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President Trump sounded ready to dismiss top intelligence chief Tulsi Gabbard until he got an earful last week from one of his oldest friends and advisers, Roger Stone, Axios has learned.

Why it matters: Trump was displeased with Gabbard when she didn’t wholeheartedly endorse the Iran war during her recent testimony to Congress about threats to the U.S., according to five advisers and confidants who spoke with the president.

  • The day before, Gabbard’s former adviser and counterterrorism director, Joe Kent, quit his post in a headline-grabbing resignation that undercut the administration’s message campaign about the danger posed by Iran.

Inside the room: Trump “scolded” Gabbard in a private meeting soon afterward and questioned her loyalty, two of the sources said.

  • Two others said Trump wasn’t that mad, and instead chided Gabbard in a sarcastic but friendly way.

Zoom in: Trump started polling advisers on their opinions of Gabbard’s testimony, her job performance and whether to replace her, The Guardian reported a week later.

  • Her fellow Cabinet officials backed her, as did Stone when the president called him last week, Axios has learned.
  • “Roger sealed the deal. He saved Tulsi,” a source familiar with Trump’s thinking told Axios.
  • Stone declined to comment but confirmed Thursday on X that he interceded on Gabbard’s behalf: “Fortunately, I acted in time.”

Between the lines: Stone, 73, has been a friend and adviser to Trump, 79, since 1979 and has a special relationship with the president no one else has. He gave four reasons for Trump to keep Gabbard, according to two people who spoke with Stone:

  1. Gabbard was loyal, gave congressional testimony in a professional manner and never disputed the president.
  2. Gabbard wasn’t going to resign like Kent and didn’t deserve to be proactively fired.
  3. Firing Gabbard would needlessly create a damaging news cycle for Trump — and make her into a martyr of sorts for those in the president’s base agitated by the war.
  4. If she were fired and given that aura of credibility among MAGA dissenters, Gabbard could become a potent GOP presidential candidate in a little over a year. That might hurt Trump’s preferred successor, Vice President Vance, in the early 2028 primary states of New Hampshire and South Carolina.

The intrigue: Stone’s advocacy for Gabbard has led to a bitter feud with another Trump adviser — Laura Loomer, a frequent critic of Gabbard, whom Loomer accuses of disloyalty.

  • “Tulsi is done,” Loomer wrote on X last week. “The White House wants zero drama so they gave her the option to resign, but … she will do a lot of damage if she is given the choice to resign because she will launch her 2028 presidential campaign.”
  • A Gabbard ally told Axios it’s “absolutely false” that she was offered a chance to resign and pointed out that Trump has stood by Gabbard repeatedly.

Friction point: The dividing line in the controversy is Israel. Loomer and other Gabbard critics faulted her for hiring Kent, whom they accused of antisemitism when he resigned and accused Israel of manipulating Trump into war with Iran.

  • Kent denied the allegation as a smear.
  • Gabbard recently hired a critic of U.S.-Israel policy, Dan Caldwell, at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, which pro-Israel Trump supporters also criticized.

The backstory: A former Democratic congresswoman and combat veteran, Gabbard is a longtime critic of foreign wars and U.S. policy in the Middle East.

  • Before Trump joined Israel’s bombing campaign of Iran last year in Operation Midnight Hammer, he got annoyed with Gabbard for posting a video on her X account in which she talked about visiting Hiroshima. She warned that the “political elite and warmongers” are “carelessly fomenting fear and tensions between nuclear powers.”
  • There was tension last year between Gabbard and CIA Director John Ratcliffe over her decision to pull the security clearances of some officials without consulting him.
  • Gabbard was cut out of some crucial meetings in the run-up to the current war in Iran.

What they’re saying: An ODNI spokesperson said Gabbard “remains committed to fulfilling the responsibilities the President placed in her to protect the safety, security and freedom of the American people. She will continue to work tirelessly on behalf of President Trump’s agenda.”

  • White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said: “President Trump believes Tulsi Gabbard is doing an excellent job on behalf of the administration. She is a key member of his national security team.”

By Axios – https://www.axios.com/2026/04/10/trump-tulsi-gabbard-roger-stone

This was, if proven true, a grand orchestration, a fiscal labyrinth designed to obscure the flow of money with the kind of complexity that would impress a Byzantine accountant.

