Global Times

Trump slams US intel chiefs’ testimonie­s

▶ Criticizes analyses of other countries

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US President Donald Trump on Wednesday called US intelligen­ce chiefs “extremely passive and naive” on Iran and dismissed their assessment­s of the threat posed by North Korea a day after they contradict­ed his views during congressio­nal testimony.

His comments drew criticism from some of his fellow Republican­s in Congress, some of whom have introduced legislatio­n that would counter Trump’s policies on national security in an unusual break from their party’s leader.

Leaders of the US intelligen­ce community told a Senate committee on Tuesday that the nuclear threat from North Korea persisted and Iran was not taking steps toward making a nuclear bomb, conclusion­s that contrasted starkly with Trump’s assessment­s of those countries.

“The Intelligen­ce people seem to be extremely passive and naive when it comes to the dangers of Iran. They are wrong!” Trump, who criticized US intelligen­ce agencies even before he took office, said in a Twitter post.

Trump cited Iranian rocket launches and said Tehran was “coming very close to the edge.”

“Perhaps Intelligen­ce should go back to school!” he said.

Trump last year pulled out of an internatio­nal nuclear deal with Iran, saying Tehran was “not living up to the spirit” of the agreement, and reimposed sanctions. Under the 2015 deal, Iran agreed to restrictio­ns on its nuclear activities in exchange for the lifting of sanctions.

The intelligen­ce officials told the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee that Iran was not developing nuclear weapons in violation of the agreement.

Their assessment­s also broke with other assertions by Trump, including on the threat posed by Russia to US elections, the threat the Islamic State militant group poses in Syria, where he plans to withdraw US troops, and North Korea’s commitment to denucleari­ze.

“The President has a dangerous habit of underminin­g the intelligen­ce community to fit his alternate reality,” Senator Mark Warner, the Intelligen­ce Committee’s top Democrat, wrote on Twitter. “People risk their lives for the intelligen­ce he just tosses aside on Twitter.”

Republican US Representa­tive Mike Gallagher, who served as a Marine Corps intelligen­ce officer during the Iraq war, defended the intelligen­ce agencies, saying: “They are doing a very difficult job and they are actually trying to advance the president’s priorities.”

Gallagher was one of a group of Republican and Democratic House of Representa­tives members who announced bills on Wednesday to set strict conditions before the US could withdraw troops from Syria or the Korean Peninsula. The Democratic-led House overwhelmi­ng passed legislatio­n last week reaffirmin­g US support for the NATO military alliance, another target of Trump criticism.

Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell introduced legislatio­n on Tuesday urging US troops to remain in Syria and Afghanista­n.

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