
(SeaPRwire) – A former Defense Department intelligence officer has warned that the shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner has uncovered a critical security vulnerability for President Donald Trump and other senior U.S. officials.
Amid soaring tensions between Washington and Tehran and stalled ceasefire negotiations, Andrew Badger told Digital that the April 25 security breach could further boost Iran’s incentive to target Trump and other members of the administration.
“This could reveal a weakness in the ability to access President Trump or senior government officials,” Badger stated before cautioning about “significant vulnerabilities.”
“When you observe your adversary and spot their weaknesses, it also stokes your drive to act,” he remarked before asserting that “Iran has the motive to strike at senior Trump officials, including President Trump.”
“Iran, which has a well-documented track record of employing criminals and proxy individuals, could certainly look at this as an opportunity.”
Chaos erupted at the Washington Hilton Hotel when a suspected gunman, identified as 31-year-old Cole Thomas Allen of Torrance, California, forced his way past a security checkpoint and opened fire.
Trump and other administration officials were quickly evacuated from the ballroom as law enforcement responded to the scene. Allen is currently in custody and made his initial court appearance on Monday.
The gathering included Trump, first lady Melania Trump, Vice President JD Vance, Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, journalists and senior administration officials — a concentration of leadership that Badger said presented significant risk.
“The top three of the line of succession were at this single event,” Badger noted.
He added that “eight of the nine line-of-succession officials were at this single event,” warning of a worst-case scenario: “If this individual had somehow worn a suicide vest, you could have eliminated all three of those individuals.”
“Imagine if there were multiple people. Imagine if he was wearing suicide vests. Imagine if he used some type of drone,” Badger said, emphasizing the scale of potential exposure at a nonsecure venue.
The incident, he said, unfolds against the backdrop of ongoing tensions with Iran, which have escalated amid U.S. and Israeli targeting of Iranian officials and leadership.
Badger pointed to longstanding Iranian hostility tied to the 2020 killing of Qassem Soleimani, the commander of Iran’s Quds Force, who was killed in a U.S. drone strike near Baghdad International Airport ordered by Trump.
“There has been a driving animus, a driving motivation in the Iranian regime — which they’ve stated publicly — to get revenge for that killing of Soleimani,” said Badger, who served on the front lines of human intelligence operations, including a 2014 deployment to Afghanistan.
After Soleimani was killed, Ayatollah Khamenei warned that those responsible for the attack would face “severe revenge,” adding that the death would strengthen and intensify resistance against the United States and Israel.
Badger warned that Iran and other adversaries have increasingly relied on unconventional tactics. “Iran and other state actors such as Russia have increasingly reverted to contracting criminals, or gangsters, to conduct hybrid warfare,” he said.
Following the incident, Trump underscored the need for more secure venues, advocating for a dedicated White House ballroom.
“It’s got every single bell and whistle you can possibly have for security and safety… It’s really what you need,” Trump said on “The Sunday Briefing.”
This article is provided by a third-party content provider. SeaPRwire (https://www.seaprwire.com/) makes no warranties or representations regarding its content.
Category: Top News, Daily News
SeaPRwire provides global press release distribution services for companies and organizations, covering more than 6,500 media outlets, 86,000 editors and journalists, and over 3.5 million end-user desktop and mobile apps. SeaPRwire supports multilingual press release distribution in English, Japanese, German, Korean, French, Russian, Indonesian, Malay, Vietnamese, Chinese, and more.
