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Trump's Counterterrorism Chief Resigns Over Iran War, Accusing Israel of Deceiving the President

Joe Kent, the director of the National Counterterrorism Center and the highest-ranking intelligence official in the Trump administration to break ranks, resigned on March 17 in a blistering letter that accused Israel of manufacturing the case for war against Iran and deceiving President Trump into launching a conflict that serves no American interest [1][2].

The resignation — from a man Trump himself nominated, the Senate confirmed, and who served 11 combat deployments in the Middle East — represents the most significant internal rupture yet in an administration prosecuting a war that a majority of Americans oppose [3][4].

The Letter

Kent's resignation, posted on X and addressed directly to the president, did not mince words. "I cannot in good conscience support the ongoing war in Iran," he wrote. "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" [1][2].

The letter went further, alleging a coordinated deception campaign: "Early in this administration, high-ranking Israeli officials and influential members of the American media deployed a misinformation campaign that wholly undermined your America First platform and sowed pro-war sentiments to encourage a war with Iran. 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" [5][6].

Kent drew an explicit parallel to the Iraq War, writing that Israel used "the same tactics the Israelis used to draw us into the disastrous Iraq war that cost the nation the lives of thousands of our best men and women" [5].

He invoked his most personal credential: "As a veteran who deployed to combat 11 times and as a Gold Star husband who lost my beloved wife Shannon in a war manufactured by Israel, I cannot support sending the next generation off to fight and die in a war that serves no benefit to the American people nor justifies the cost of American lives" [2][5].

Who Is Joe Kent?

Kent's biography makes him an unusually difficult figure for the White House to dismiss. A retired Army Green Beret and former CIA paramilitary officer, Kent completed 11 combat tours, primarily in Iraq and the broader Middle East [7]. His first wife, Senior Chief Petty Officer Shannon Kent, a Navy cryptologist, was killed by an ISIS suicide bomber in Manbij, Syria in January 2019 — making her the first female combat death in Syria since U.S. operations began [8].

Kent channeled his grief into politics, running as a MAGA-aligned Republican for Congress in Washington's 3rd district in 2022 and 2024, losing both races. His campaigns drew controversy over associations with far-right figures, including an interview with an organization linked to white nationalist Nick Fuentes and comments describing American culture as "anti-white" [7]. The Associated Press reported his 2022 campaign paid a Proud Boys member as a consultant [7].

Despite these controversies, Trump nominated Kent to lead the National Counterterrorism Center in February 2025, and the Senate confirmed him in July 2025, making him the president's principal counterterrorism adviser and a top aide to Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard [2][9].

Trump Hits Back

The president wasted no time distancing himself from his former appointee. "I always thought he was a nice guy but weak on security," Trump told reporters at the White House, adding "I didn't know him well" — a claim that sits uneasily with the enthusiastic praise Trump offered during Kent's February 2025 nomination [2][10].

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt pushed back harder, insisting the president "had strong and compelling evidence that Iran was going to attack the United States first" and flatly rejecting Kent's characterization of Israeli pressure [3][10].

House Speaker Mike Johnson also weighed in, calling the threat from Iran "imminent" and dismissing Kent's claims about Israeli influence as "conspiracy theories unworthy of someone who held such a sensitive position" [11].

The MAGA Crack-Up

What makes Kent's resignation politically explosive is not just what he said but who is agreeing with him. His departure has crystallized a fracture within the MAGA coalition that has been widening since the first bombs fell on February 28.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene called Kent "a great American hero" and reiterated her opposition to the war, warning: "NO DRAFT AND NO BOOTS ON THE GROUND because we campaigned on NO MORE FOREIGN WARS OR REGIME CHANGE" [12]. Greene has publicly stated that if a draft were implemented, her own son would not serve [12].

Tucker Carlson, the most influential voice in right-wing media, has been a consistent critic of the conflict, arguing the administration has abandoned its "America First" platform in favor of Israeli strategic interests [12]. Kent's letter reads like a policy document drafted in Carlson's editorial offices.

On the other side, traditional hawks and pro-Israel conservatives have closed ranks behind the war. Conservative commentator Mark Levin clashed publicly with Megyn Kelly over the conflict, and the divide has produced some of the most vitriolic intra-right arguments since the early days of the Trump movement [12].

The silence from one key figure has been deafening. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard — Kent's direct superior and a politician who built her national profile opposing military intervention in the Middle East — has not publicly commented on the war since it began. Her office did not respond to requests for comment on Kent's resignation [9]. In 2020, Gabbard released a fundraising video titled "Trump's Path To War With Iran." In 2024, she endorsed Trump, citing peace as a primary reason [9].

What the Public Thinks

Kent's core argument — that this war was unnecessary — aligns with the views of a majority of the American public.

A Quinnipiac University poll from March 9 found 53% of voters oppose the military action in Iran, with only 40% in support. Fully 74% oppose sending ground troops [4]. An NPR/PBS News/Marist poll conducted March 2-4 found 56% of Americans oppose the military action [3]. A CNN poll found 59% disapprove of the strikes [13].

The partisan divide is stark: 84% of Republicans support the action, while 86% of Democrats oppose it. Independents lean heavily against — 61% oppose [3][4]. Perhaps most troubling for the administration, about half of voters in multiple polls said the war has made America less safe, while only about 30% said it made the country safer [4].

