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Guest Columnist Brian Parsons: Between A Rock And A Hard Place

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April 5, 2026

Between A Rock And A Hard Place

By: Brian Parsons

This past weekend, I helped host our annual Lincoln Day Dinner fundraiser. There were politicians and candidates from the lowest office to a sitting US Senator present. Top to bottom, all were campaigning. Top to bottom, all showed revulsion at the mention of Medicaid and the problems it’s creating. All passed the buck to someone else, including the sitting US Senator.

With 105 Idaho legislators from all corners of the state and 31% of Idaho’s kids on Medicaid, it’s statistically impossible that none of these legislators are touched by it, either having been enrollees, or their kids or grandkids having been or currently being enrolled. Yet there is this disdain for doctors who accept it. They didn’t create it. They don’t particularly like it. Politicians leave them with no choice but to accept it, and leave it impossible to accept.

In the Pocatello region, there are 7000 kids on Medicaid. In Idaho Falls, 10,000 kids are on Medicaid. These are the two largest pediatric markets in Southeast Idaho. Should doctors refuse it, 17,000 kids lose medical care. Should they accept it, they’re reviled by their own representatives as government dependents.

That was the actual messaging from Representative Ben Fuhriman of Blackfoot to us in our requests for help: “The legislature has concerns about businesses that are dependent on supplemental government programs.” Where was the concern when Representative Fuhriman gave youth health funding to restore adult supplemental programs? Does this representative understand that they are the ones who set reimbursement below the cost of services delivered? Does he know that they were the ones who created a system that requires supplemental programs and asked doctors to participate to keep the budget in check? This amounts to political spousal abuse. “Why did you make me hit you?”

Last fall, when we were working to fix this issue, Representative Cheatum told my wife at a local gun show that he only had one vote and couldn’t help. This weekend, he seemed apologetic toward the plight of pediatrics and then passed the buck by blaming representatives of the Magic Valley, i.e., the Gang of 8. Does Representative Cheatum know that Representative Cayler of the G8 sat down with us for three hours and then carried the bill to fix the issue in the House Health and Welfare Committee? Does he know that G8 Representatives Hostetler and Leavitt drove from Twin Falls to attend our luncheon and texted during the session to ask about our progress? On this issue, not a single Pocatello representative or senator stepped up to represent the children of Pocatello.

Regarding our chronicled Medicaid progress, it is dead. Coeur d’Alene Pediatrics was forced to sell to a government-carved-out non-profit. Idaho Falls Pediatrics was forced to sell to a private equity firm. Pocatello Children’s is weighing their options while attempting to weather the storm.  Dozens of other clinics are faced with similar crises but have no voice.  The legislature even took funding for youth health initiatives from the 2007 Big Tobacco settlement and allocated it to adult behavioral health. We asked for restoration of Medicaid-wide case management at a cost of $18 per patient for 350k patients. They gave it to 200 adult behavioral health patients at a cost of $20k+ per patient. Even the Democrats are guilty here and called that a win. Allies are hard to find.

On a recent Idaho Ranch Podcast, Representative Redman of Coeur d’Alene sat down to discuss Medicaid with host Matthew Todd. At one point, Redman admits that the legislature weighed able-bodied adults vs. the vulnerable and they chose to cut the vulnerable. How bizarre, punitive, and short-sighted.

This is the choice that the public has handed to the legislature by passing Expansion by referendum. There is a finite pool of funds for the safety net, and we have to decide where those will go. We were promised $30 million in unfunded liabilities covered by Expansion. We’re nearly five times that in cost. Ultimately, hospitals, government-carved-out clinics, and associations with deep pockets have been heard. Hospitals can use presumptive eligibility to enroll uninsured adults in Medicaid in the ER, and, regardless of whether they qualify, the cost is shifted to the Feds.

I often hear the argument that the state pays a dollar and the Feds add nine as justification for Medicaid spending. It’s a Ponzi scheme, just like the Federal Reserve, which requires banks to hold one dollar to lend ten. The other nine dollars come from the printing press and create debt. The end result is that the Federal healthcare behemoth grows, and when it accounts for a third of patients and politicians slash doctors’ reimbursement below cost, it leaves the most efficient and lowest-cost providers to sell their businesses. Only those reimbursed at the highest government-carved-out rates can survive, and everyone else becomes leveraged for acquisition.

