How US airstrike intel reports became a tool for partisan media: Bias Breakdown
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Jul 1, 2025
After the U.S. airstrikes on Iran, the portrayal of the attack by left- and right-leaning outlets quickly diverged.
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President Trump has just announced on social media that the U.S. has just completed three
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successful attacks on three nuclear sites in Iran. News from the President of the United States that
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there has been an attack inside Iran. It's been a week since the U.S. bombed Iran's nuclear
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facilities. And from day one, media coverage set the tone. From left networks, a sobering one
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Since 1979, the U.S. military has not engaged directly with Iran. But Donald Trump has done so tonight
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Donald Trump has ordered U.S. military bombing raids on Iran. We are now in war with Iran
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Delivering the most sober possible message to the American people, who have been largely opposed to and afraid of a potential U.S. war with Iran
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Again, for generations, Donald Trump has now started it. And networks on the right, a tone of triumph
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No president has been able to deal a blow like this to the number one state sponsor of terror
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The Trump doctrine is very different, very unique than any other president in the history of this country
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And I think he has proven that you can successfully take out and neutralize threats in the world without getting involved in forever wars
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It's the biggest news story since Trump's election. This is when the media should be providing a valuable service
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A major world event happens and the public's looking for straightforward answers
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But as you're about to see, partisan outlets gave two different versions of events to fit a political narrative
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Welcome to Bias Breakdown. Join Straight Arrow News. See the slant. Avoid the bias
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When others skew the facts, we give you the truth down the center. Welcome to Bias Breakdown
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Following the strike on Iran's nuclear sites, news outlets on the left said the U.S. was
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entering war with Iran. Under this lens, much of the noise from left-leaning outlets
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focused on the legality of Trump's strikes. Was he allowed to make such a decision without
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congressional approval? And if not, is it an impeachable offense? Congress didn't authorize this. No president of any party has the ability on their own to start a
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war, sending American aircraft over another country, dropping bombs, that's risking starting a war
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And certainly the Congress has a role to play Right leaning media avoided claims that the U was getting into a war Instead much of the coverage highlighted the success of the mission
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These, the strikes against the nuclear facilities were absolutely successful. It was an amazing operation
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Let's talk about why this story took two different directions. The biggest dividing line in early coverage comes down to how Trump's strikes were interpreted
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was bombing Iran's nuclear sites a declaration of war. Some say the president overstepped by acting without congressional approval
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Others say he exercised lawful authority, as presidents have done in the past
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But the media inserted itself into that debate and chose sides. I remain absolutely convinced that this was unjustified
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There was more time for diplomacy. We had something truly badass happen and the media in its desperation to make Trump look bad figured out a way to just poo poo the whole thing to the masses
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The left also questioned the effectiveness of the strikes. President Trump had declared they were completely and totally obliterated
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But tonight sources say this new preliminary Pentagon report finds the damage was limited, saying Iran's nuclear program was only set back a few months
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This weekend's strikes on three Iranian nuclear facilities set Iran's program back by months
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and did not obliterate the facilities as President Trump had claimed. But right-leaning media pushed back
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defending the administration against claims that the strike wasn't as effective as the president said
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And this unprecedented strike was made against Iran, knocking out Iran's nuclear sites, likely setting back that program for years, decades, or perhaps ever
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The decision by President Trump and what Israel did prior to our military going in there with the stealth bombers, it looks like we've set Iran back big time
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You saw the same sentiment in news headlines. The left promoting intel reports, doubting the strike's effectiveness, highlighting Iran was only set back months
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The right pointing to intel that Iran's nuke program was set back years
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It's our job as journalists to bring people clarity. But what happened
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From the headlines graphic we just shared on your screen, it doesn't get more contrasting and confusing than that
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But revisiting a common conversation we have here on this podcast cherry picking data polls studies and experts is a tool for pushing agendas If I want to persuade you on something I can say here I got this expert this poll
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or this intel report to prove it. And maybe that information is factually true, but if I'm only
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giving you part of the story that supports my point of view, that's dishonest. And that's not
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what we do here. So let's talk about some of the intelligence reports out there and what we know so
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far. A leaked preliminary defense intelligence agency assessment suggests the strikes may have
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only delayed Iran's nuclear program by a few months, with damage mostly limited to above-ground
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infrastructure. But a CIA report claims the strikes caused severe long-term damage. Israeli
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intelligence also points to significant damage, potentially setting Iran back by years
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The International Atomic Energy Agency says the strikes dealt severe but not total damage
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And even Iran's own foreign minister admitted to excessive and serious damage, a stark contrast
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to the Supreme Leader's claim that the strikes achieved nothing. A Washington Post report over
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the weekend revealed a call by Iranian officials saying the strike was less damaging than they had
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expected. There's several sources and assessments with several different conclusions. What these
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have in common is they're all preliminary. It's something our reporter Ryan Robertson put this
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way. It's simply going to take time to learn more about the damage done. The DIA report says based
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on current findings, Iran's nuclear program was probably set back a few months, not years
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But it's worth noting the DIA's report was given a low confidence rating, implying it could be wrong
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or it might change. And that should not be surprising, because just like it took time
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to plan the strikes, it's going to take time to find out if the plan worked
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Things are still a bit blurry being only a week since the strikes
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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said it'll take a lot of literal digging to discover the extent of the damage
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So all of the evidence of what was just bombed by 12 30 pound bombs is buried under a mountain devastated and obliterated So if you want to make an assessment of what happened at Fordow you better get a big shovel Reporting public reaction to the
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airstrikes can also create contradiction and confusion. A large majority of the American
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people approve of Donald Trump's actions in the Middle East. The American people can see what is
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going on. They don't like it. Of course they don't. I mean, a new CNN poll out today finds
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that a majority of Americans disapprove of Trump's decision to strike Iran by a 12 point margin
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It's easy for media on the right and the left to manipulate polling and public sentiment
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to fit a narrative. A CNN poll out last week showed the majority of Americans, 56 percent
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disapproved of the strikes in Iran. But an Axios poll found a majority of Americans
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55% supported the recent U.S. airstrikes. The media has massive power to shape opinion
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especially in moments where public interest peaks. The day of the airstrikes, networks turned a slow
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new Saturday into a record-breaking viewership day. Fox News saw its third highest-rated Saturday
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in the network's history. And millions tuned in to CNN and MSNBC on days that typically see
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numbers nowhere close to that. People were plugged in. America was plugged in. But depending on where
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you got your news, you may well have been inflicted with a preferred narrative, putting Trump's
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strikes in a positive or negative light. And that's your bias breakdown
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checking out, it's from a few weeks back during the early negotiations over President Trump's big
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beautiful bill. Republicans are now pushing to get that package to his desk by week's end
9:26
The episode breaks down how the media covered proposed Medicaid cuts and how left and right
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leaning outlets framed it as either targeting benefits or waste. You can find all of our
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episodes on Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you listen to podcasts. Big thank you to Ian Kennedy
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on our edits and Allie Caldwell on our graphics. And thank you for watching. I hope you have a
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wonderful July 4th weekend. Happy Independence Day. I'll see you next time
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