Joe Kent, the former director of the National Counterterrorism Center who resigned Tuesday in protest over the war with Iran, is being investigated by the FBI for allegedly leaking classified information, according to a source familiar with the matter.
The probe, first reported Wednesday by Semafor, predates Kent’s dramatic departure from the Trump administration.
Additional details were not immediately available.
News of the investigation came one day after former White House deputy chief of staff Taylor Budowich alleged on X Tuesday that Kent was “a crazed egomaniac who was often at the center of national security leaks, while rarely (never?) producing any actual work.”
“This isn’t some principled resignation,” Budowich added, “he just wanted to make a splash before getting canned. What a loser.”
In his resignation letter, Kent claimed that Iran “posed no imminent threat to our nation” and argued that Trump launched Operation Epic Fury “due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby.”
Kent, a two-time Republican congressional candidate, expanded on those claims in an interview with podcaster Tucker Carlson released Wednesday night, accusing conservative media personalities — “your Mark Levins, Sean Hannitys, etc.” — of repeating Israeli talking points about Iran enriching uranium to the point of developing nuclear weapons.
“Yet, if you looked in classified intelligence, we didn’t see any of that,” he insisted. “The circle that was around [President Trump] was very, very tight and very small and I think they were on the same sheet of music, and I think a lot of them were getting their information from the ecosystem that I described.”
Kent added that while there was “robust debate and robust discussions” leading up to Trump hitting three Iranian nuclear sites in June 2025, deliberation ahead of Operation Epic Fury was “conducted by just a handful of advisers around the president.”
Trump himself responded to Kent’s departure Tuesday, with the president telling reporters in the Oval Office: “I always thought he was a nice guy, but I always thought he was weak on security, very weak on security.”
“When I read the statement, I realized that it’s a good thing that he’s out, because he said that Iran was not a threat,” the president added. “Iran was a threat. Every country realized what a threat Iran was.”
The president added: “When somebody is working with us that says they didn’t think Iran was a threat, we don’t want those people … They’re not smart people, or they’re not savvy people. Iran was a tremendous threat.”
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt also accused Kent of peddling “false claims” in his resignation letter, noting that Trump had deployed “his top negotiators” in an effort to avoid war, but “had strong and compelling evidence that Iran was going to attack the United States first.”
She also blasted “the absurd allegation that President Trump made this decision based on the influence of others, even foreign countries,” calling it “both insulting and laughable.”