The greatest tragedy in all of this is that the medical freedom our legislature hopes to achieve comes through independent doctors. The kind of doctors who don’t dance in the streets for Black Lives Matter while you’re locked in your home during a pandemic. The kind to support crisis pregnancy centers. The kind to reject experimental gender care, and the kind to correct the Republican Party platform when it criminalizes a menstrual cycle.

Two years ago, my wife and I served as delegates to the Idaho GOP Summer Convention and saved them from setting the bar for life at fertilization, which would have categorized every failed pregnancy as an abortion. They owe her a debt of gratitude. She was repaid eight months later when the legislature effectively put the entire category of pediatrics on the ropes by selling Medicaid to an out-of-state insurance corporation and slashing reimbursement for private practice below cost.

In the coming November election, it is likely that abortion will be presented on the ballot, and we will fight with everything that we have to defeat it, just like we did with Proposition 1. We are a dying nation and need people to have families and to support those families for the furtherance of this nation. We are big supporters of the Compassion & Hope Pregnancy Center in Pocatello. My wife likes to tell the story of how she was saving a 24-week newborn in residency while down the hall, a child of the same gestational age was being terminated. Doctors are trained to heal, not destroy.

Being pro-life doesn’t end when a child is born. We believe in personal responsibility, and we do recognize that the more the government gets involved, the worse things typically get. Still, we believe that the safety net exists for those who cannot do for themselves, and not for corporate welfare. It would behoove the Idaho legislature to adopt the same philosophy.

DOME, World’s First Nuclear Reactor Test Bed, Ready for Privately Developed Advanced Reactors

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DOME Exterior Pictures

(Idaho National Laboratory Press Release, April 8, 2026; Cover photo credit: INL)

(IDAHO FALLS, Idaho) – The highly anticipated National Reactor Innovation Center Demonstration of Microreactor Experiments test bed is open for business.

DOME, located at the Idaho National Laboratory, is a first-of-its-kind microreactor test bed that will enable rapid development, testing and demonstration of privately developed advanced nuclear reactors. The test bed will play a role in reinvigorating the American nuclear energy industry and meeting the nation’s need to produce abundant, affordable and reliable power.

DOME was developed as a hands-on demonstration pathway for industry, recognizing that the nation’s growing demand for advanced nuclear energy required a dedicated, world-class testing environment that only a U.S. Department of Energy national laboratory could provide. In support of the administration’s nuclear executive orders, construction of the test bed was accelerated by nearly a year to enable industry to meet the urgent need for advanced nuclear energy in the United States.

Officials from INL and the Department of Energy gathered at the Materials and Fuels Complex at INL to officially celebrate DOME’s grand opening on April 8.

“The DOME test bed will be a cornerstone of the Department of Energy’s comprehensive strategy to re-establish U.S. leadership in advanced nuclear technologies,” said Dr. Rian Bahran, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Nuclear Reactors. “By providing essential infrastructure for testing and validation of new reactor designs, DOME directly supports our programmatic goals, accelerating the development and deployment of innovative solutions vital for energy security and economic growth for the United States. It is a testament to our commitment to a robust nuclear future.”

“DOME represents the kind of bold and creative infrastructure investment that America’s nuclear resurgence demands,” said INL Director John Wagner. “We are accelerating the next generation of nuclear innovators from concept to demonstration at a pace the industry has not seen in decades.”

Built from the repurposed Experimental Breeder Reactor-II dome, a former reactor facility at INL, the 80-foot-diameter, 100-foot-tall test bed provides a safe, flexible and capable environment for testing experimental reactor concepts and gathering performance data. Reactor developers will use that data to support design verification and future licensing. By offering real-world operating conditions and expert support, DOME is poised to significantly reduce the time and cost required to deploy next-generation nuclear technologies. It is designed to host microreactor experiments generating up to 20 megawatts of thermal energy.

