Pentagon Refuses to Disclose Iran Damage Details in Heated Senate Hearing

Pentagon leaders refused to publicly disclose battle damage assessments from the Iran conflict during a Senate hearing. Senator Christopher Murphy questioned whether administration claims matched classified intelligence, citing reports Iran retained 70% of missile capabilities. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and General Dan Caine declined to answer, citing the non-classified setting. The exchange highlighted tensions over transparency and funding for the ongoing military campaign.

Key Points: Pentagon Refuses to Disclose Iran Damage Details

  • Pentagon refuses to share Iran damage details publicly
  • Senators question if claims match intelligence
  • Iran may retain 70% of missile capabilities
  • Hegseth and Caine decline to answer in open hearing
3 min read

Pentagon refuses to publicly disclose Iran damage details

Pentagon leaders refuse to publicly disclose Iran battle damage assessments, sparking confrontation with senators over transparency in the ongoing conflict.

"How do we assess whether we should continue funding this if you can't state to us what the assessments are? - Senator Christopher Murphy"

Washington, May 13

Pentagon leaders refused to publicly disclose detailed battle damage assessments from the ongoing Iran conflict.

The issue became one of the sharpest points of confrontation during a Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Defence hearing on President Donald Trump's proposed $1.5 trillion defence budget, as lawmakers pressed Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and Joint Chiefs Chairman General Dan Caine for specifics on Iran's remaining missile, drone and naval capabilities.

Democratic senators repeatedly questioned whether the administration's public claims about crippling Iran's military infrastructure matched classified intelligence assessments.

Senator Christopher Murphy cited public reports suggesting Iran still retained as much as 70 per cent of its missile and drone capabilities despite weeks of US operations.

Murphy directly asked Caine whether he disputed those intelligence estimates.

"With deep respect for the question, I'm not going to comment in this forum on what may or may not have been opined on by the IC," Caine responded, referring to the intelligence community.

"I'm not going answer what you guys in the Congress considers decision criteria around continued funding or not," the general added later.

Murphy argued lawmakers could not properly evaluate the success of the campaign without transparent assessments.

"How do we assess whether we should continue funding this if you can't state to us what the assessments are?" he asked.

Hegseth also declined to discuss specific battlefield assessments in public. "This is not a classified setting. We don't talk about those things," the defence secretary said.

At another point, Hegseth accused senators of relying on leaked intelligence reports. "Why would I validate what people may leak or not leak?" he asked.

The tense exchange followed broader questioning from lawmakers about whether the administration had underestimated Iran's ability to continue military operations, particularly its use of drones and asymmetric naval tactics in the Strait of Hormuz.

Senator Brian Schatz questioned whether the Pentagon had fully anticipated Iran's retaliation capabilities after US strikes.

"There are some data points that seem to indicate that we did not see all of this coming," Schatz said while pointing to emergency troop movements, redeployment of missile defence systems and damage to US military facilities across the region.

Hegseth rejected the suggestion that the Pentagon had been caught off guard. "I can reassure you that it was all accounted for," he said.

The administration has consistently maintained that the campaign's primary objective is preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. Officials have also highlighted the destruction of large parts of Iran's navy, missile launch systems and defence industrial infrastructure.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sneha F
As an Indian, I find this very concerning. The US is spending $1.5 trillion on defence while their own senators can't get straight answers. Meanwhile, our budget is a fraction of that. We need to invest in our own military, not rely on others.
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Michael C
The general's response to Senator Murphy was basically "trust me bro." If they really crippled Iran's military, why not show the proof? This feels like they're hiding something, maybe that Iran still has plenty of fight left.
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Vivek B
This is peak "operational security" nonsense. The US Congress is literally supposed to oversee this spending. If they can't get answers, then who can? Also, the 70% figure from intelligence is worrying. Iran is not going anywhere easily. 😬
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James A
I get the need for secrecy, but Hegseth accusing senators of relying on leaks is rich. Maybe if they were transparent, they wouldn't need leaks! The Strait of Hormuz issue is massive, and if they underestimated Iran's drones, that's a huge problem.

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