Let’s Ask Arty About the Lead-Up to the War with Iran

Let’s Ask Arty uses existing Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology to query LLMs about politics in these troubled times.

Q1 – What did US intelligence reporting suggest about Iran’s threat to the United States before the US joined Israel in their bombing campaign against Iran?

US intelligence reporting, as reflected in publicly available accounts and statements cited in news coverage, suggested there was no clear imminent threat to the United States from Iran in the period immediately before the U.S. joined Israel in striking Iranian targets.

The most explicit articulation of this came from Joe Kent, Director of the National Counterterrorism Center, who resigned on March 17, 2026, stating that “Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation.”

Q2 – Can you break down America’s core intelligence assessment before the strikes?

No imminent threat to the U.S. homeland: Joe Kent’s resignation post directly challenged the administration’s justification for military action, asserting that intelligence did not show an immediate danger to the United States.

Critics argued the U.S. acted without a triggering intelligence warning: Analysts at institutions like Brookings and media outlets such as The Guardian described the strikes as a “war of choice,” implying that intelligence did not support claims of an urgent threat.

Q3 – What Did the US intelligence reporting say about the long-term threat that Iran posed to the United States?

While not indicating an imminent threat, reporting emphasized a persistent, long-term pattern of hostile Iranian activity, including:

  • Iran’s IRGC and proxy network had killed more than 1,000 Americans since 1979.
  • Over 180 attacks on U.S. military bases in 2023–2024 by Iranian-backed groups. These were cited by some analysts as part of a broader argument that Iran represented a continuous threat, even if not an immediate one.

Before the U.S. joined Israel in bombing Iran, intelligence reporting—at least as described by senior officials and public sources—did not indicate an imminent threat to the United States. Instead, the intelligence picture pointed to a chronic, long-term pattern of Iranian hostility, not an immediate trigger requiring urgent military action.

Q4 – If the Intelligence reporting did not indicate that Iran posed an imminent threat to the US, why did Donald Trump commit to join Israel in attacking Iran?

The Trump administration justified striking Iran by publicly framing the attack as an act of self‑defense against “imminent threats,” even though intelligence briefings to Congress and internal assessments did not support the existence of such an imminent threat.

The justifications shifted repeatedly in the days surrounding the strikes, creating a patchwork of sometimes contradictory explanations.

Q5 – Arty, can you provide a breakdown of the various reasons the Trump Administration gave for attacking Iran?

Sure!

Claim: Iran was close to nuclear breakout: President Trump argued that Iran was rebuilding its nuclear program and was “probably a week away” from bomb‑making material or would have a “very powerful nuclear weapon within a month.”

However, reporting noted that these claims contradicted U.S. intelligence assessments, which said Iran was years away from such capabilities.

Claim: Iran was developing long‑range missiles that could soon reach the U.S.: Trump said Iran was developing missiles that could “soon” reach the American homeland. A 2025 Defense Intelligence Agency assessment, however, projected that Iran might be able to develop an intercontinental missile by 2035, if it chose to pursue one.

Claim: The U.S. needed to preempt an Iranian attack: Secretary of State Marco Rubio initially claimed Iran posed an imminent threat because it would retaliate against U.S. forces once Israel struck Iran. The next day, Trump shifted the explanation, saying Iran was going to attack first, independently of Israel’s actions.

This shift created confusion because it contradicted both earlier statements and intelligence briefings.

Q6 – Arty, can you help us understand what the intelligence actually indicated about the Iranian threat?

Private briefings to Congress: No imminent Iranian attack: According to ABC News reporting, Trump administration officials told congressional staff that U.S. intelligence did not indicate Iran was preparing a preemptive strike on U.S. forces or the homeland. They described only a general regional threat, not an imminent one.

This directly conflicted with the administration’s public messaging.

Q7 – What was the messaging about Iranian threats from the Trump Administration after initiating strikes against Iran?

Claim: Iran refused to halt uranium enrichment: Some officials later said the strikes were ordered because Iran would not agree to stop enrichment altogether. This justification was offered after the operation had already begun, which reporters noted was unusual for a major military action.

Claim: The U.S. was acting in collective self‑defense with Israel: In its Article 51 letter to the U.N., the U.S. framed the strikes as lawful self‑defense. Legal analysts argued the justification was weak because Article 51 requires an armed attack, and the administration had not demonstrated one.