“NRIC built this test bed to answer the need of industry to have a facility that would enable them to swiftly convert their innovative concepts into practical demonstrations,” said NRIC Director Brad Tomer. “With the information gathered from their testing at DOME, reactor developers will turn pioneering ideas into validated technologies to advance nuclear energy. We are extremely proud to offer this capability and cannot wait to see the impact it has on the nuclear industry.”

DOME experiments will be scheduled through an annual competitive application process. The sequencing of experiments is based on several criteria, including technology readiness, fuel availability and a regulatory approval plan. Applicants will fund their testing campaigns.

INL is preparing for DOME’s inaugural experiment, using nuclear fuel, this year. Radiant’s Kaleidos Demonstration Unit plans to start a year-long testing program this spring.

About Idaho National Laboratory
Battelle Energy Alliance manages INL for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Nuclear Energy. INL is the nation’s center for nuclear energy research and development, and also performs research in each of DOE’s strategic goal areas: energy, national security, science and the environment. For more information, visit www.inl.gov. Follow us on social media: Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn and X.

BLM To Host Public Hearing on Vehicle Use for Wild Horse and Burro Management

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(Bureau of Land Management Press Release, April 8, 2026)

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Bureau of Land Management will host a virtual public hearing to provide information and collect comments on the use of motorized vehicles in managing wild horses and burros. The meeting is scheduled for April 29, 2026, 12-2 p.m. MT, and will be held using Microsoft Teams video conferencing technology.

Federal regulations require BLM to conduct an annual hearing to consider use of motorized vehicles to manage wild horses and burros. BLM typically uses motorized vehicles to conduct gather operations, complete population surveys, and transport animals to and from corrals, pastures, and adoption, sale, and transfer events.

To participate in the virtual public meeting, members of the public must register in advance by April 29. Written comments may also be sent by 3 p.m. MT on April 29, 2026, to BLM_HQ_MotorizedVehicleHearing@blm.gov.

For additional information regarding the meeting, please contact the Wild Horse and Burro National Information Center at 866-468-7826 or wildhorse@blm.gov. People who use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) may call the Telecommunications Relay Service at 711 during normal business hours.

BLM manages and protects wild horses and burros across 25.5 million acres of public lands in 10 Western states. More information on the BLM Wild Horse and Burro Program is available at BLM.gov/whb.

The BLM manages about 245 million acres of public land located primarily in 12 western states, including Alaska, on behalf of the American people. The BLM also administers 700 million acres of subsurface mineral estate throughout the nation. Our mission is to sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of America’s public lands for the use and enjoyment of present and future generations.

Pocatello Police Department Highlights ‘Strengthening Families Month’

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(Pocatello Police Department, April 8, 2026; Cover image credit: Prevent Child Abuse Idaho FB)

April is Strengthening Families Month!

Nationally, April is recognized as Child Abuse Prevention Month. Idaho observes this important time through Strengthening Families Month. This name change shifts our focus away from what we want to stop (child abuse and neglect) and instead highlights how we prevent it: by proactively strengthening families and communities before a crisis occurs.

Prevent Child Abuse America introduced the blue pinwheel as the national symbol for Child Abuse Prevention in 2008.

Every year, Idaho Children’s Trust Fund and organizations statewide spread the important message of awareness for the need to strengthen families and prevent child abuse and neglect from ever happening in the first place. The theme of Strengthening Families Month is “Pinwheels for Prevention.” The pinwheel represents what we want for all children: a happy, healthy, and carefree childhood.

Keep an eye out for pinwheels across the state! The Idaho Children’s Trust Fund has partnered with organizations, businesses, and service providers in every county in Idaho. Pinwheels, banners, put-in-cup displays, and window clings are just some of the ways to show that you support Strengthening Families to prevent child abuse and neglect.

Youth Turkey Season Kicked Off April 8. Here’s How To Get the Most Out of It.

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(Idaho Fish and Game Press Release, April 7, 2026)

Chances are, your kid (age 17 and under) is probably pretty good at making weird, high-pitched sounds that ruffle feathers and drive you nuts. The good news is, you can pair that hidden talent with some clever coaching and camouflage for one joyous week in April where kids rule the roost—at least when it comes to turkey hunting.