If the United States is to endure we cannot be governed like a shell game at a county fair, where the pea is never where the hand pretends it to be. Yet here we are, staring down a revelation so audacious, so brazen in its alleged design, that it would make even the most jaded ward heeler of Tammany Hall blush with embarrassment.

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard has now stepped into a morass that reeks not merely of impropriety, but of a systemic rot that has metastasized through the bureaucratic bloodstream of Washington. According to a declassified intelligence summary of intercepted communications obtained by Just the News, U.S. intelligence agencies captured Ukrainian government messages discussing a plot to route hundreds of millions of American taxpayer dollars, ostensibly earmarked for clean energy and infrastructure projects in a war-torn nation, back into the United States to benefit Joe Biden’s 2024 reelection campaign and the Democratic National Committee. Let that settle in your mind like a thunderclap rolling across a summer sky.

This was not petty theft. This was not a rogue functionary slipping a few coins into his pocket. This was, if proven true, a grand orchestration, a fiscal labyrinth designed to obscure the flow of money with the kind of complexity that would impress a Byzantine accountant. The declassified summary states, in chillingly direct language, “The Ukrainian Government and unspecified U.S. Government personnel, through USAID in Kyiv, reportedly developed a plan that would provide hundreds of millions of US taxpayer dollars to fund an infrastructure project for Ukraine that would be used as a cover to send approximately 90% of funds allocated to the DNC to fund Joe Biden’s reelection campaign.” Ninety percent! Not a rounding error. Not an incidental diversion. A wholesale redirection.

The report continues with a candor that borders on the surreal. “They were confident the project would be funded initially, even though at some time in the future the project would be disapproved as unnecessary. At this time, the money would already be allocated and impossible to return or use for a different purpose.” In other words, construct the illusion, secure the appropriation, and let the funds vanish into the ether before anyone bothers to ask whether the bridge was ever meant to be built.

Intercepts from late 2022 reportedly detail how subcontractors, including two American entities whose names remain classified, would be used as conduits. “The plan included details of how subcontractors would be funded through U.S. companies so that how the funds were spent and allocated would be difficult to track,” the summary explained.

Additionally, contracts would be executed that would be difficult to verify. In this manner, most of the U.S. funding would be diverted to Joe Biden’s election campaign without the ability to track where exactly the funds came from.” A hall of mirrors would be simpler.

Gabbard, to her credit, did not bury this. She did not convene a committee to study whether a committee should be formed. She moved. Upon learning of the intercepts, she directed officials at USAID to scour records, contracts, payments, and communications to determine whether this alleged scheme was ever implemented and whether a criminal referral to the FBI is warranted. Her team has further concluded that there is no substantive evidence the allegations were thoroughly investigated during the Biden administration and that the communications do not appear to be tied to Russian disinformation. That well worn alibi, so often deployed like a magician’s cape, is conspicuously absent.

Consider the metaphor. The American taxpayer is told he is funding a sturdy bridge in a distant land. He imagines steel beams, concrete pylons, the honest labor of reconstruction. Instead, if these allegations are borne out, that bridge is a mirage, and the steel has been melted down into political coin, stamped and spent in the service of domestic electoral ambition. It is not merely deception. It is alchemy of the most cynical kind, transmuting public trust into partisan advantage.

And where, one might ask, was the vigilance? Officials who have reviewed the files reportedly noted a striking lack of curiosity in pursuing what can only be described as an explosive allegation of foreign interference in a U.S. election. The absence of prior investigation is not a footnote. It is an indictment of indifference at best, and something far more sinister at worst.

President Donald Trump, never one to whisper when a trumpet will do, amplified the allegations, casting them as yet another example of what he has long described as a weaponized and corrupted administrative state. His critics scoff. They always scoff. But their scoffing grows increasingly hollow as each new disclosure peels back another layer of institutional duplicity.

The timing of these revelations is not without consequence. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has been working closely with Trump’s envoys in an effort to craft a peace plan to end the war that erupted in 2022. Yet even as he seeks diplomatic equilibrium, his administration has been shadowed by persistent allegations of corruption. The resignation of Andriy Yermak, a close ally and former head of the presidential office, following searches by Ukraine’s anti-corruption agencies, only deepens the sense that something beneath the surface is amiss.

