In a closed-door briefing with all U.S. senators on Thursday, CIA Director John Ratcliffe didn’t mince words. When Democrat senators pushed for more “proof” about the effectiveness of President Trump’s recent airstrikes on Iran’s nuclear sites, Ratcliffe dropped a brutal comparison — and a hard truth.
“Iran has been fighting Israel for decades. They strung along the Obama administration for 20 months while negotiating the JCPOA. But Trump made them accept a ceasefire with their mortal enemy in 20 minutes.”
That remark, reported by a source inside the room to Breitbart News, set the tone for what became a sharp rebuke of Democrat skepticism — and a direct defense of a strategy that has reshaped the U.S. approach to Iran, emphasizing strength over appeasement.
The briefing, which also featured Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, focused on the aftermath of Trump’s decisive order to strike key nuclear sites in Iran. And according to Ratcliffe, the intelligence is clear: Iran’s nuclear capabilities have been devastated.
“This includes new intelligence from an historically reliable and accurate source/method that several key Iranian nuclear facilities were destroyed and would have to be rebuilt over the course of years,” Ratcliffe told senators, reaffirming a statement he previously made public.
His comments align closely with assessments from Israeli intelligence and remarks from Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR), chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. Cotton publicly affirmed the effectiveness of the strikes and praised both Trump and Israeli military efforts during what has been dubbed the “12-day war.”
The takeaway for many in the national security world — particularly on the right — is simple: Peace through strength works.
Ratcliffe’s jab at the Obama-era Iran deal — the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) — struck a nerve for good reason. The deal, criticized heavily by Republicans for offering Iran sanctions relief in exchange for vague nuclear promises, took nearly two years to negotiate. Critics say it emboldened the regime and delayed real accountability.
Trump, in contrast, opted for military precision backed by diplomatic resolve — and in doing so, managed to force Iran to accept a ceasefire with Israel in record time.
This side-by-side speaks volumes to conservative voters who have long called for stronger foreign policy grounded in American strength, not apologies or endless talks.
Shortly after Trump’s successful strikes, CNN’s Natasha Bertrand — the same reporter behind the now-debunked “Russian disinformation” smear about Hunter Biden’s laptop — published a leak from a so-called Defense Intelligence Agency “initial assessment” questioning the effectiveness of the mission.
The Trump team didn’t hold back. Officials including Ratcliffe, Hegseth, and Rubio were quick to challenge the report, with sources suggesting the leak was politically motivated and possibly criminal.
Trump himself has hinted the leak may have come from congressional Democrats, a move that would carry serious implications given the classified nature of the intelligence.
As The Daily Wire and Washington Examiner noted, the coordinated effort to cast doubt on Trump’s success fits a familiar pattern — one where good news for America becomes bad news for Democrats if it involves Trump.
Critics may try to spin, but Ratcliffe’s resume speaks for itself. The former Director of National Intelligence during Trump’s first term, Ratcliffe is no stranger to uncovering uncomfortable truths. He was one of the earliest officials to publicly suggest that COVID-19 likely came from a Wuhan lab — something legacy media dismissed until evidence caught up.
He also played a key role in exposing the false narratives behind the Russia collusion hoax, declassifying documents that proved critical to dismantling the case built against Trump.
Now, as CIA Director, Ratcliffe is once again providing clarity in a fog of partisan media spin — and standing firm behind Trump’s actions.
“Iran’s nuclear program has been severely damaged,” he emphasized. “Facilities were destroyed. Rebuilding them will take years.”
For conservatives, this moment reveals more than just a foreign policy win — it shows how strength, not softness, earns peace. Trump’s approach forced Iran to the table in under an hour — something no years-long deal or payout under prior administrations ever achieved.
And with Democrats scrambling to downplay or discredit the achievement, it’s increasingly clear that their problem isn’t with the strike — it’s with who ordered it.
As Ratcliffe, Rubio, Cotton, and others stand behind the operation’s success, one thing is certain: America’s enemies fear strength, not speeches.