Public Opinion on U.S. Military Action in Iran (March 2026)
Source: Quinnipiac University / NPR/PBS/Marist
Data as of Mar 9, 2026CSV

The War's Toll

Kent's resignation comes as Operation Epic Fury enters its 18th day with no ceasefire in sight. The human cost continues to mount: over 1,300 killed in Iran, more than 900 in Lebanon, and 12 in Israel, with 13 U.S. service members killed and approximately 200 wounded [1][14]. The Minab school airstrike, which killed at least 165 people — most of them children — has become a flashpoint for domestic and international opposition [15].

The economic toll has been equally severe. Oil prices have surged from roughly $67 per barrel before the war to well above $90, briefly exceeding $100 — the first time since Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine [16]. The Strait of Hormuz, through which 20% of the world's oil flows, has been effectively shut down, triggering the largest oil supply disruption in modern history [14].

WTI Crude Oil Prices Before and During Iran War

Israeli forces, meanwhile, have opened a third front, with devastating fighting against Hezbollah in Lebanon that has displaced 820,000 people [14]. On the same day Kent resigned, Israel announced overnight strikes in Tehran that killed Ali Larijani, secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council, and Gholamreza Soleimani, commander of Iran's Basij paramilitary forces — the most significant targeted killings since Supreme Leader Khamenei was assassinated on the war's first day [17].

The Precedent Question

Kent's resignation invites comparison to other high-profile departures over American military adventures. In 2003, three State Department officials resigned over the Iraq War, and British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook quit Tony Blair's cabinet. But those resignations came from career diplomats and opposition-leaning politicians. Kent is a combat veteran, a MAGA loyalist, and a Trump appointee who ran the agency charged with assessing exactly the kind of threat the president claims justified this war.

That distinction matters. As one former intelligence official told Raw Story, Kent's departure "could lead to an exodus of those who have doubts" within the national security apparatus [18]. If the person whose job it was to evaluate whether Iran posed a terrorist threat to the United States concluded it did not, the administration's stated justification for war faces a credibility crisis from within.

What Comes Next

The immediate political fallout will depend on whether Kent's resignation remains an isolated act of conscience or becomes the first in a cascade. Several dynamics are converging: public opinion running against the war, a MAGA base fracturing along interventionist lines, an administration that has privately acknowledged "buyer's remorse" among its own allies, and a conflict whose trajectory now depends on an adversary — Iran's new hardline Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei — who has categorically rejected negotiations [14].

Kent, for his part, appears to have calculated that the political cost of staying silent exceeded the cost of breaking with a president he once championed. His letter ends with an implicit warning that the "America First" movement has been hijacked by the very forces it once defined itself against — and that the troops he served alongside for two decades are paying the price.

The question now is whether anyone still inside the administration shares that view — and whether they'll say so.

Sources (18)

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    Joe Kent, the director of the National Counterterrorism Center, resigned over the war in Iran, saying Iran posed no imminent threat to the U.S.

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    Kent became the first senior Trump official to resign over the Iran war, citing his experience as a Gold Star husband and 11-time combat veteran.

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    Poll: A majority of Americans opposes U.S. military action in Irannpr.org

    An NPR/PBS News/Marist Poll found 56% of Americans oppose military action in Iran, with sharp partisan divisions.

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    Quinnipiac poll finds 53% of voters oppose Iran military action, 74% oppose ground troops, and about half say the war makes America less safe.

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    Kent's resignation letter accused Israel of deploying a misinformation campaign to push the U.S. into war, drawing parallels to the Iraq War.

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    U.S. counterterrorism director Joe Kent resigns over war: 'Iran posed no imminent threat'cnbc.com

    Kent alleged Israeli officials and American media deployed a misinformation campaign that undermined the America First platform.

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    Joe Kent - Wikipediaen.wikipedia.org

    Joe Kent is a former Army Green Beret, CIA paramilitary officer, and Republican congressional candidate who served as NCTC director from 2025-2026.

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    Shannon M. Kent - Wikipediaen.wikipedia.org

    Shannon Kent was a Navy cryptologist killed by an ISIS suicide bomber in Manbij, Syria in January 2019.

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    Top Gabbard aide Joe Kent resigns in opposition to Iran warwashingtonpost.com

    Kent served under DNI Tulsi Gabbard, who has not publicly commented on the Iran war despite previously campaigning against military action in Iran.

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    'Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation': Trump-appointed intelligence official resigns over Iran warcnn.com

    Trump dismissed Kent as 'weak on security' despite previously praising him during his nomination.

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    Johnson Hits Back After Counterterrorism Chief Quits; Says Iran Threat Was 'Imminent'zerohedge.com

    House Speaker Johnson called Kent's claims about Israeli influence 'conspiracy theories unworthy of someone who held such a sensitive position.'

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    Greene called Kent a hero and warned against a draft, while Tucker Carlson continued criticizing the war as a betrayal of America First principles.

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    59% of Americans disapprove of Iran strikes and most think a long-term conflict is likely.

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    US National Counterterrorism Center director Joe Kent resigns over Iran waraljazeera.com

    Over 1,300 killed in Iran, 912 in Lebanon, 12 in Israel, and 13 U.S. service members killed with roughly 200 troops wounded.

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    Kent's departure comes amid growing public opposition to the war and the Minab school airstrike controversy.

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    Multiple polls show majority opposition to U.S. military action in Iran, with sharp demographic and partisan divides.

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    Kent resigned the same day Israel announced killing two top Iranian officials in overnight Tehran strikes.

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    Bombshell Trump war resignation could lead to exodus of 'those who have doubts': expertrawstory.com

    Experts warn Kent's departure could trigger further resignations from officials who privately oppose the war.