Ukraine’s own anti corruption bodies announced they had exposed a “high level criminal organization operating in the energy sector” as part of what they termed Operation Midas. Yermak himself stated that investigators faced “no obstacles” and that he offered “full cooperation,” while Zelenskyy declared, “When all attention is focused on diplomacy and on defending ourselves in this war, we need internal strength.” He added with notable urgency, “I want no one to have any questions for Ukraine.”

Yet questions abound and they do not begin in 2022. They trace back through a tangled history that includes the now infamous Burisma saga. Mykola Zlochevsky, the Ukrainian oligarch who owned the energy company, brought Hunter Biden onto the board in 2014. Hunter Biden himself later conceded the obvious when asked whether he would have been offered the position absent his last name. “Probably not, in retrospect,” he admitted, adding with a candor rare in Washington, “there’s no question my last name was a coveted credential.

A 2020 Senate report detailed the chronology with almost clinical precision. Within days of Vice President Joe Biden meeting Hunter’s business partner Devon Archer at the White House, events unfolded in rapid succession. Archer joined Burisma’s board. British authorities seized 23 million dollars from accounts tied to Zlochevsky. Then Hunter Biden joined the board and, over subsequent years, he and Archer were paid millions.

Senator Chuck Grassley and Senator Ron Johnson wrote, “Hunter Biden and Devon Archer were paid millions of dollars from a corrupt Ukrainian oligarch for their participation on the board.” Later, an FBI source alleged Zlochevsky claimed he paid 5 million dollars to Hunter Biden and 5 million to Joe Biden, describing it with the term “ poluchili,” a phrase associated with coercive payments in Russian criminal parlance. Those allegations would become mired in controversy, with the source later charged and pleading guilty to making false statements. Even so, the episode underscores a recurring theme, a pattern of proximity between political power and foreign money that refuses to dissipate.

Adding to the tapestry President Joe Biden, after repeatedly pledging he would not intervene, ultimately issued a sweeping pardon for his son in December 2024, covering not only specific convictions but any potential offenses dating back to 2014. It was an act that raised eyebrows not merely for its scope, but for its timing and its breadth.One begins to see a pattern, or at the very least, a constellation of coincidences so dense that they resemble design.

Of course, the obligatory refrain has already begun. The allegations are unverified. The claims are unproven. The intercepts are preliminary. Yes, all of that is true. But it is equally true that these are not rumors whispered in a tavern. They are intelligence intercepts, memorialized, declassified, and now placed before the American people.

While an investigation is not a conviction it is a beginning. But it is a beginning that demands seriousness, rigor, and above all, honesty. If $20M of American aid was even contemplated as a political slush fund that is not merely a scandal, it is a desecration of the public trust, a violation of the covenant between citizen and state.

Gabbard’s broader tenure has already been marked by an appetite for disruption. Cybersecurity modernization. Structural reforms. A willingness to declassify and confront past intelligence controversies. These are not the gestures of a caretaker. They are the actions of someone intent on recalibrating an intelligence apparatus that has, in the eyes of many Americans, drifted perilously far from its constitutional moorings.

But this matter eclipses even those efforts. This is not about policy nuance or bureaucratic efficiency. This is about whether the machinery of government can be bent, twisted, and repurposed into an electoral weapon while cloaked in the language of foreign aid. The American people are not naïve. They understand that politics is a rough trade. But there is a line, a bright and unmistakable line, between hardball and corruption. If this scheme crossed that line, then it did not merely step over it. It leapt across with the enthusiasm of a thief fleeing the scene.

One is left with a simple, unavoidable question. If this had involved a Republican administration, would the silence be so deafening? Or would the airwaves be filled with righteous indignation, the kind that shakes chandeliers and topples careers? We deserve answers. Not platitudes. Not procedural delays. Answers. Because a republic that tolerates the laundering of its own integrity will soon find that integrity is the one currency it can no longer afford.

Any republic worthy of its name should never force its citizens to choose.

There are moments in the life of a republic when the citizen is asked to accept something that defies instinct, experience, and common sense. Our present moment is one of them. The American voter is told, with an air of finality and condescension, that the machinery of our elections is beyond question. That the systems are secure. That the results are unimpeachable. That any doubt is not merely misguided but dangerous. But when did skepticism become subversion? When did asking questions become an act of heresy?

