Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Korva Coleman.
President Trump has issued a new threat toward Iran.
He's threatening to blow up the world's largest gas field in Iran if Iran keeps attacking Qatar.
This comes after Israel struck the same gas field yesterday.
Trump says the U.S. was not part of that Israeli attack.
Later this morning, the House Intelligence Committee will question national security leaders,
including National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard and CIA Director John Ratcliffe.
NPR's Greg Myrie says both were asked yesterday by a Senate panel about the war's effects on world oil shipments.
But Democratic senators got to press specifically whether they warned President Trump
that Iran was likely to choke off the flow of oil from the Strait of Hormuz.
Both Ratcliffe and Gabbard were pretty evasive.
Gabbard said the intelligence community long believed that closing the Strait was a possibility.
Ratcliffe declined to say whether he'd made this point in the days just before the war.
NPR's Greg Myrie reporting.
The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency says he does not believe
the current war in Iran can entirely eliminate that nation's nuclear program.
NPR's Jeff Brumfield has more.
IAEA Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi says Iran's nuclear program has been heavily damaged by repeated strikes.
But speaking to reporters in Washington, D.C., he said he expects it will survive the current conflict in some form.
That's because the program isn't just located at Iran's main nuclear sites, he says.