Andrew Kloster calls US airstrikes on Iran ‘pointless,’ suggests ‘deep state’ swayed prez
WASHINGTON — A top staffer in the federal agency overseeing personnel for the Trump administration has denounced the US strikes on Iran as “pointless” and suggested the decision was made by members of DC’s “deep state.”
Andrew Kloster, who serves as general counsel at the Office of Personnel Management, tweeted — and then deleted — a string of posts ripping the US for having sent “handouts” to Israel in the past and for previously downplaying the threat of Tehran getting a nuclear weapon.
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Within a half-hour of President Trump announcing successful US airstrikes on Iranian nuclear facilities Saturday night, Kloster wrote on X, “I apologize and will never again doubt the power of the deep state.”
In a response to an X user saying that “Iran’s nuclear sites being crushed seems a long-term benefit for the US,” Kloster wrote, “I think it was just kind of pointless.”
He also boosted a post from Vish Burra, disgraced former New York Rep. George Santos’ ex-director of operations, that referred to Israel’s conflict with Iran as a “tribal squabble” after Tehran broke a cease-fire Trump secured Monday night.
The posts — still visible as of Tuesday morning — have since been deleted.
The senior official’s candid commentary is extremely unusual — due in part to the fact that he can be fired at will as a political appointee.
OPM also has a role in implementing Trump’s “Schedule F” directive to ensure that non-political appointees in the federal bureaucracy are upholding the president’s policies.
In April, Trump tweeted that pursuant to one of his Day One executive orders, all career government employees would need to “be held to the highest standards of conduct and performance.
“If these government workers refuse to advance the policy interests of the President, or are engaging in corrupt behavior, they should no longer have a job,” Trump added.
Kloster’s posts reflected the broad unease among Trump’s non-interventionist supporters who fear that US involvement in bombing Iran will trigger a prolonged conflict in the region, sap trillions of dollars more from the US Treasury and result in American deaths — after prior US interventions turned into quagmires in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt had urged the president’s jittery MAGA base ahead of the bombing mission to “trust in Trump” to secure “peace through strength.”
Just two days after his unprecedented attack on Iran, Trump swiftly returned to his anti-war messaging — brokering a cease-fire Monday and then strong-arming both sides after violations Tuesday.
A source close to the White House described Kloster’s tweets as foolish.
Kloster worked at the White House Office of Presidential Personnel during the final year of Trump’s first term and also as a lawyer for then-Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz’s congressional office from February 2023 until his resignation in November.
He also had stints as deputy general counsel and later acting general counsel in OPM during the first Trump administration as well as in senior positions in the Department of Transportation and the Environmental Protection Agency.
The tweets are just the latest drama surrounding Trump appointees put in charge of filling his administration.
Presidential Personnel Director Sergio Gor allegedly sparked Trump’s feud this month with Elon Musk.
Sources also revealed that Gor, the top administration official in charge of vetting job applicants, had not submitted paperwork for a standard government security clearance and that despite saying he’s from Malta was not born on the Mediterranean island.
Kloster has been described by sources close to the White House as a close friend and ally of Gor.
Kloster did not respond to Post requests for comment. The White House declined to comment.
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