The issue of election integrity has not faded into the past. It has not been resolved. It has not been settled. It lingers like an unanswered riddle at the heart of American democracy. As the 2026 election cycle accelerates, the same concerns that animated millions of voters in recent years remain unresolved, unaddressed, and in many cases deliberately ignored.

At the center of this debate are the systems themselves. Electronic voting machines. Tabulation software. Chain of custody procedures. Absentee ballots. Early voting expansions. Each element, taken individually, may appear benign. Together they form a complex architecture that demands trust. Blind trust. Total trust. And yet trust is not something that can be commanded. It must be earned.

Consider the role of companies such as Dominion Voting Systems and Smartmatic. These firms have become household names not because of transparency, but because of controversy. Their defenders insist that their systems are secure and their critics are misinformed. But why, then, is there such resistance to full forensic audits? Why is scrutiny treated as sabotage? If confidence is truly warranted, should it not withstand examination?

The American people are not irrational. They are not incapable of understanding complexity. What they reject is opacity. What they resent is dismissal. When citizens observe irregularities, whether real or perceived, and are told to remain silent for the sake of stability, the effect is not reassurance. It is alienation.

Election integrity is not a partisan issue. It is the foundation upon which all political legitimacy rests. Without confidence in the process, the outcome becomes suspect, regardless of who wins or loses. A republic cannot endure if its citizens believe the system is rigged, manipulated, or beyond their reach. And yet, instead of confronting these concerns with clarity and openness, many in positions of authority have chosen a different path. They ridicule. They censor. They deflect. They insist that the matter is closed. But it is not closed. It is very much alive.

The expansion of mail in voting, while convenient, has introduced new vulnerabilities. Ballots traveling through vast and decentralized systems raise questions about custody and verification. Signature matching, often subjective, becomes a point of contention. Deadlines shift. Rules vary by jurisdiction. Uniformity, once a hallmark of electoral integrity, gives way to fragmentation.

Meanwhile, the technology itself remains largely inaccessible to public understanding. Proprietary software. Limited transparency. Restricted access for independent review. These are not the hallmarks of a system designed to inspire confidence. They are the characteristics of a system that demands faith without proof.

Who benefits from such a system? Who is served by the insistence that questions must not be asked? These are not rhetorical flourishes. They are essential inquiries. There was a time when both parties agreed that election security was paramount. There was a time when identification was considered common sense. There was a time when ballots were counted in a manner that could be observed and understood by the average citizen. That time now feels distant.

Today, the debate is framed in absolutes. You either accept everything or you are cast as a denier. You either trust completely or you are labeled a threat. This binary framing is not only dishonest. It is dangerous. The strength of a democracy lies not in the suppression of doubt, but in its resolution. Transparency is not the enemy of stability. It is its prerequisite. Audits, verifications, and open examination should not be feared. They should be welcomed.

As we approach another critical election cycle, the question remains. Not who will win. Not which party will prevail. But something far more fundamental. Will the American people believe the results? That is the question that haunts our time. That is the question that must be answered. And until it is answered with clarity, honesty, and undeniable transparency, the shadow of doubt will remain.

Trust the machine or trust your eyes? Any republic worthy of its name should never force its citizens to choose.

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ROGER STONE MEDIA

WHO IS ROGER STONE?

Roger Stone is a seasoned political operative, speaker, pundit, and New York Times Bestselling Author featured in the Netflix documentary Get Me Roger Stone.

Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Donald Trump—all of these Presidents relied on Roger Stone to secure their seat in the Oval Office. In a 45-year career in American politics, Stone has worked on over 700 campaigns for public office.

“Roger’s a good guy. He is a patriot and believes in a strong nation, and a lot of other things I believes in.”

– President Donald J. Trump
Stone’s bestselling books include The Man Who Killed Kennedy: The Case Against LBJThe Bush Crime FamilyThe Clintons’ War on WomenThe Making of The President—How Donald Trump Orchestrated a Revolution, and Stone’s Rules with a forward by Tucker Carlson.
For the last 15 years, Roger Stone has published his International Best & Worst Dressed List. Stone is considered an authority on political and corporate strategy, branding, marketing, messaging, and advertising.
Stone is the host of The StoneZONE on Rumble and is also the host of The Roger Stone Show on WABC Radio.

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