Joe Kent: Trump can't end war until Israel taken out of the loop
In a wide-ranging interview the ex-counterterrorism
chief also balks at arguments that Americans need to 'sacrifice' in order to
prevent a future nuclear attack
May 20, 2026
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/joe-kent-trump-iran/
When the Iran war began, the Trump administration told the American people that if the U.S. did
not attack and assassinate Iran's leadership, the Islamic Republic could soon
be launching
missiles at U.S. cities.
Now, as Americans absorb skyrocketing prices and note
the grim inflation, fuel, and food
supply forecasts,
Trump and his surrogates in Congress and the media are ramping up the rhetoric. It goes something
like this: Main Street America must accept the “trade off” and sacrifice
affordability or face a “ lunatic
dropping a nuclear weapon on us.”
Joe Kent, who led the National Counterterrorism Center
before resigning in
protest of Trump’s
Iran war policy, continues to call out what he deems a desperate attempt
to maintain support for a terrible mistake. He says Iran
never posed an imminent threat to the U.S. before the war. Kent, who is the
highest-ranking member of the Trump administration to resign over the war, is
also a U.S. combat veteran (11 tours primarily in Iraq), former CIA
paramilitary, and a MAGA conservative.
In a wide-ranging interview with Responsible
Statecraft, Kent pointed out that, days before the U.S. cut off talks with Iran
and started bombing its nuclear facilities last June, his boss, Director of
National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, testified that Iran was not building a nuclear weapon. This
jibes with assessments during the Biden administration and earlier intelligence
community briefings dating back two decades, which all say there is no evidence Iran restarted
its nuclear weapons program since 2003.
“There was no reason to trust their (Iranians') word,
but every bit of evidence we had for verification showed that they weren't
developing a nuclear weapon," Kent told RS. "Even at their height, if
they wanted to break out and develop a nuclear weapon, that timetable was
anywhere from several months to several years to develop the weapon itself, but
then you still have a major issue with delivery.”
“The idea that they could put a nuclear weapon on a
ballistic missile system and get it to America, it's just preposterous,” he
added.
“And again, too, why would they do that? Because it
would immediately mean that we would wipe them off face the earth,” he added.
“So that argument in itself, I just think, is absolutely preposterous. It just
shows to me how desperate the administration is to have any kind of narrative
that they can sell to the American people.”
Kent pointed to new polling on
Monday that shows
the majority of Americans oppose the war. While that only includes 22% of
Republicans, the longer the Hormuz Strait is closed and economic conditions
fray here in the U.S, the softer Trump’s base of support becomes.
“I think, like, every penny it goes up at the pump,
and every day it goes on longer, he's going to lose more and more of those
Republican voters,” Kent said, adding that prominent MAGA voices who oppose the
war are “kind of giving permission for other people to say, 'Oh yeah, okay, I'm
not for this.'”
Of course, it will be one heck of a battle. Seven-term
Rep. Thomas Massie, (R-Ky.) lost his primary Tuesday night after a grueling
race in which his opponent Ed Gallrein was backed by Trump and pro-Israel
billionaires eager to get the anti-Iran war, anti-Israel aid Massie off the
playing field.
"He walks out of this with his honor
intact," Kent posted
last night.
"He’s a patriot & kept his integrity. As long as the voters give their
votes to whoever can run the most ads, we will have politicians who are
purchased by foreign governments & corporate interests."
‘Every time it’s been the Israelis’
In his resignation letter, Kent said that early in
this second Trump administration, “high-ranking Israeli officials and
influential members of the American media deployed a misinformation campaign”
that “sowed pro-war sentiments to encourage a war with Iran.” Kent was
immediately accused of antisemitism. He maintains that the Israelis have
divergent interests and that, when the administration was close to getting a
deal with Iran in June 2025, they convinced Trump to abandon talks and pursue
regime change.
This was borne out in an explosive New York
Times "reconstruction" of Trump’s path to the most recent war on Feb.
28. In it, the paper notes that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s four trips
to the U.S. from July through December 2025 paid off. “The U.S. decision to
strike Iran was a victory for Mr. Netanyahu, who had been pushing Mr. Trump for
months on the need to hit what he argued was a weakened regime.”
