Kushner cited in classified whistleblower complaint against DNI Gabbard: Report

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Kushner cited in classified whistleblower complaint against DNI Gabbard: Report

A highly classified whistleblower complaint against Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard has prompted months of internal debate over how — and whether — to share it with Congress. The document was kept under strict security amid warnings that disclosure could cause serious national security damage, and the delay drew scrutiny from lawmakers.

New reporting adds a key detail: the complaint stems from a National Security Agency-intercepted conversation in which two foreign nationals discussed Jared Kushner.

Why Kushner is involved

Kushner has played a role in some of the Trump administration’s most sensitive foreign policy efforts, including talks on Iran’s nuclear program and negotiations to end the war in Ukraine. 

The revelation has intensified a fight on Capitol Hill over oversight and whistleblower procedures, including whether Gabbard’s office delayed transmitting the complaint and how much of the underlying intelligence Congress can see.

What the complaint alleges

According to The Wall Street Journal, the intercepted conversation involved two foreign nationals discussing Kushner, and at least part of the exchange related to Iran. The exact details of the conversation remain classified.

Administration officials denied the claims about Kushner, calling them false, but declined to provide specifics, citing the need to protect intelligence-gathering methods. Other officials said there was no corroborating evidence, while cautioning that the absence of corroboration does not necessarily invalidate the allegations.

The complaint alleges Gabbard met with White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles shortly after the intelligence was collected and later worked to limit its sharing for political reasons. 

The Journal reported the complaint was filed last May and became the subject of an eight-month dispute over how to share it with Congress.

Lawmakers divided

Whistleblower Aid, which represents the complainant, says its client asked in June 2025 that the complaint be transmitted to Congress, and that Gabbard “repeatedly stonewalled and thwarted” its release because she was the subject of the complaint.

The document was reportedly kept in a secure safe during the standoff due to concerns that broader distribution could compromise national security. A heavily redacted version was shown last week to the Gang of Eight on a read-and-return basis.

Senate Intelligence Committee Chair Tom Cotton, a Republican, called the complaint not credible and defended Gabbard’s handling of it. In contrast, the committee’s top Democrat, Sen. Mark Warner, said the version lawmakers saw was so heavily redacted he could not assess its credibility and questioned the eight-month delay.

Andrew Bakaj, the whistleblower’s attorney, formally asked that the full complaint and the underlying intercept be shared with Congress. He accused Gabbard of obstructing his client’s ability to brief intelligence committees directly.

Gabbard’s office called the allegations “baseless and politically motivated,” and said a former acting inspector general found claims against her not credible.

What comes next

Democrats are pressing for access to the unredacted complaint and related intelligence and could seek additional classified briefings. Republicans have largely framed the dispute as an effort to undermine Trump administration policies.

For now, the underlying intelligence remains classified, the complaint tightly restricted, and Congress divided over both its credibility and how it was handled.

The post Kushner cited in classified whistleblower complaint against DNI Gabbard: Report appeared first on Straight Arrow News.

Ella Rae Greene, Editor In Chief

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