Q8 – Arty, can you help us separate the Shit-from-Shinola regarding the Trump Administration’s threat assessment leading up to the war with Iran and after the war began?

The Trump administration justified the strikes by invoking imminent threats, nuclear danger, missile development, and preemptive self‑defense. But intelligence reporting shared with Congress did not support the existence of an imminent threat, and several of the administration’s public claims contradicted both intelligence assessments and earlier statements by its own officials.

My Take

Good god, the toxic mix of incompetence and callousness from the Commander in Chief has painted the United States into a corner so completely that the only way the President feels he can get us out of said corner is to threaten bombing an entire civilization into extinction.

The President’s attention deficit to reading, assessing, and understanding intelligence reports is eclipsed only by a morality deficit fed by greed, the lust for power, and the President’s narcissistic personality disorder.

At a recent White House Event, President Trump said that he “automatically loves people who are nice to [him], even if they’re bad people.” Knowing this about our President, all Benjamin Netanyahu (or any other leader for that matter) has to do to curry favor with President Trump is blow a little sunshine up his boxer shorts.

So, we have an American President on the public record saying that a person’s character or behavior does not influence his support for them; it’s their loyalty that wins him over. It’s why our President fawns grotesquely over Viktor Orban, Vladimir Putin, and Benjamin Netanyahu, a known anti-democracy authoritarian and two war criminals, each of them showering Trump with favorable press.

So, when Benjamin Netanyahu sits at the head of the table in the situation room at the white house, he understands that all the loyalty showered on President Trump over the years is about to pay dividends (regardless of what our US intelligence reporting says). He makes his pitch to Donald Trump for launching a joint US–Israeli war against Iran, a pitch that included the following assessments as reported publicly:

  • Iran’s ballistic missile program could be destroyed within weeks.
  • The Iranian regime would be too weakened to close the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Regime change was achievable, with street protests resuming and Mossad operations helping topple the government.
  • He presented a video montage of potential post‑theocratic Iranian leaders, including exiled crown prince Reza Pahlavi.

What was the reaction of US Intelligence officials to Benjamin Netanyahu’s pitch? A whole lot of push-back:

  • CIA Director Ratcliffe called the regime‑change scenarios “farcical.”
  • Secretary of State Rubio summarized the assessment as “In other words, it’s bullshit.”
  • Gen. Caine warned that Israel routinely oversells its plans and that the proposals were not well‑developed.

The US Intelligence assessment was that:

  • Iran could be struck militarily,
  • But regime change was unlikely,
  • And Iran could still close the Strait of Hormuz or retaliate in a significant way.

A true leader would have huddled with experts on his team and with officials from the intelligence community and would have done a deep dive into all the data and reporting. Instead, immediately after Benjamin Netanyahu’s presentation, and with total disregard for the gravity of the situation, Donald Trump said: “Sounds good to me.”

According to reports from people in the room, Trump appeared focused primarily on killing Iran’s Supreme Leader and destroying Iran’s military capacity, rather than on regime change. He dismissed concerns about the feasibility of replacing the Iranian government.

Of course, we now know that many of Netanyahu’s predictions have proved to be incorrect, including the assumption that Iran would be unable to close the Strait of Hormuz or mount significant retaliation.

And so, here we are, in a terrible mess that we could have avoided if we had an ethical, moral, and competent President.


If you haven’t had a chance yet, please check out my book, My Paper, My Words: Rantings from a Progressive Boomer and Peeved Parent, from Amazon. And if you feel moved to write a review of the book, on Amazon, or anywhere else, I’d be honored.

My Paper, My Words is a collection of essays, stories, and poems that reflect the challenges of a middle-class husband and father trying to navigate a rapidly changing political, religious, and technological landscape of post-911 America.

Liar’s Spit and Gravel

I took a poem I wrote several months ago, titled Spit and Gravel, tweaked the wording, added a chorus, and used Suno to set my words to music under the artist profile Sapient Rain.

Sapient Rain is a collaborative musical project that pairs me, the lyricist, with the AI music platform Suno.

Liar’s Spit and Gravel is available on music streaming platforms on April 12th, 2026, but you can listen to it today on Suno.