During that period, Kent contends that the DNI started
getting sidelined, which was also borne out in reporting at
the time.
“After the 12-day war, after Midnight Hammer, it
seemed like the (Trump) circle shrunk down to just the president and a handful
of advisers," he said. Once Operation Epic Fury began, he claimed, “(we)
worked diligently for two weeks trying to present the President with kind of
off-ramps, but our ideas really weren't even reaching the White House.”
Kent said the Israelis, to their credit, “have always,
in my experience with them, since January of 2025 when we came in the
administration, they've been very upfront about what they wanted. They never
came to us and said, like, 'we just want to make sure Iran doesn't get a
nuclear weapon.' No, they said, 'This is the time for us to change out the
Iranian regime.'”
Kent caused a stir just last week when he charged that
the U.S. was on the cusp of getting a better deal than President Barack Obama’s
Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action when Trump threw it all away to bomb Iran in
June 2025.
“The Iranians feared and respected Trump in a way they
never respected Obama — he took out the terror mastermind (Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps Commander) Qasem Soleimani, yet was prudent enough
not to get sucked into the quicksand of another Middle Eastern quagmire that
would only favor Iran and strengthen its hardliners,” he posted on X on May 13.
Eight months after Operation Midnight Hammer, despite
Trump’s claims that Iranian nuclear sites had been “obliterated,” the Israelis
helped to convince Trump the time was ripe to strike again as protests roiled
the streets of Iran, according to press accounts. Trump, feeling emboldened by the Venezuela operation months before, made the final decision
to move.
Kent said it was a mistake that he felt he could no
longer condone by staying in the government.
“We killed the Supreme Leader, who had the prohibition
on developing a nuclear weapon, who was able to withhold the proxies, killed
him, killed (head of Iran’s National Security Council Ali) Larijani, killed a
bunch of the other Iranian moderates, and now we're stuck with these
hardliners,” Kent said. “That was the Israeli strategy. It was very effective,
and now we're back in this situation. So, that's why I've always said, in order
for us to get ourselves out of the situation and get a deal with Iran, the
first step has to be restraining the Israelis.”
As Kent posted on X, “President Trump can still
correct course,” but he has to “leverage the potential of sanctions relief to
open the Strait of Hormuz and secure a new deal on the nuclear issue.”
His advice was not taken so well by the White House,
which claimed that Kent’s resignation letter and current
comments were “riddled with lies.”
"Most egregious are Kent’s false claims that the
largest state sponsor of terrorism somehow did not pose a threat to the United
States and that Israel forced the President into launching Operation
Epic Fury,” the White House said in a statement to Fox News. “President Trump’s
number one priority has always been ensuring the safety and security of the
American people.”
But the lack of messaging management has allowed for
different narratives to peek through, like when Secretary of State Marco
Rubio said (then walked back) that the U.S. bombed on Feb.
28 because Israel was going to first, and a swift Iranian retaliation would be
inevitable. More recently, Trump said the war in Iran was “at the behest
of allies” in Gulf. Even
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth admitted Iran does not have the current capability to hit
the U.S. with missiles.
Kent’s resignation and public criticisms of the
administration’s policies have drawn swift rebuke from detractors, who called
his letter — which put more onus on Israel than the president for American
actions, and suggests that Israel had pulled the U.S. into the 2003 Iraq War
— “virulent
anti-Semitism” (Sen.
Mitch McConnell), deploying "ugly stuff that plays on the worst
antisemitic tropes" (J Street's
Ilan Goldenberg).
Longstanding accusations of Kent indulging in
January 6 conspiracy theories and having extremist and Christian Nationalist
“associations,” which came up during his confirmation
hearings last year, soon
resurfaced.
“Other people before me that said things like this had
their entire lives ruined for it, because they were just immediately labeled as
being horrible anti-semites,” he noted regarding his charges of Israeli
influence on the government. Things have changed, he added. He stands behind
what he says is his direct experience in the administration. “I think with a
younger generation that's more active on social media and doing their own
research… It's just not sticking as much as it did, you know, in the past.”