CNN journalist Manu Raju, the network’s chief congressional correspondent, gained attention an exchange with US secretary of state Marco Rubio during a press briefing in Washington, DC. Indian-American Raju’s questioning focused on Rubio’s explanation of why the United States joined military action against Iran — and the exchange went viral on social media.At a press event this week, Rubio said the United States launched strikes against Iran because US leaders believed that Israel was planning its own attack on Iran and that Tehran would then retaliate against American forces. Hence, the US acted first as a precaution to prevent higher casualties.Rubio said that, based on that information, the US decided to act first to protect American troops.During the briefing, Manu Raju repeated part of Rubio’s earlier statement and asked if Israel’s planned strike was why the US acted when it did. Rubio replied, “There’s nothing to clarify,” and at one point said to Raju, “This is my press conference.”The exchange stood out because many conservative commentators and lawmakers saw Rubio’s earlier comments as suggesting that US actions were linked to Israel’s plans. This raised questions about why the US attacked Iran and whether other allies influenced the timing of the military action.Rubio later tried to clarify his earlier comments, saying that Washington knew about Israeli plans but the decision to strike Iran was made by the US president himself and would have happened regardless. President Donald Trump also denied that Israel dictated the US’s actions, saying the US made its own decision based on its assessment of the threat from Iran.Manu Raju is a long‑established American political journalist. He joined CNN in 2015 after reporting for Politico and other national news outlets. Raju covers the US Congress and national politics, and he also anchors CNN’s Sunday political news program Inside Politics with Manu Raju.Raju earned attention earlier in his career for covering major elections and legislative battles, and he has been recognized with journalism awards for his reporting. He was born in Illinois to parents who immigrated from Karnataka, India, in the 1970s. His father worked as a doctor, and his family background includes an Indian grandfather who was a Kannada poet. Raju grew up in the US and built his journalism career there.








