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Top Intelligence Chiefs to Face Hill Grilling on Iran War, Botched School Strike and U.S. Terror Threats

Senior Trump administration intelligence officials will appear at back‑to‑back Senate and House Intelligence Committee hearings starting Wednesday, with lawmakers set to press them on the Iran war, a U.S. missile strike that hit an Iranian elementary school and killed more than 165 people, and the FBI’s ability to stop attacks on U.S. soil. The article reports that outdated targeting data from the Defense Intelligence Agency likely contributed to the school strike, and DIA Director Lt. Gen. James H. Adams will be among those questioned, while the White House says its investigation is ongoing. The sessions will also probe internal dissent after National Counterterrorism Center Director Joe Kent resigned this week, saying he could not back a war he believes was not triggered by an imminent Iranian threat, a position the White House has publicly rejected. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and CIA Director John Ratcliffe are expected to face questions about assessments indicating U.S. strikes are unlikely to topple Iran’s regime and that some prewar imminent‑attack claims were shaky. FBI Director Kash Patel, under criticism for firing dozens of agents and for a video showing him partying with U.S. Olympic hockey players, will be pressed on whether his leadership has weakened the bureau even as recent incidents in Texas, New York, Virginia and Michigan highlight what officials describe as an elevated terrorism threat. The hearings will test how much Congress can pry out about faulty intelligence, internal disagreement and war‑on‑terror tradeoffs at home at a moment when the administration is selling the Iran campaign as necessary and under control.

Iran War and U.S. Intelligence Oversight Domestic Terrorism and FBI Operations

📌 Key Facts

  • Annual worldwide threats hearings begin in the Senate on Wednesday, March 18, 2026, and continue in the House on Thursday.
  • Officials expected to testify include DNI Tulsi Gabbard, CIA Director John Ratcliffe, DIA Director Lt. Gen. James H. Adams and FBI Director Kash Patel.
  • Outdated Defense Intelligence Agency targeting data is reported to have contributed to a U.S. missile hitting an Iranian elementary school, killing more than 165 people.
  • National Counterterrorism Center Director Joe Kent resigned this week, saying he did not believe Iran posed an imminent threat to the U.S. and could not support the war.
  • The FBI is under scrutiny for agent firings and leadership controversies amid recent domestic attacks and plots linked to Islamist extremism and the Iran conflict.

📊 Relevant Data

As of 2024, there are approximately 750,000 Iranian Americans in the United States, comprising about 0.2% of the total U.S. population.

7 facts about Iranians in the U.S. — Pew Research Center

Most Iranian Americans arrived in the U.S. after the 1979 Iranian Revolution, with over 40% immigrating during or after this period due to the fall of the monarchy and subsequent political instability.

Iranian Americans — Wikipedia

U.S. airstrikes since 9/11 have resulted in at least 22,000 civilian deaths in the Middle East, including around 11,500 in Iraq, 5,700 in Syria, and 4,800 in Afghanistan.

U.S. Airstrikes Killed at Least 22,000 Civilians Since 9/11 — Statista

From 2016 to 2023, 49% of domestic terrorist attacks and plots against U.S. government targets were motivated by partisan political beliefs, compared to 29% driven by general opposition to federal authority.

The Rising Threat of Anti-Government Domestic Terrorism: What the Data Tells Us — CSIS

There are approximately 685,000 Lebanese Americans in the U.S., with the highest concentration in Michigan where they make up 0.68% of the state's population (over 68,000 people).

Lebanese Americans — Wikipedia

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