Republican nominee Donald Trumpâ€
Officials with the director of National Intelligence briefed Trump on Tuesday about “real and specific threats� by Iran to assassinate him with the goal of destabilizing the United States and sowing chaos, campaign spokesman Steven Cheung said in a statement.
The ODNI, in joint statements with the FBI and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, has described Iran becoming “increasingly aggressive� in undertaking a “multipronged approach … to stoke discord and undermine confidence in our electoral process.� In August, federal prosecutors charged a Pakistani man with an Iranian-backed murder-for-hire plot targeting an unidentified U.S. politician.
Cheungâ€
But Cheung then went further, claiming without evidence that Iran wanted Harris to win the election. “Make no mistake, the terror regime in Iran loves the weakness of Kamala Harris, and is terrified of the strength and resolve of President Trump,� Cheung said.
The Biden administration had previously alerted the Secret Service of an unspecified threat to Trump by Iran before an assassination attempt on the former president in Pennsylvania in July, though the shooting is not believed to be related to any Iranian effort, U.S. officials said.
For the past few years, Western security and law enforcement agencies said they have disrupted attempts to assassinate anti-Iran activists as well as former U.S. officials, including John Bolton, who was Trumpâ€
Intelligence officials have said Iran views this presidential election as “particularly consequential� for its national security, but they have not said whether Iran has a preferred candidate.
There was no evidence of Iranian involvement in the two assassination attempts on Trump, on July 13 in Butler, Pa., and Sept. 15 in West Palm Beach, Fla.
Other Republicans, including House Speaker Mike Johnson, have also accused Iran of favoring Harris.
An ODNI spokesperson acknowledged the briefing but declined to address any specifics.
Deprecating Harris as “weakâ€� has been a core message of Trumpâ€
“Sheâ€
On Sept. 18, ODNI, the FBI and CISA said Iranian hackers stole information from the Trump campaign and tried to supply it to reporters and to people associated with the Biden campaign. There was no indication that the recipients associated with the Biden campaign responded.
The joint statement said Russia and China are also trying to exploit divisions in the United States during election seasons.
Josh Dawsey contributed to this report.