WASHINGTON — The beleaguered United States President Donald J. Trump has amplified unsubstantiated claims about a purported conspiracy involving former President Barack Obama, the Central Intelligence Agency and the 2016 election, calling on authorities to “ARREST OBAMA NOW!” in a social media post that has drawn widespread criticism from independent media and fact-checking organisations.
On his social platform, Trump wrote that “Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard has just released HUNDREDS OF BOMBSHELL RUSSIAGATE DOCUMENTS proving that Barack Obama personally ordered CIA agents to manufacture false intelligence on President Trump and was actively ‘working with the enemy’ to undermine … our democracy and President Trump’s LANDSLIDE 2016 VICTORY.” He added a quote attributed to commentator Jesse Watters, saying “Whatever happens to these guys is not revenge … it’s accountability … it’s time for people to pay the price.”
The social media post repeats a broader narrative circulating in some conservative political circles that suggests Obama orchestrated an “intelligence coup” against Trump — a claim that has no verified evidence in publicly available records. Independent media outlets and reference works characterise the allegation as part of a baseless conspiracy theory, noting that there is no substantiated proof that Obama directed espionage or illegal intelligence operations against Trump.
The original “Russiagate” investigations in 2016–2019 were grounded in intelligence assessments from the FBI, CIA and other U.S. agencies that concluded Russia interfered in the election and sought to influence results — findings later affirmed by the U.S. intelligence community — without evidence of direct orchestration by Obama’s White House.
Tulsi Gabbard, who served as Director of National Intelligence in the Trump administration, has released documents in 2025 that supporters claim shed new light on the saga. However, critics — including many journalists and analysts — argue that the materials do not present new verified facts and borrow heavily from narratives that originated during Trump’s own presidency.
Legal scholars say calls for the arrest of a former president based on such claims are unlikely to translate into credible legal action unless backed by corroborated evidence and judicial review. The post has reignited debate over disinformation, political rhetoric and the limits of public discourse in digital media.

