75 percent of its mobile missile launchers, operational access to 30 of its 33 missile sites along the Strait of Hormuz, and access to approximately 90 percent of its underground missile storage and launch facilities.


    Donald Trump called that treason. Not a lie. Not misleading. Not irresponsible.


    Treason.


    Now let us be equally anccurate about where those assessments came from. Not from Tehran, not another (brilliant) LEGO animation. Not from enemy propaganda. Not from journalists who wish the war would fail.

    They came from the United States Intelligence Community. They were produced by Trump’s own agencies. They were circulated to Trump’s own policymakers. The press did not fabricate the intelligence. The press reported what the government already told itself.
    Which means when Donald Trump calls the coverage treason, he is calling his own intelligence apparatus treasonous.


    He does not say that part out loud.


    This administration’s public record on this war is not a matter of interpretation. These are the actual claims.


    Trump declared Iran has “nothing left in a military sense.” Remember that?


    Pete Hegseth announced that Iran’s “missile program is functionally destroyed, launchers, production facilities, and existing stockpiles depleted and decimated and almost completely ineffective.”

    This blowhard just keeps spewing lies


    The White House’s own stated first objective of Operation Epic Fury was the destruction of Iran’s missiles and missile industry.


    Against those claims, lies the facts:

    • 70 percent of the prewar stockpile retained.
    • 75 percent of mobile launchers viable.
    • 30 of 33 Strait of Hormuz missile sites restored to operational access.

    This is not a gap between expectation and outcome. This is the complete inversion of everything the administration promised the American people. The mission’s stated primary objective was not achieved. And the White House response to that fact is to accuse journalists of betraying the country for saying so.


    Note the escalation, because it is not accidental.


    Two weeks ago, Trump called the Times’ Iran coverage “actually seditious.”


    This week: “virtual TREASON.”


    “They are aiding and abetting the enemy.”


    The acting Pentagon press secretary added that the Times was acting as “public relations agents for the Iranian regime.”


    The word choices are doing real work here.

    Sedition. Treason. Aiding the enemy. These are not rhetorical flourishes. These are the legal vocabulary of prosecution. They are the language a government uses when it is preparing to criminalize the act of speaking.


    Trump is not calling the reporters wrong or even careless.
    He is calling them criminals.
    There is a difference, and the difference is everything.

    It is not treason to speak the truth.


    The truth is Iran retains 70 percent of its missiles. Meanwhile, the United States expended approximately 1,100 long-range stealth cruise missiles, a figure that represents nearly the entire remaining American stockpile. We fired more than 1,000 Tomahawk missiles, roughly ten times what the Pentagon procures in a single year. We used more than 1,300 Patriot interceptor missiles, more than two full years of production at current manufacturing rates.
    Replenishing those stockpiles will take years.
    Lockheed Martin currently produces 650 Patriot interceptors annually. Scaling to 2,000 per year is the stated ambition. The rocket motor supply chain cannot be accelerated on command.

    Hey, Trump, this is basic math. Our enemies can do math too. Is arithmetic treason now?


    Pete Hegseth testified before Congress this week that the munitions concern has been “foolishly and unhelpfully overstated.”

    But the facts are Iran has 70 percent of its missiles.


    America has a Truth Social post and a supply chain problem.


    If you have even a basic working brain, it is obvious to conclude Trump is not angry that Iran retained its missiles.


    He is angry that Americans found out.


    That is the tell. That is the confession embedded in the accusation. A president genuinely concerned with national security would be furious at the failure. He would be demanding accountability from commanders. He would be interrogating the Joint Chiefs. He would be asking how the first and primary objective of his own military operation was not achieved after the expenditure of nearly the entire American long-range missile stockpile.

    He is not doing any of that.
    Instead, he is on Truth Social calling reporters traitors.

    The lie now becomes the official position.


    Truth becomes the threat.


    The journalists who speaks the truth becomes the enemy.


    It does not matter that the intelligence was produced by his own government. It does not matter that the assessments were circulating among his own senior officials before a single sentence appeared in print. It does not matter that Iran’s missiles are, in fact, still there.

    What matters is that you believed the war was won. And now you don’t.


    That is the crime he cannot forgive.


    The free press did not fail this country by reporting classified assessments of a war the public was never allowed to honestly evaluate.

    It did its job and quite well.

    The only thing the media failed to do was protect a president from the consequences of his own falsehoods.


    That is not treason.


    That is the good fight being fought.