Here’s what you’ll need: 

  • Kid (age 8 to 17)
  • Hunting license and turkey tag
  • Shotgun
  • Calls
  • Camo
  • Tick repellant (optional, but highly recommended by this author)

Idaho’s general season youth turkey hunt runs Wednesday, April 8 through Tuesday, April 14 and is a great opportunity for kids to get an early shot at turkey hunting. Getting the kids out this week is a fun way for parents, grandparents, and other adults to mentor a youngster without affecting your own hunt. The general youth turkey hunt is only open to licensed youth who are 8 to 17 years old on April 8.

Turkey hunting is also a gateway to other types of hunting. As one of the calendar year’s earliest hunt opportunities, it’s also a good primer to see if your budding hunter is ready or excited for next fall’s big game hunts.

Going after thunder chickens (as the kids say) is exciting, inexpensive, and doesn’t require a bunch of specialized gear. Turkeys are often found in fairly accessible places where long hikes into rugged country aren’t in the syllabus, which means it’s also easy to pack one out if you have a successful hunt.

Give this exercise a try.

Ask your kid if they’ve ever wanted to talk to a bird. Then ask your kid if they’ve ever wanted to talk to a giant bird while playing in the dirt.

Most expert kids will agree that the answer is usually “yes.”

Talking to a tom turkey with calls is one of the most thrilling pursuits in the world of hunting. Think about it. Short of maybe archery elk and waterfowl, there aren’t too many species out there willing to engage us as hunters in fruitful conversation. And giving a youth hunter a portal into that interspecies banter might just win them over for life.

Where to start

Turkeys are found throughout Idaho, but most general seasons are in the Panhandle, Clearwater, Southwest, and Southeast regions. You can see a map of them on page 21 of the 2026-27 Upland Game, Turkey and Furbearer Seasons and Rules booklet.

Turkeys tend to congregate at lower elevations in early spring, often near agriculture lands, and follow the snow line up in elevation as spring progresses.

Hunters should scout out hunting areas before the season, and make sure you get permission on private land before you hunt. When in doubt, check a map or app so you know who owns the land. Savvy hunters typically introduce themselves to landowners before the season starts.

Follow the rules, kids

Licensed youth who 17 years or younger on April 8 may participate in the general youth turkey hunt. Resident hunters under 12 and nonresident hunters under 18 must be accompanied by a licensed adult (18 years of age or older) to participate.

Adults who accompany youth hunters must also be licensed and be within normal conversation or hearing range without shouting and without the aid of electronic devices.

No hunter education certification? You can still hunt with a “Passport”

Fish and Game offers first-time hunters the Hunting Passport so they can try hunting for a year without hunter education certification. Those who have previously held a hunting license in any state are ineligible.

  • The minimum age to hold a Hunting Passport is 8 years of age; there is no maximum age.
  • Anyone hunting under the Passport Program must be accompanied by a mentor at least 18 years of age who possesses a valid Idaho hunting license.
  • Holders of a Hunting Passport must purchase general season tags, appropriate permits and validations to participate in hunting. All hunting rules, seasons and weapon restrictions also apply to the holder of a Hunting Passport.

For more information about turkey hunting, see the 2026-27 Upland Game, Turkey and Furbearer Seasons and Rules booklet available online, at all Fish and Game regional offices, and at license vendors.

Deceased Identification: Tank Farm Road Officer-Involved Incident

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(Bannock County Coroner’s Office Press Release, April 8, 2026)

The Bannock County Coroner’s Office, in cooperation with Power County Coroner’s Office and Power County Sheriff’s Office, has confirmed the identity of the deceased following the officer-involved shooting on Tank Farm Road in Power County on Friday, April 3, 2026.

  • Richard Todd Forrest, 63, of Pocatello (m)

Next of kin has been notified.

“Our office is committed to a standard of absolute accuracy and compassion. When family resides out of state, the logistics of locating and notifying them personally becomes more complex, but it is a necessary step. Ensuring a family hears this news from a professional—not from a news headline or a social media post—is a matter of respect that we will not compromise on,” said Bannock County Coroner Torey Danner.

