00:00A letter just came in and a statement came in from the Atomic Energy Commission of Israel and I just wondered, this is an official letter and they're very serious people as you know, the devastating U.S. strike on Fordow destroyed the site's critical infrastructure and rendered the enrichment facility totally inoperable.
00:25It was devastated. We assessed that the American strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities has set back Iran's ability to develop nuclear weapons for many years to come.
00:36This achievement can continue indefinitely if Iran does not get access to nuclear material, which it won't.
00:45It's so so sad that that whole thing had to go. But I just I just want to thank our pilots.
00:51You know, they were maligned and treated very bad, demeaned by fake news, CNN, which is back there, believe it or not, wasting time, wasting and nobody's watching them.
01:01So they're just wasting a lot of time, wasting my time. And The New York Times, they put out a story that, well, maybe they were hit, but it wasn't bad.
01:10Well, it was so bad that they ended the war. It ended the war.
01:13Somebody said in a certain way that it was so devastating, actually, if you look at Hiroshima, if you look at Nagasaki, you know, that ended a war, too.
01:25This ended a war in a different way. But it was so devastating.
01:28Also, they have out of Dubai just came that Iran's foreign ministry spokesman, this is Iran's foreign ministry, says it's near its nuclear installations were very badly damaged by the American strike.
01:46So what bothered me about these reports with fake reports put out by The New York Times, failing, I call it the failing New York Times because it's doing terribly without me, it would be doing no business at all.
01:58But, and by fake news, CNN and MSDNC, all of these terrible people, you know, they have no credibility.
02:08You know, when I started, they were at 94 percent credibility, the media now it's at 16 percent.
02:13And I'm very proud of it because I've exposed it for what it is.
02:17But when I when I saw them starting to question the the caliber of the attack, was it bad?
02:26Well, it was really bad. It was devastated. They were obliterated like you can't get into the tunnels.
02:31They just put that over. That just came out. They can't. There's nothing.
02:35There's no way you can even get down. The whole thing is collapsed in a disaster.
02:39And I think all of the nuclear stuff is down there because it's very hard to remove.
02:43And we we did it very quickly when they heard we were coming.
02:47It was, you know, you can't move it very hard, very dangerous, actually, to move to.
02:51And they also knew we were coming.
02:53So I don't think too many people want to be down there knowing we're coming.
02:56With the bunker busters, as we call them, we're the only ones that have them.
03:00We have the best equipment, best nuclear equipment, and we have the best equipment in the world.
03:04And by the way, we can't forget our submarine, which was out there.
03:09Submarines, actually. But submarine was out there.
03:11We shot 30 rockets into an area, every single one of them.
03:19I think it was almost 400 miles away.
03:22I think, Pete, 400 and long.
03:25It was in the ocean long ways away.
03:29And we shot we shot a total of 30.
03:33Every single one of them hit within nine inches from where it was supposed to be.
03:38It took out a lot because we didn't do just four.
03:41We did two others in addition, which hadn't been completely destroyed.
03:48So we hit them with a submarine from hundreds of miles away.
03:52Amazing. Just amazing equipment.
03:55Greatest submarines in the world.
03:56Nobody's even close to 20 years behind us when it comes to submarine technology.
04:02So that's one.
04:03And the other was was from the Atomic Energy Commission.
04:09And they have about three or four of them now coming in from atomic energy commissions from various places.
04:14But the one that we have that just came out, we released it a little while ago, was from the Israeli Atomic Energy Commission.
04:23But numerous of them are getting to see the site and the site has been demolished.
04:28And again, we had these brave patriots, these incredible flyers, these people that can fly a plane better than anybody can fly a plane,
04:39going into very hostile territory, flying into the territory that has got more missiles and things pointed at it.
04:48But it was very stealth.
04:49They didn't get to see it.
04:50It was dark.
04:51That's the amazing thing about the shots.
04:54They hit the shots perfectly.
04:55And yet it was dead dark.
04:56There was no moon.
04:57There was no light.
04:58It was virtually moonless.
05:01It was very dark.
05:03And they hit the shots were hit perfectly.
05:05But when they get demeaned and they were very upset about it because they knew how strong it would be back in Missouri.
05:10The pilots flew about 36 hours, two ways, far distance and in those incredible B-2s.
05:18And we then had the F-22s and we had the F-35s and we had other planes and we had, I think, a total of 52 tankers.
05:25That means the big tankers, because the refueling was a lot for all of the different planes that we sent.
05:32Incredible operation.
05:33And I have to say, General Raisin Cain was incredible.
05:37That's why he beat ISIS and we beat ISIS in a matter of weeks.
05:41I was told it would take four to five years.
05:43We did it in a few weeks.
05:45And he was great.
05:46That's why he's the head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff right now, because I had a very good experience with him.
05:52He knocked out ISIS in a period of literally a few weeks.
05:56Amazing.
05:57And it was supposed to take a few years, five years to be exact.
06:02So we had a great victory there.
06:05And we then came here and I think we had a great victory here.
06:08But this is an ongoing project.
06:11This is the safety of Europe, the safety of the world.
06:14And they've raised it from 2 percent to 5 percent, something which nobody.
06:18And you're talking about over a trillion dollars a year.
06:21So we're talking about a lot of money from coming in from countries that we're not paying nearly enough to be effective.
06:28So I have, as you know, Marco Rubio with me and Pete Hegseth, Secretary of State and Secretary of War.
06:36Should we say secretary?
06:37You know, it used to be called Secretary of War.
06:39Maybe for a couple of weeks we'll call it that because we feel like warriors.
06:43It used to be called Secretary of War.
06:45In fact, if you look at the old building next to the White House, you can see where it used to be Secretary of War.
06:50Then we became politically correct and they called it Secretary of Defense.
06:54I don't know.
06:55Maybe we'll have to start thinking about changing it.