Liar’s Spit and Gravel, by Sapient Rain

Carpet bombing
Pedophile
The trashy king
Of tacky tiles
Pushing sneakers
Selling bibles
Names all over
Epstein’s files

Hawking watches
Hats and tees
What’s the price
Of dignity?

It seems that what
We value most
Is the loud and proud
Who like to boast
About dropping bombs
And making ghosts

When all that matters
Is what we’ve grossed
When hate and greed
Are double-dosed
Our nation’s veins
Become thrombosed

We need a Dylan
Of our own
A collective moss
Around the stone
We need a Martin
For the day
To gather us
To make some hey
We need a Bobby
To inspire
To fight injustice
To light a fire
Where are the leaders
Of today
As dead as Caesar
and JonBenét

Autocratic
In his tone
His swelled-up ego
Overblown
A head that’s crammed
With nothing known
Cuts lady justice
To the bone

He snaps her picture
With his phone
He loves how she’s
Become so prone
To misogyny and
Testosterone

Bibi, Don,
And Vlady P
Selling war
To you and me
Killing, stealing,
And getting rich
Double-dealing,
Bait and switch

End-time preppin
Sneak attacks
Their Jesus Christ
Ain’t comin back
They drop his name
While talking smack
And stab our allies
In the back

We need a Dylan
Of our own
A collective moss
Around the stone
We need a Martin
For the day
To gather us
To make some hey
We need a Bobby
To inspire
To fight injustice
To light a fire
Where are the leaders
Of today
As dead as Caesar
And JonBenét

Hegseth, Miller, RFK,
On the news
To fuck my day
Lindsey, Marco,
And Pammy Bee
Spewing lies
For all to see

See JD’s Maybelline
Eyeliner
Trump on the hunt
For vagina
Wraps himself
In stars and stripes
Pretends he’s cool
Like Wesley Snipes

Cocky, brass
In midnight rants
Surrounds himself
With sycophants
Marco, Graham,
And JD Vance

As lies unfurl
And we unravel
As truth
Gets bashed
By Johnson’s
Gavel
The blood-soaked
Trail on which
Truth travels
Gets paved with
Liar’s spit
And gravel

Fuck the Prez
And his crew
Screwing over
Me and you
He’s full of shit
A fucking liar
Making us
The world’s pariah

We need a Dylan
Of our own
A collective moss
Around the stone
We need a Martin
For the day
To gather us
To make some hey
We need a Bobby
To inspire
To fight injustice
To light a fire
Where are the leaders
Of today
As dead as Caesar
And JonBenét


If you haven’t had a chance yet, please check out my book, My Paper, My Words: Rantings from a Progressive Boomer and Peeved Parent, from Amazon. And if you feel moved to write a review of the book, on Amazon, or anywhere else, I’d be honored.

My Paper, My Words is a collection of essays, stories, and poems that reflect the challenges of a middle-class husband and father trying to navigate a rapidly changing political, religious, and technological landscape of post-911 America.

I Wanna Bomb Iran on Suno

Here this song on Suno

Oh, yeah, I’ll tell you somethin’
I think you’ll understand
When I say that somethin’
I want to bomb Iran
I want to bomb Iran
I want to bomb Iran

Some, Jews, say to me
that I’m their kind of man
church pews are the key
to get the promised land
they want to bomb Iran
they want to bomb Iran

When Bibi hugs me
I feel happy inside
It’s such a feeling that I scream
genocide!
genocide!
genocide!

Yeah, ole Bibi said to me
Let’s take the Gaza Strip
Trump casinos by the sea
I say we let her rip
I want to bomb Iran
I want to bomb Iran
I want to bomb Iran

When Bibi hugs me
I feel happy inside
It’s such a feeling that I scream
genocide!
genocide!
genocide!

Hamas has that somethin’
they’ve got a shitty brand
But I’ll say the dumb thing
I want to bomb Iran
I want to bomb Iran
I want to bomb Iran
I want to bomb Iran


If you haven’t had a chance yet, please check out my book, My Paper, My Words: Rantings from a Progressive Boomer and Peeved Parent, from Amazon. And if you feel moved to write a review of the book, on Amazon, or anywhere else, I’d be honored.

My Paper, My Words is a collection of essays, stories, and poems that reflect the challenges of a middle-class husband and father trying to navigate a rapidly changing political, religious, and technological landscape of post-911 America.