‘Release the video’: Analysts demand proof as Trump makes bold vandalism claim

Donald Trump’s insistence that vandals carved up the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool keeps colliding with one stubborn problem his critics will not let go of: if it really happened, where is the footage?

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After the president announced on Truth Social that “many additional people have been arrested” over the “disgraceful Vandalism” of the pool, claiming saboteurs cut a 250-foot gash into the structure and poured corrosive chemicals into the water, a chorus of commentators responded with a simple challenge. “Release the video,” wrote Brian Tyler Cohen, summing up the skepticism in three words.

The demand cut to the heart of why the story strains credulity for so many. As conservative writer John Podhoretz pointed out, the alleged crime supposedly occurred in one of the most heavily trafficked public spaces in the country. “Someone cut a 250-ft. gash in a location open 24 hours a day in the most visited national park in the United States in one of its most famous sites and nobody saw it happening or filmed it at the time?” he wrote, adding that the claim is “as credible as him saying we won the war.”

Others made the same point about the conspicuous absence of evidence. “Weird how there is no video of anyone vandalizing anything,” wrote the popular influencer account Spiro’s Ghost, before noting that the president had also misspelled “pool” as “poll” in his post. Commentator Al Smizzle was blunter about the administration’s credibility, writing, “They lie like they breathe. Video would be everywhere.” In a location that busy, the argument goes, a multi-hour act of destruction involving blades and chemicals would have been captured by countless phones.

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Tennis legend Martina Navratilova zeroed in on the physical implausibility of the damage itself. “Unbelievable. What could they possibly have done to a pool that is that long???” she wrote, echoing the widespread confusion over how vandals could meaningfully sabotage a shallow reflecting basin stretching more than a third of a mile.

Several critics used the moment to mock the administration’s stated priorities. Writer Molly Jong-Fast responded to the vandalism claims with a sarcastic “Laser focused on affordability,” needling a White House that campaigned on lowering costs for all but has spent days consumed by the fate of a decorative pool.

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