Gabbard pressed on omission of climate change from threat report
- Independent Senator Angus King expressed confusion over the lack of climate change in the U.S. Intelligence Community's annual threat report, stating that every previous report mentioned global climate change as a significant national security threat, except this one.
- During the Senate Intelligence Committee hearing, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard outlined various threats, stating that cartels were responsible for the deaths of more than 54,000 U.S. Citizens from synthetic opioids over a year-long period ending October 2024.
- King highlighted potential impacts of climate change, including mass migration, famine, dislocation, and political violence, showcasing the report's omission as a significant gap in addressing security issues.
- Gabbard noted that criminal groups are a major source of unrest in the Western Hemisphere, detailing their engagement in extortion, weapons and human smuggling, and other illicit activities.
28 Articles
28 Articles


Leftists Melt Down after Climate Change Removed from America’s List of Policy Priorities
Why Climate Change is a National Security Threat
The U.S. intelligence community published its 2025 annual threat assessment on March 25. Missing from the document was any mention of climate change—marking the first time in over a decade that the topic has not appeared on the list. “What I focused this annual threat assessment on, and the [Intelligence Committee] focused this threat assessment on, are the most extreme and critical direct threats to our national security,” Director of National …
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