I was a longtime critic of the late US Senator Lindsey Graham, who I believe betrayed his values in pursuit of Donald Trump‘s approval. Yet I believe the suspicious circumstances around his sudden death, in addition to his significant role in some of the world’s most dangerous conflicts, warrant a full government investigation.
To be clear at the outset: there is no evidence of foul play so far. The preliminary finding from the Washington DC medical examiner points to a ruptured aorta caused by chronic heart disease, a killer that often strikes without warning. Graham’s own father died of a heart attack in his sleep at 69. Natural causes may well be the whole story.
But within hours of the 71-year-old’s passing, something remarkable happened. An Iranian government-linked propaganda outlet appeared to take credit. The account released a Lego-style AI video depicting a hooded figure slipping into the senator’s home at night and triggering a fatal cardiac event, mirroring with unsettling specificity how Graham died. The video ends with “Lindsey” being ticked off a kill list, with another name written beneath. The caption cheerfully asked who was next. State television anchors grinned through the news of his death.
By Monday afternoon, two days after the senator’s death, FBI agents descended on his Capitol Hill home. Witnesses described at least five agents moving in and out of the residence, some wearing latex gloves, while investigators interviewed neighbours. The FBI Director, Kash Patel, says the bureau has made every necessary resource available to the investigation, even as a law enforcement source insists nothing so far suggests foul play.
Trump’s FBI director, someone I have also frequently criticised, did the right thing. With America’s adversaries openly celebrating a senator’s death and hinting they had a hand in it, a serious, transparent investigation is warranted to rule that out credibly and completely.
Senator Lindsey Graham had been one of America’s most outspoken hawks on Iran (Photo: Kent Nishimura/Getty Images)Graham was a driving force behind the war with Iran. He was among a small handful of Americans most responsible for the worst upheaval in that country since the 1979 revolution. He pushed for more aggressive action and worked to dissuade the administration from winding down the conflict. In turn, Tehran put him explicitly in its crosshairs and threatened him by name with assassination. Just days before his death, Graham was publicly brushing off those threats on social media.
Perhaps these taunts are bluster, opportunistic propaganda designed to claim a scalp Tehran never took. But when a hostile foreign power that has explicitly threatened to kill a sitting US senator releases a video implying it did exactly that, the appropriate response is a major investigation.
And Iran was hardly alone in wanting Graham gone. The Russians have longed to see the senator sidelined for years. Graham died roughly a day after returning from Kyiv, his 10th wartime visit to Ukraine, where he stood beside Volodymyr Zelensky, toured a drone factory, and announced that the White House had finally agreed to back his sanctions bill. The legislation would hand President Trump sweeping new powers to punish the countries bankrolling Moscow’s war machine. “It means it’s going to become law,” Graham declared. Thirty-six hours later he was dead, and the bill had lost its principal architect at the moment it was poised to pass.
Moscow’s propagandists have never been subtle about their intentions. In 2023, the head of the Kremlin’s RT network mused on state television about dispatching an assassination team after Graham. She invoked the Soviet spymaster who organised Leon Trotsky’s murder with an ice axe in Mexico City in 1940 and added a chilling promise that it would not even be hard, because they had his address. This weekend, the same propagandists gloated on air over his death, with one musing that it was hard to predict who was next in line to die. The senator, by the way, died in the same place she had threatened: his home.
The Ukrainian President, Volodymyr Zelensky, with Graham in Kyiv, Ukraine last Friday, the day before the senator’s death (Photo: Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via AP)I do not raise this pattern as an armchair observer. During the first Trump administration, I helped lead the US response to the 2018 Salisbury attack, when Russian military intelligence officers travelled to the quiet Wiltshire city of Salisbury and poisoned Sergei Skripal, a former Moscow intelligence officer who had spied for Britain, along with his daughter. They used a military-grade nerve agent engineered for deniability. The Kremlin’s apparent plan was for the deaths to be mysterious and unattributable, while still sending a menacing message to other defectors. The plot unravelled only because the poison failed to finish the job and British investigators refused to accept easy answers. In response, the US expelled 60 Russian intelligence officers, the largest such expulsion in American history.
The lesson of Salisbury is that such operations are exposed only when investigators move quickly and decisively. A cardiac event in a 71-year-old man with a family history of heart disease is the likeliest story of what happened to Senator Graham. But if there’s even a chance it was an intentional act of a hostile foreign power, the international implications could be massive, which is why we need toxicology, a counterintelligence review of the threat streams, and a forensic examination of the senator’s final days, his travel and his home.
I am not alone in saying so. Senator John Cornyn, a Republican and no one’s idea of a conspiracist, acknowledged this week that the aortic tear could explain Graham’s death while urging officials to “resolve all those questions by seeing what the toxicology reports show”. He is right. Nor would we be right to dismiss these concerns because some of the loudest voices raising them are people like Laura Loomer, whose track record of promoting conspiracy theories and absurdities is well documented. Even unreliable narrators occasionally stumble on to legitimate questions.
I was no admirer of Lindsey Graham. I watched him sacrifice principle after principle in pursuit of Donald Trump’s approval, and I have called that what it was. Cowardice. I will not launder that judgement now that he is gone.
But Graham was elected by the people of South Carolina, and whatever his politics, every citizen should be equally appalled by the prospect of a foreign government threatening our elected leaders, let alone touching them.
None of this is unthinkable. In 1983, the Soviet Union shot down a passenger jet carrying Congressman Larry McDonald of Georgia, killing him along with more than 260 others. Most Americans don’t know that a foreign adversary has taken the life of a sitting member of Congress within living memory. Pretending it could never happen again is not scepticism. It’s amnesia.
If a thorough investigation finds nothing, the finding itself will have value. It will deny our enemies the propaganda victory of ambiguity and expose their claims of credit as impotent bluster. But if a foreign hand is found to have been involved in the death of a United States senator, the consequences must be devastating. They must be swift, public and severe enough that no adversary ever again mistakes an American election certificate for a target list.
Anything less is an invitation.
Miles Taylor is a former chief of staff at the US Department of Homeland Security and has served on Capitol Hill, in the White House and at the Pentagon. He is a No 1 New York Times bestselling author, regular national security commentator and democracy reform leader
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