‘She’s Unraveling In Real Time’: CNN Reporter Pushes Karoline Leavitt to the Edge — and What She Blurts Out Next Trying to Defend Trump Leaves the Room Gasping

President Donald Trump has spent the week trying to convince Americans that his decision to launch military strikes on Iran is not only necessary but […] ‘She’s Unraveling In Real Time’: CNN Reporter Pushes Karoline Leavitt to the Edge — and What She Blurts Out Next Trying to Defend Trump Leaves the Room Gasping

‘She’s Unraveling In Real Time’: CNN Reporter Pushes Karoline Leavitt to the Edge — and What She Blurts Out Next Trying to Defend Trump Leaves the Room Gasping

President Donald Trump has spent the week trying to convince Americans that his decision to launch military strikes on Iran is not only necessary but wildly successful — a narrative his administration has been tasked with selling to a skeptical press corps day after day.

But on Wednesday that assignment proved especially daunting for White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, who found herself in an increasingly tense showdown with reporters as she attempted to defend the administration’s messaging surrounding the deaths of U.S. service members during the ongoing conflict.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt speaks during a news briefing in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House on March 04, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

The confrontation reached a boiling point when CNN reporter Kaitlan Collins pressed Leavitt about remarks made earlier in the day by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who appeared to complain about the way the media was covering the deaths of American troops killed during the military campaign known as Operation Epic Fury.

The tense exchange erupted in the White House briefing room after Collins asked whether the administration believed the press should avoid prominently covering the deaths of U.S. service members.

Earlier that day, Hegseth had lashed out at the media while discussing the conflict.

“This is what the fake news misses,” Hegseth said. “… when a few drones get through or tragic things happen, it’s front page news. I get it — the press only wants to make the president look bad. But try for once to report the reality.”

When Collins brought up those remarks during the briefing a tense back and forth ensued.

“Given what Secretary Hegseth said this morning, is it the position of this administration that the press should not prominently cover the deaths of U.S. service members?” Collins asked.

Leavitt immediately rejected the premise.

“No. It’s the position of this administration that the press in this room and the press across the country should accurately report on the success of Operation Epic Fury …,” she said.

Collins wasn’t convinced and pushed back, quoting Hegseth directly and noting that he had criticized the media for placing coverage of the troop deaths on the front page.

“That’s not what the secretary said, Kaitlan, and that’s not what the secretary meant — and you know it,” Leavitt fired back. “You know you are being disingenuous.”

Then things took a turn.

“We’ve never had a secretary of defense who cares more,” Leavitt continued, attempting to pivot away from the quote.

But Collins quickly interrupted and read Hegseth’s remarks verbatim. Suddenly Leavitt seemed to reverse course.

“The press does only want to make the president look bad — that’s it, that’s a fact,” she declared, doubling down in a way that appeared to confirm the very point Collins was pressing.

The room erupted as reporters reacted to the blunt admission.

“Listen to me,” Leavitt snapped, attempting to regain control of the briefing.

“Especially you — and especially CNN.”

She went on to accuse the network of relentlessly attacking the president, declaring that it was an “objectiontible fact” that CNN’s coverage of Trump was overwhelmingly negative — though she appeared to briefly misspeak while making the argument.

“If you’re trying to argue right now that CNN’s overwhelming coverage is not negative of President Donald Trump I think the American people would tend to agree — and your ratings would tend to agree,” Leavitt said with a freudian slip she never caught.

Clips of the confrontation quickly spread across social media, where critics mocked the press secretary’s argument and accused the administration of attacking journalists rather than answering the underlying question.

“He does not need help looking bad Karoline,” one Threads user wrote. Another added, “Trump makes Trump look bad. The press don’t need to put any effort in.”

Others targeted Leavitt directly. “Karoline Leavitt wouldn’t know a fact if it sat on her,” one critic wrote.

“Bluster Barbie can’t answer a single question without accusing reporters of being out to get Trump. I mean, I’m sure a lot are (justifiably) but just asking a question you don’t like doesn’t mean you attack someone & their organisation,” one Threads user wrote.

“Leavitt really out here mad the truth got dragged into the light huh,” one X user wrote.

“She is unraveling in real time. Let’s see if she lasts a month,” another added.

Some critics also pointed to the controversy surrounding Trump’s past remarks about service members. One X post read, “Karoline Leavitt and Pete Hegseth: the press is making Trump look bad by reporting the death of 6 ‘suckers and losers.’”

The phrase “suckers and losers” references allegations that Trump privately disparaged U.S. service members killed in war. In 2023, former White House chief of staff John Kelly confirmed that Trump had made disparaging comments about military veterans and fallen troops during his presidency, reinforcing earlier reporting that sparked widespread backlash.

Later Wednesday night, Collins addressed the clash during her CNN program “The Source,” pushing back against the suggestion that coverage of the fallen soldiers was politically motivated.

“Needless to say, our coverage of Americans who have made the ultimate sacrifice for their country is not about the president, and it’s not about CNN either,” Collins said.

“It’s about the people that you’re looking at here.”

She then read the names of the six U.S. service members killed so far during the conflict with Iran: Captain Cody Khork, Sergeant First Class Noah Tietjens, Sergeant First Class Nicole Amor, Sergeant Declan Coady, Major Jeffrey O’Brien and Chief Warrant Officer 3 Robert Marzan.

The tense exchange underscored the administration’s increasingly combative posture toward the press as the Iran conflict stretches into its fifth day and questions continue to swirl about the costs and consequences of the military campaign.

‘She’s Unraveling In Real Time’: CNN Reporter Pushes Karoline Leavitt to the Edge — and What She Blurts Out Next Trying to Defend Trump Leaves the Room Gasping