Bombshell report on Kash Patel exposes a national security nightmare Podcast Por  arte de portada

Bombshell report on Kash Patel exposes a national security nightmare

Bombshell report on Kash Patel exposes a national security nightmare

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Trump tried to use a Saturday Oval Office event about psychedelic therapy for veterans to project control at one of the weakest moments of his presidency. But behind the carefully staged photo op was a much darker reality, an escalating crisis with Iran, a fragile blockade in the Strait of Hormuz, a last-minute surveillance fight in Congress, and a devastating new report raising serious questions about whether FBI Director Kash Patel is fit to lead during wartime.


The Breakdown:

Trump used a Saturday morning Oval Office event to create the appearance of strength and loyalty after a week of visible fractures inside his coalition over the Iran war

The executive order on psychedelic therapy for veterans may be worthwhile policy, but this episode argues the event itself was staged first and foremost as political damage control

Joe Rogan and Robert O'Neill, both recent critics of Trump over the Iran conflict, stood behind him and helped create the image of unity he desperately needed

That is part of Trump's pattern, he does not persuade critics so much as buy temporary alignment with access, visibility, and policy wins tied to causes they care about

While that event was happening, the wider crisis was getting worse, with Iran moving again around the Strait of Hormuz and Trump openly threatening more bombing if no deal is reached

That kind of rhetoric raises the stakes for global shipping, energy markets, and the risk of a broader war, even while Trump insists everything is going very well

Trump also signed a short-term extension of Section 702 surveillance powers after members of his own party blocked the broader renewal he wanted without stronger privacy protections

That failed push matters because it shows that even inside his own coalition there are still points of resistance to unchecked executive power

The larger danger in this episode is not just Trump's public instability but the people surrounding him, including officials who appear compromised, compliant, or unwilling to stop him

A new Atlantic investigation into FBI Director Kash Patel described repeated concerns about excessive drinking, erratic behavior, serious security lapses, and a pattern officials now see as a national security vulnerability

The report says meetings have been delayed because Patel was too impaired, that his own security team at one point considered using breaching equipment to reach him, and that his behavior has become a deeper concern since the war with Iran began

Patel is also accused of misusing government resources and responding to scrutiny with public threats against the press from his official FBI account, which only deepens the alarm around his judgment

This episode argues that the real story is not the spectacle in the Oval Office but the cracks widening underneath it, inside the administration, inside Trump's alliances, and inside the machinery of national security itself

It also makes the case that authoritarian loyalty is transactional and brittle, and that the same people now helping Trump project control may turn the moment the political cost becomes too high

The message here is that we cannot afford to look away just because the chaos is exhausting, because the danger is real, the instability is visible, and more people are starting to see it clearly

More on my daily Substack at: https://heatherdelaneyreese.substack.com/


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