Toronto Star

Spy agencies worry about spilling secrets to Putin’s new BFF

Briefing of candidates have insiders uneasy over Trump’s disinteres­t in world affairs

- GREG MILLER THE WASHINGTON POST

ASPEN, COLO.— U.S. spy agencies are preparing to deliver a classified briefing to Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump, the nation’s intelligen­ce director said this week, despite deep unease among many spy officials with the real estate mogul’s pro-Russian rhetoric.

National Intelligen­ce Director James Clapper Jr. indicated that Trump and Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton are eligible to receive intelligen­ce briefings within days of the conclusion of the Democratic National Convention.

“Now is the appropriat­e time, since both candidates have been officially anointed,” Clapper said.

Amid reports that some intelligen­ce officials have deep reservatio­ns about sharing sensitive informatio­n with Trump, Clapper said that “it is not up to the administra­tion and not up to me personally to decide on the suitabilit­y of presidenti­al candidates. The American electorate is deciding on the suitabilit­y of the next commander-in-chief.”

But Clapper’s remarks came amid new signs of deep discomfort with Trump among the upper ranks of the intelligen­ce community. In a measure of that growing animosity, one senior intelligen­ce official said that he would decline to participat­e in any session with Trump.

“I would refuse,” the official said, citing not only concern with Trump’s expression­s of admiration for Russian President Vladimir Putin but seeming disinteres­t in acquiring a deeper or more nuanced understand­ing of world events.

“He’s been so uninterest­ed in the truth and so reckless with it when he sees it,” the official said.

Clapper’s comments seemed aimed at quelling a rising chorus of such voices among analysts and other officials at U.S. spy agencies who have expressed dismay with Trump’s positions on a range of issues, including his vow earlier this year to order the CIA to resume using brutal interrogat­ion methods that were banned and widely condemned as torture.

Trump’s quip this week goading Russia’s intelligen­ce services — widely suspected of hacking the Democratic National Committee’s email servers — to target Clinton’s accounts while serving as secretary of state was seen as particular­ly incendiary among intelligen­ce profession­s who regard Russia as a foe.

Trump triggered the controvers­y when he said, “Russia, if you’re listening, I hope you’re able to find the 30,000 emails that are missing” from a broader collection that Clinton turned over to the FBI and the State Department. Clinton has said she deleted 32,000 emails from her time as secretary because they were personal. And she later filed a sworn statement in a civil suit that she turned over all work-related emails.

FBI director James Comey said the FBI was able during its probe to recover several thousand work-related emails Clinton had not turned over but said there was no evidence she purposely failed to do so.

Trump retreated from his statement Thursday, saying he was merely being “sarcastic,” but not before his provocativ­e comment was criticized in Washington and denounced at the Democratic convention.

Some current and former U.S. intelligen­ce officials have also expressed concern about Clinton, who was recently reprimande­d by Comey for her “careless” handling of sensitive material in the emails. But unlike Trump, Clinton has participat­ed in hundreds of intelligen­ce briefings in her career and had access to classified material while working in the White House and the Senate.

The practice of briefing presidenti­al candidates after convention­s dates back decades, and typically involves — at least initially — sharing broad assessment­s of foreign events and threats.

Clapper said that the White House in the coming days would contact the Trump and Clinton campaigns, offering “fairly general” overviews on issues including the threat posed by Daesh, also known as ISIS and ISIL, and other terror groups.

Only the winner of the election in November will be given a detailed briefing on the most sensitive U.S. secrets, including clandestin­e CIA operations and capabiliti­es overseas.

Clapper emphasized that candidates are free to decline briefings. The U.S. official who spoke anonymousl­y said he believes Trump might do so. “It’s entirely conceivabl­e that he will say, ‘I know all that. I don’t want to be briefed,’ ” the official said.

 ??  ?? Director of National Intelligen­ce James Clapper says it’s not up to him to decide on the suitabilit­y of presidenti­al candidates.
Director of National Intelligen­ce James Clapper says it’s not up to him to decide on the suitabilit­y of presidenti­al candidates.

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