NEWSAR
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SRCThe Guardian - World News
LANGEN
LEANCenter-Left
WORDS643
ENT12
FRI · 2026-05-22 · 18:57 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0522-78509
News/Tulsi Gabbard resigns as Trump’s top US /US intelligence director Tulsi Gabbard leaving post after ro…
NSR-2026-0522-78509News Report·EN·Political Strategy

US intelligence director Tulsi Gabbard leaving post after rocky tenure

Tulsi Gabbard is resigning as US Director of National Intelligence on June 30th, following a tenure marked by being sidelined from key foreign policy decisions concerning Iran and Venezuela. The White House reportedly forced her resignation.

Robert Tait in WashingtonThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-05-22 · 18:57 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 3 min
US intelligence director Tulsi Gabbard leaving post after rocky tenure
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
3min
Word count
643words
Sources cited
4cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
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Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Tulsi Gabbard is resigning as US Director of National Intelligence on June 30th, following a tenure marked by being sidelined from key foreign policy decisions concerning Iran and Venezuela. The White House reportedly forced her resignation. Gabbard's departure comes after she was publicly at odds with President Trump on assessments of Iran's nuclear program and sought to align herself with his agenda. She is the fourth woman to leave Trump's cabinet recently. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence credited her with reshaping the Intelligence Community, including revoking security passes and releasing classified files.

Confidence 0.90Sources 4Claims 5Entities 12
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Political Strategy
National Security
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
4
Well sourced
FewMany
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Key claims

5 extracted
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Tulsi Gabbard is leaving her post as US director of national intelligence on June 30.

factual
Confidence
1.00
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Fox News was first to report Gabbard’s exit, citing her husband’s cancer diagnosis.

factualFox News
Confidence
0.90
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The White House forced Gabbard to resign, according to a source familiar with the issue.

factualReuters
Confidence
0.80
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Trump seemed to add insult to injury by declaring he did not care what she said, and dismissing her assessment as “wrong”.

factual
Confidence
0.70
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Gabbard was largely sidelined as Donald Trump launched attacks on Venezuela and Iran.

factual
Confidence
0.70
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Full report

3 min read · 643 words
Tulsi Gabbard is leaving her post as US director of national intelligence following a tumultuous stint in which she was largely sidelined as Donald Trump launched attacks on Venezuela and Iran.In a letter to the US president, she said she would resign and leave her post on 30 June. “While we have made significant progress ... I recognize there is still important work to be done,” she wrote.The White House forced Gabbard to resign, the Reuters news agency reported, citing a source familiar with the issue. Fox News was first to report Gabbard’s exit, citing her husband’s cancer diagnosis.Trump was asking cabinet members last month whether he should replace Gabbard, according to two people briefed on the discussions.“Unfortunately, after having done a great job, Tulsi Gabbard will be leaving the Administration on June 30th​,” he wrote in a statement on his Truth Social platform on Friday.​Gabbard “has done an incredible job, and we will miss her​”, the president said, adding that Aaron Lukas,​ principal deputy director of national intelligence, would serve as ​acting ​director of ​national ​intelligence.Gabbard already seemed marginalized last June, when Trump endorsed Israel’s decision to attack Iran before the US joined the war by ordering the bombing of the Islamic regime’s nuclear facilities.The decision was a public repudiation of Gabbard’s earlier testimony on Capitol Hill that Iran was not building a nuclear weapon. Trump seemed to add insult to injury by declaring he did not care what she said, and dismissing her assessment as “wrong”.Within weeks, Gabbard made a public effort to get back into the president’s good graces by calling for Barack Obama and several top national security officials in his administration to be prosecuted, alleging that they had conducted a “treasonous conspiracy” to falsely depict Russia as interfering in the 2016 election on Trump’s side.Obama denied the allegations, which seemed designed to satisfy Trump’s “retribution” agenda against his political opponents.This year, she provoked outrage among Democrats by turning up at the scene of an FBI raid to seize ballots from the 2020 presidential election, a setting far outside her predominantly foreign intelligence brief, but another sign that her priority was keeping on the good side of Trump.By contrast, she was excluded from the decision-making surrounding the seizure of Venezuela’s president, Nicolás Maduro, in January, and likewise absent from key decisions and public statements concerning February’s decision to renew military strikes on Iran.Gabbard’s apparent exclusion from key national security policy decisions vindicated those who doubted her qualifications for a post that gave her oversight of 18 intelligence agencies.Her nomination following Trump’s November 2024 election victory was criticized by those who pointed to her repeating of Kremlin talking points over Russia’s war with Ukraine, and a meeting with the former Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad in 2017, in which she told him that Syria was “not an enemy of the United States”.Hillary Clinton had previously suggested that Gabbard, a former Democrat who left the party in 2022, was being “groomed” by Russia.She becomes the fourth woman to depart Trump’s cabinet in just over two months, following the ousting in March of Kristi Noem, the former homeland security secretary; Pam Bondi, who was fired as attorney general in April; and labor secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer, who resigned in April after a series of misconduct allegations.In a statement, the office of the director of national intelligence (ODNI) credited Gabbard with “a transformational effort to reshape the Intelligence Community in ways no predecessor had attempted”.“It has been a bad 15 months for the ‘deep state’ with Tulsi Gabbard in charge,” said the ODNI spokesperson Olivia Coleman.Among the supposed achievements trumpeted was the revoking of security passes of what Coleman called “Deep-State bad actors”, but who others said had been loyal career intelligence officers, as well as the release of previously classified files on the John F Kennedy, Robert F Kennedy and Martin Luther King assassinations.
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Entities

12 identified
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Keywords & salience

10 terms
tulsi gabbard
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director of national intelligence
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donald trump
0.90
resignation
0.80
foreign intelligence
0.70
iran
0.60
nuclear facilities
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venezuela
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political opponents
0.40
national security
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