“We ask for the community’s continued patience as our investigators work through the complexities of this case. At this stage, speculation only hinders the process. We will provide a clear and factual account of the events as soon as it is responsible to do so,” said Power County Sheriff Kasey Kendall.

To provide the public with a clearer understanding of the officer-involved shooting, a critical incident video is being prepared for release. Further information concerning the circumstances of the original shooting will be shared as it becomes available through the ongoing investigation.

Power County Sheriff’s Office continues to be assisted in the homicide investigation by Idaho State Police, Power County Coroner’s Office, and Bannock County Coroner’s Offices. The Idaho Falls Police Department remains the lead agency for the investigation into the officer-involved shooting.

Pocatello Police Department, City Offices Placed on a Temporary Lockdown

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(Pocatello Police Department Advisory, April 8, 2026)

On April 8, 2026, at approximately 10:51 a.m., Pocatello Police Dispatch received a report of a male subject making threats to harm department employees. The subject was initially believed to be located in the parking lot of the Pocatello Police Department.

Due to the seriousness of the threat and the subject’s reported proximity, both the Pocatello Police Department and the City of Pocatello offices were placed on lockdown as a precautionary measure.

An investigation was immediately initiated. Shortly after the report, it was determined that the subject was actually located in Chubbuck. The lockdown of both buildings was subsequently lifted, and the Chubbuck Police Department assumed responsibility for the investigation.

Idaho Gang of Eight: When Politics Costs Your Family’s Business

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April 7, 2026

When Politics Costs Your Family’s Business
Senator Glenneda Zuiderveld’s husband lost longtime dairy accounts solely because of her public stand against illegal immigration.

By: Idaho Gang of Eight

For those of us serving in public office, disagreement comes with the territory. Heated debates, tough votes, and the occasional angry constituent are part of the job.

But what’s happening to Senator Glenneda Zuiderveld goes beyond disagreement.

Last month, three longstanding dairy industry customers terminated her husband Tom’s accounts, not because of his quality of service, but because of her political beliefs. That’s what makes this different.

Before Glenneda ever ran for office, she and Tom sat down and talked honestly about the risks. They knew stepping into public life could bring consequences. Like most families, they pictured criticism in the papers, heated conversations at events, maybe even some lost friendships.

They didn’t imagine this.

Three dairies cut ties with Tom after her public stance against illegal immigration. These were relationships built over years, steady accounts that helped support their family. According to a letter from Tom’s employer, the decision was “tied to your wife’s political role” and “not related to the level of service you have provided.

The message was clear: certain political positions now come with consequences that extend beyond the ballot box, straight into your family’s livelihood.

It’s worth noting the irony here. These dairies operate in an industry where roughly 90% of the workforce is foreign-born, according to the Idaho Dairymen’s Association.

Yet some are now punishing a lawmaker who simply wants our immigration laws enforced and our borders secured.

Now, you might agree with her immigration policies. You might strongly disagree. That’s not really the point.

Because once political disagreements start costing people their jobs or their family’s businesses, it changes the nature of public service. At that point, it’s no longer just about debate, votes, or policy debates in the Capitol. It becomes about personal risk, about wondering whether speaking your conscience will mean your spouse or kids pay the price.

You don’t have to agree with Senator Zuiderveld to see the problem here. If this becomes the expected cost of serving in office, fewer good people will be willing or able to step forward.

Idaho deserves public servants who can speak their conscience without fear that their families will pay the price.

Documentation

Original materials are included below.

Employer Letter

Official Press Release

In Liberty,

Senator Christy Zito, District 8
Zito4Idaho@protonmail.com

Senator Glenneda Zuiderveld, District 24
GZuiderveld@senate.idaho.gov
Substack: @glenneda

Senator Josh Kohl, District 25
JKohl@senate.idaho.gov
Substack: @joshkohl4idaho

Representative Faye Thompson, District 8
FayeforLD8@gmail.com

Representative Lucas Cayler, District 11
LCayler@house.idaho.gov
Substack: @lucascayler

Representative Kent Marmon, District 11
KMarmon@house.idaho.gov
Substack: @kentmarmon

Representative Clint Hostetler, District 24
CHostetler@house.idaho.gov
Substack: @theidahoresolve

Representative David Leavitt, District 25
DLeavitt@house.idaho.gov
Substack: @Leavitt4Idaho

Guest Columnist Idaho Senator Brian Lenney: The 2026 Idaho Legislative Session Lookback

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April 7, 2026

The 2026 Idaho Legislative Session Lookback
A disturbing trend (Idaho is not immune)

By: Idaho Senator Brian Lenney

Last week we finished 81 days in Boise.

