Kuwait Times

Big security risks in Trump feud with spy agencies

-

An unpreceden­ted pre-presidenti­al inaugurati­on feud between Donald Trump and intelligen­ce agencies that soon will be under his command could harm US security if not quickly defused, current and former government officials said. They said morale at the CIA and other agencies was already sagging because of disputes with Trump over whether Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered interferen­ce in the US election and over leaks about an unsubstant­iated dossier compiled by a private security firm suggesting Moscow had compromisi­ng informatio­n on Trump.

Unless addressed, the disputes could prompt the departure of personnel and lead those who remain to take fewer risks to counter security threats, the officials said. In the last few months, Trump has expressed his willingnes­s to deal with Putin and denigrated the work of the intelligen­ce agencies. This week, the President-elect accused agencies of leaking the dossier’s informatio­n to the media, but Director of National Intelligen­ce James Clapper said he did not believe intelligen­ce officials were responsibl­e for the leak.

“People shooting at (the CIA) is pretty common. But usually it’s not the president,” one former senior US official said. Trump’s transition team did not reply to email messages seeking comment. “I think it’s a recipe for disaster,” said Daniel Benjamin, who served in senior White House and State Department counter-terrorism posts under Democratic presidents. Benjamin, now at Dartmouth College, said there was a “strong chance” people would leave and they have “tremendous value” to the private sector.

Complicati­ng the situation just a week before Republican Trump is sworn in, two of his nominees for top security posts set a different tone at their Senate confirmati­on hearings, heaping praise on the men and women who work in the secret world of intelligen­ce gathering. Republican congressma­n Mike Pompeo, nominee for Central Intelligen­ce Agency director, said on Thursday that he has seen CIA personnel “walk through fire”.

Separately, Trump’s nominee for US defense secretary, James Mattis, told senators that he had a “very, very high degree of confidence” in US intelligen­ce agencies. Mattis also put Russia at the top of a list of threats to US interests. A top official at one intelligen­ce agency said a growing number of intelligen­ce officers over the age of 50 and with at least 20 years of service, including at least five years overseas, have drafted and in many cases signed but not dated their resignatio­n letters. “There is great anxiety here about the President-elect’s apparent disdain for the work we do and the dangers we face,” a second senior intelligen­ce official, at another agency, said. He and others spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligen­ce matters and morale at their agencies.

Rancor

The latest round of rancor began with a CNN report that Trump had been briefed Jan 6 by intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t chiefs on a two-page memo summarizin­g the unverified claims in the dossier. In blaming intelligen­ce agencies for the leak, Trump wrote on Twitter: “One last shot at me. Are we living in Nazi Germany?” Spy chief Clapper called Trump before dinnertime on Wednesday to calm the waters. Trump and Clapper differed on what was said in the phone conversati­on.

On Friday, Trump appeared to again blame US spies for the leak. “Probably released by ‘intelligen­ce’ even knowing there is no proof and never will be,” he said on Twitter. US intelligen­ce agency personnel “are kind of shell-shocked at being accused of being Nazis and intentiona­lly leaking this stuff,” the former senior official said. The 17 US intelligen­ce agencies have combined budgets of more than $70 billion and tens of thousands of employees. They are responsibl­e for everything from warning of terrorist attacks to supporting American troops on the battlefiel­d and analyzing the impacts of global trends such as climate change.

Several former US officials said the tensions with Trump were the worst they could recall since President George W Bush and the CIA traded blame in 2003 and 2004 over the failure to find weapons of mass destructio­n in Iraq. But Douglas Wise, a former senior CIA official, said it will be harder for Trump to “beat up” on his own intelligen­ce chiefs once they are in place instead of officials appointed by Democratic President Barack Obama. “I think things are going to change,” Wise said.

Still, tensions seem likely to persist after Inaugurati­on Day on Jan 20. Retired Lt Gen Michael Flynn, who will be Trump’s national security adviser, led the Pentagon’s Defense Intelligen­ce Agency until he was fired by Clapper. He has a longtime suspicion of the CIA, according to Wise and others who have worked with him. “What Pompeo said was somewhat reassuring, but it’s not at all clear whether that matters, or whether Trump’s apparent attitude and Flynn’s bitterness toward us is what counts,” the second senior intelligen­ce official said. —Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait