Top U.S. Counterterrorism Chief Joe Kent Resigns, Citing Objections to Trump Administration’s War With Iran

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 Joe Kent, who directed the National Counterterrorism Center and served as a top aide to Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, became the first senior Trump administration official to resign over the Iran war Tuesday, delivering a scathing rebuke accusing President Donald Trump of launching military operations under Israeli pressure despite Iran posing “no imminent threat” to the United States.

Kent’s stinging public resignation letter underscores profound discomfort many within the “America First” movement feel about the expanding Middle Eastern conflict that appears to contradict Trump’s longstanding promises to avoid entangling foreign wars that drain American resources and lives. The resignation creates the administration’s first high-profile defection over foreign policy and exposes internal divisions regarding how Israeli influence shapes U.S. military decision-making.

“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 in his resignation letter posted to social media platform X, employing unusually blunt language for a departing intelligence official.

The reference to “imminent threat” carries significant legal weight. Legal experts have maintained that an imminent threat would be required for the United States to lawfully launch preemptive war under current domestic and international law absent congressional authorization. Kent’s assertion that no such threat existed suggests he believes the military campaign lacks proper legal foundation.

Kent continued his critique by invoking Trump’s original campaign promises and first-term foreign policy approach. “I support the values and the foreign policies that you campaigned on in 2016, 2020, 2024, which you enacted in your first term. Until June of 2025, you understood that the wars in the Middle East were a trap that robbed America of the precious lives of our patriots and depleted the wealth and prosperity of our nation.”

The June 2025 reference suggests Kent identified a specific turning point when Trump’s Middle East policy shifted from restraint toward confrontation—potentially tied to Israeli military operations against Iran or intensive lobbying by pro-Israel advocates within the administration and Congress.

Kent accused high-ranking Israeli officials and influential American media figures of deploying a “misinformation campaign that wholly undermined your America First platform and sowed pro-war sentiments to encourage a war with Iran.” The allegation that Israeli operatives deliberately manipulated information flows to influence American foreign policy represents an extraordinary claim from someone holding one of the U.S. intelligence community’s most sensitive positions.

“This echo chamber was used to deceive you into believing that Iran posed an imminent threat to the United States, and that should you strike now, there was a clear path to a swift victory,” Kent continued. “This was a lie and is the same tactic the Israelis used to draw us into the disastrous Iraq war that cost our nation the lives of thousands of our best men and women. We cannot make this mistake again.”

The comparison to Iraq War intelligence failures—when claims about weapons of mass destruction proved false and the promised swift victory devolved into years of costly occupation—represents one of the most damning indictments Kent could invoke. The parallel suggests he believes history is repeating itself with similar deceptions producing another catastrophic Middle Eastern quagmire.

Kent served in Army Special Forces and as a CIA paramilitary officer before twice running unsuccessfully for Congress in Washington state as a Trump-aligned Republican. His military and intelligence credentials lend credibility to his claims about threat assessments and the validity of justifications for military action, making his resignation more damaging than if it came from a political appointee lacking operational experience.

Democrats had opposed his appointment to lead the National Counterterrorism Center, citing his ties to far-right figures, his embrace of conspiracy theories about January 6, and an alleged attempt to influence a Venezuela intelligence report. Kent was confirmed last July on a 52-44 vote despite Democratic objections about his qualifications and ideological associations.

Like Gabbard—whom he worked closely with as one of her senior aides—Kent entered the administration with strong anti-interventionist credentials and commitments to restraining American military involvement overseas. His resignation suggests that those principles ultimately proved incompatible with supporting the Iran war whose strategic rationale and legal foundations he fundamentally rejects.

The White House and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence did not immediately respond to requests for comment regarding Kent’s resignation, though Trumpworld pushback against the departing official is likely to prove fierce given the explosive nature of his accusations and the political damage they could inflict on the administration’s Iran policy justifications.

Taylor Budowich, a Trump adviser and former deputy White House chief of staff, characterized Kent as a “crazed egomaniac” who “just wanted to make a splash before getting canned,” suggesting the administration will attempt portraying the resignation as an attention-seeking gesture from a troubled official rather than a principled stand based on legitimate policy disagreements.

The Associated Press confirmed that Kent said he “cannot in good conscience” support Trump’s Iran war, reiterating that 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.” The repetition of this core accusation across multiple platforms ensured maximum visibility for Kent’s central claim about Israeli influence determining American military decisions.

Before entering Trump’s administration, Kent conducted two unsuccessful congressional campaigns in Washington state while also serving in the military, completing 11 deployments as a Green Beret before transitioning to CIA work. His extensive operational experience in counterterrorism and special operations provided firsthand knowledge of threat assessment processes and military planning that informed his conclusions about the Iran war’s justifications.

Democrats strongly opposed Kent’s confirmation by pointing to his promotion of conspiracy theories and connections to far-right figures including Graham Jorgensen—a member of the Proud Boys far-right military organization—and Joey Gibson, founder of the Christian nationalist group Patriot Prayer. Democrats also questioned Kent regarding his participation in a Signal group chat used by Trump’s national security team to discuss sensitive military plans, raising concerns about information security and appropriate use of encrypted communications for classified discussions.

According to Reuters, Kent’s resignation made him the first and most senior Trump administration member to quit over the Iran war, establishing a precedent that could encourage additional departures if other officials share his concerns about the conflict’s legal foundations and strategic wisdom. Intelligence officials were caught off guard by the news, suggesting Kent kept his resignation plans confidential even from colleagues who might have anticipated his growing discomfort with Iran policy.

Kent maintains close ties with Gabbard, who has maintained a conspicuously low profile since the Iran war commenced. Gabbard has not issued public statements regarding the conflict and has appeared publicly only during dignified transfer ceremonies for American soldiers killed during combat operations—a silence that some observers interpret as reflecting her own ambivalence about military actions that contradict her longstanding anti-interventionist positions.

The AP noted that Gabbard’s spokesperson also did not immediately respond to questions about Kent’s resignation, raising speculation about whether Gabbard shares Kent’s concerns but cannot publicly express them while serving in the administration. Her previous advocacy against regime change wars and criticism of interventionist foreign policy made her an unlikely champion for aggressive military action against Iran, creating apparent contradictions between her stated principles and the policies she now oversees.

Some experts have emphasized that an imminent threat would be required for the United States to launch war under current legal frameworks absent congressional authorization. The 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force—which has been stretched to justify numerous military actions over two decades—does not clearly apply to Iran, while the Constitution grants Congress exclusive authority to declare war except when presidents must respond to imminent threats requiring immediate defensive action.

Kent’s assertion that Iran posed no imminent threat therefore suggests the military campaign lacks proper legal authorization—a claim with potentially significant constitutional implications if pursued by congressional critics or legal scholars challenging the war’s legitimacy. Whether courts would accept jurisdiction over such challenges or whether Congress would assert its war powers authority remains uncertain given historical reluctance to constrain presidential military actions once initiated.

The resignation also highlights tensions within the Trump coalition between nationalist-populist elements who oppose foreign military entanglements and neoconservative-aligned figures who support aggressive action against Iran regardless of America First principles. Kent’s departure suggests these factions cannot be reconciled when policy decisions require choosing between contradictory commitments.

For Trump, Kent’s resignation creates political vulnerabilities on multiple fronts. The accusation that Israeli pressure rather than American national security interests drove the decision to launch war could alienate both anti-interventionist supporters who backed Trump specifically to avoid such conflicts and critics who have long warned about foreign governments exercising disproportionate influence over U.S. foreign policy.

The comparison to Iraq War deceptions proves particularly damaging given that Trump himself repeatedly criticized that conflict during his campaigns, portraying it as a catastrophic mistake driven by false intelligence and special interests rather than genuine security concerns. If Kent’s characterization gains traction, it could undermine public support for the Iran war by suggesting Trump has repeated the exact mistakes he previously condemned.

As the war continues with mounting American casualties, economic disruption from oil supply interruptions, and no clear endpoint despite administration promises of swift victory, Kent’s resignation may prove prophetic if the conflict devolves into the protracted quagmire he warned against. Whether additional officials follow his example by resigning in protest or whether he remains an isolated dissenter will signal how deeply opposition to the war extends within the administration’s national security apparatus.

For now, Kent’s departure stands as the most dramatic illustration yet that the Iran war has fractured the Trump coalition and raised fundamental questions about whether the president betrayed his core supporters’ expectations by launching exactly the type of Middle Eastern military adventure he spent years promising to avoid.

AP/Axios/Reuters

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