Baltimore Sun

Congress pushes for Iran intel

Pelosi warns Trump to avoid war after US moves in the region

- By Lisa Mascaro and Susannah George

WASHINGTON — Sudden White House moves in the Mideast sparked alarm in Congress on Wednesday as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi warned President Donald Trump away from war with Iran and lawmakers in both parties demanded more informatio­n on his thinking.

The top leaders in Congress — the so-called Gang of Eight — are to receive a classified briefing from the administra­tion Thursday.

But Pelosi said the White House has resisted a wider presentati­on for all lawmakers, part of what Democrats say is a pattern of stonewalli­ng. Some Republican­s, including Utah Sen. Mitt Romney, sought out their own briefings as the administra­tion called U.S. personnel home from Iraq and sent military might to the Persian Gulf, claiming unspecifie­d threats linked to Iran.

Pelosi said Trump has “no business” moving toward a Middle East confrontat­ion without approval from Congress.

“We have to avoid any war with Iran,” she told fellow Democrats in a private meeting, according to a person in the room whowas granted anonymity to discuss it.

On Wednesday, the U.S. ordered all non-essential personnel to leave Iraq, and last week an aircraft carrier group and other resources were shifted to the Persian Gulf region. In public and in private, officials are sticking by the administra­tion’s warnings of serious threats from Iranian-backed forces in the region, yet they reject the idea that the U.S. moves are a prelude to war.

Trump denied a report Tuesday that the administra­tion had reviewed a plan to send 120,000 troops.

Still, the actions are exposing skepticism in the U.S. and among foreign allies, a legacy of the 2003 invasion of Iraq that was based on false intelligen­ce. U.S. officials have not publicly provided any evidence to back up claims of an increased Iranian threat.

“Congress has not authorized war with Iran, and the administra­tion, if it were contemplat­ing military action with Iran, must come to Congress to seek approval,” said Sen. Bob Menendez of New Jersey, top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He said he had never seen anything like the “nonanswers” coming from the administra­tion.

Republican­s who have been briefed said the threats are real.

The chairman of Foreign Relations Committee, Sen. Jim Risch of Idaho, said that based on the informatio­n he received he supports the administra­tion actions, including the reposition­ing of the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier to the Persian Gulf.

And Republican Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida said the informatio­n he’s seen shows “by far the single most imminent potential conflict of this significan­ce” in his eight years in Congress. He said, “The intelligen­ce is unmistakab­le and clear and it’s backed by observable movement on the ground.”

Still, Romney expressed support for the Senate Democrats’ request for more informatio­n in a classified briefing, and Risch said a broader briefing for senators, perhaps next week, was “in the works.”

State Department officials said threats in the region were credible and based on intelligen­ce showing Iranian-backed militias had been moving personnel and weaponry as well as stepping up surveillan­ce of U.S. and U.S.-affiliated facilities in Iraq and other parts of the Middle East. The officials were not authorized to comment publicly by name and spoke only on condition of anonymity.

They pushed back against speculatio­n that the decision to bring nonessenti­al personnel home from Iraq was a prelude to military conflict. There is no U.S. desire for war, said one official, who had returned earlier Wednesday from Europe with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

Several Democrats pinned the moves in part on national security adviser John Bolton, known for his hawkish views. Some have suggested Pompeo and Bolton don’t see eye-to-eye on the U.S. strategy, and Trump found it necessary to comment on that.

“There is no infighting whatsoever,” he tweeted Wednesday. “All sides, views, and policies are covered,” and he reserves the “decisive and final decision,” he said.

“I’m sure that Iran will want to talk soon,” he said, without elaboratio­n.

Earlier this year, Congress forced Trump into the first veto of his administra­tion over a resolution that passed the House and Senate to halt U.S. involvemen­t in the Saudi-led war against Iranian backed Houthi rebels in Yemen.

Rep. Jim Himes, DConn., a senior member of the House intelligen­ce committee said, “The people inside the administra­tion who are trying to start a war know that if they have this conversati­on in an open and transparen­t way, there will be very substantia­l pushback from both parties and both houses of Congress.”

Republican Rep. Will Hurd of Texas, who is a former CIA officer, said the administra­tion’s informatio­n on Iran is highly sensitive and by nature cannot be shared with a wide audience.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? President Trump and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi do not see eye to eye on Iran as tensions rise over the Persian country.
EVAN VUCCI/AP President Trump and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi do not see eye to eye on Iran as tensions rise over the Persian country.

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