And I want to give you the real account of what happened, not the version that makes everyone look good.

So, a few wins first.

I personally carried the bill that stripped teachers’ union dues off the taxpayer dime. Got it passed (waiting on the Governor to sign it… still). American law for American courts (I pushed that through in the Senate) is now signed into law. And my voter affidavit reform that actually puts teeth into ID voter verification at the polls is now law. These weren’t wins that fell into my lap. I put my name on the legislation and dragged them through to the finish line.

We also landed some hits on the money side. Idaho’s sitting on a $1.6 billion surplus and the instinct in that building was to spend it. Every surplus is an invitation to grow government, and there are plenty of people in Boise who answered that invitation enthusiastically.

I didn’t.

We pushed through rescissions and budget cuts that clawed back agency spending (and gutted millions from the fed-funded Minnesota-style daycare program too). But I want to be straight with you about what all of this actually is. Cutting agencies and clawing back program dollars is treating symptoms.

The disease is a spending culture in Boise that assumes every surplus belongs to the government first.

I held the line where I could but I’m not in the majority the way I’d need to be to actually win that war. So we won some battles this session. But the war is still very much going. And nothing proves that more than the biggest fight we could have had this session, the one we didn’t have. Not really, anyway. I’m talking about illegal immigration. It’s not just a “federal issue.” It touches everyone in Idaho. Your neighbor who can’t find construction work. The school that can’t figure out who’s actually enrolled. The wage that won’t go up because someone will always undercut it with labor that doesn’t cost what labor should cost.

I personally went in with several enforcement bills and they ALL got killed or refused a hearing before most Idahoans ever heard they existed.

Not by Democrats. But by our own Republican supermajority.

That’s where we’re at as a state. And you know what I keep coming back to? Somebody profits from this. Somebody profits when enforcement is weak and workers are cheap and nobody asks questions. And those somebodies were in that building, quiet and patient and effective, the whole session.

The Idaho Sheriff’s Association showed up to help kill the ICE cooperation bill I co-sponsored (and there were several more bills they testified AGAINST). I saw committee chairmen make bills disappear into their desks. And I watched every single bill we had die or got no hearing. Yes, in “Republican Idaho.” So while most legislators from safe Republican districts will send you an end-of-session letter that lists all the wins and call it a day…

I’m not going to do that.

Because you deserve to know what the cheap labor lobby still has on the Idaho statehouse. Their stranglehold didn’t loosen this session (if anything, now I know exactly how tight it is).

What you get from having me in that building is simple.

Someone who names it. Someone whose name is actually on the enforcement bills (not just the press releases). And someone who isn’t going to tell you we had a “great session” when the most important lever we had didn’t get pulled.

That’s the report from Boise.

Most people in Idaho have no idea any of this happened. You do now. That matters more than you think.

Sec. of State Rubio Announces Release of American Journalist Shelly Kittleson

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(U.S. State Department Press Release, April 7, 2026)

I am pleased to announce the release of American journalist, Shelly Kittleson, who was recently kidnapped by members of the foreign terrorist organization Kata’ib Hizballah near Baghdad, Iraq.

The U.S. Department of State extends its appreciation to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Department of War, U.S. personnel across multiple agencies, and the Iraqi Supreme Judicial Council and our Iraqi partners, for their assistance in securing her release.

This resolution reflects the Trump Administration’s steadfast commitment to the safety and security of American citizens, no matter where they are in the world.

Under President Trump, the wrongful detention or kidnapping of U.S. nationals will not be tolerated. We will continue to use every tool to bring Americans home and to hold accountable those responsible.

We are relieved that this American is now free and are working to support her safe departure from Iraq.

-Secretary of State Marco Rubio