CNN's Audie Cornish compared the unfolding Pentagon scandal to the Jeffrey Epstein scandal that has consumed much of President Donald Trump's second term so far.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has found himself in the crosshairs after the Washington Post reported that he ordered a follow-on attack against two survivors of a missile strike of an alleged drug smuggling boat, and the Trump administration has been scrambling to shield him from accountability for what has been described as a war crime or even murder.
“Secretary Hegseth authorized Admiral [Frank] Bradley to conduct these kinetic strikes,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters. “Admiral Bradley worked well within his authority and the law, directing the engagement to ensure the boat was destroyed and the threat to the United States of America was eliminated.”
Cornish asked her panelists on "CNN This Morning" to comment on Leavitt's attempt to pin blame for the strike on the admiral, and former White House official Ashley Davis, who served during George W. Bush's presidency, seemingly sidestepped the issue.
"I mean, I'd look at Karoline and think, oh, my God, your job is tough every day," Davis said. "So, I mean, it's going to be a – listen, I don't know who's right. I think it's going to definitely be litigated on the Hill in committees, and they're going to call up a lot of people on this."
Cornish stepped in to compare the administration's handling of this matter to the Justice Department's fumbling of the Epstein matter that has continued to plague the president ever since.
"It's interesting, it's a little bit like Epstein, it's a topic that they're – no one asked them to start sinking boats in Venezuela, right," Cornish said. "Like, so this is their operation. They've released almost no information about it, and now they're getting tangled up in the information they've released."
CNN's Edward-Isaac Dovere pointed out that the emerging name for the scandal struck him as odd.
"One way that you know that we're into strange territory here is that we're referring to it as a double tap, which is like a hired assassin term," Dovere said. "It's not something that we talk about within the military strike and the terminology that we're using, the way that we're talking about this, these were people who were killed. There is a question of whether the United States can just kill people."
Cornish said this attack, which was the first of at least 21 strikes on boats in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean that resulted in more than 80 deaths, was unusual compared to subsequent strikes.
"We should be clear, they did do attacks where there were survivors and they turned them away," she said. "This is not how there is some precedent for what happens after an attack."
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