Oman Daily Observer

In new attack, Trump says US intelligen­ce agencies ‘run amok’

Trump repeatedly has criticized the intelligen­ce community since taking office

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WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump on Tuesday defended his choice for the next US spy chief as someone who could “rein in” intelligen­ce agencies that “have run amok,” fuelling concerns Trump seeks assessment­s that support his own views.

Trump’s choice of Republican Representa­tive John Ratcliffe of Texas as the next director of national intelligen­ce, has been greeted with scant enthusiasm by his fellow Republican­s and charges by former intelligen­ce officials and Democrats that he is unqualifie­d and will frame intelligen­ce to suit the president.

Ratcliffe, a member of the House Intelligen­ce Committee for six months, would replace Dan Coats, whose judgments on Iran, North Korea and Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 elections clashed with Trump’s views, earning the president’s disdain.

Returning to the White House from an appearance in Virginia, Trump on Tuesday said Ratcliffe “is going to do an incredible job, if he gets approved” by the Senate.

“I think we need somebody like that in there,” he continued. “We need somebody strong that can rein it in. Because, as I think you’ve all learned, the intelligen­ce agencies have run amok. They have run amok.”

Trump denied he had a “conflict” with Coats, saying he was “a friend of mine” and a “terrific person.” But, he added, “Dan made statements and they were a little confused.”

Trump repeatedly has criticised the US intelligen­ce community since taking office, questionin­g its conclusion­s that Russia’s election interferen­ce was aimed at boosting Trump’s candidacy over that of his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton.

Coats has defended the assessment, while Ratcliffe has denied there was evidence of Russian interferen­ce, accused the FBI of pursuing a biased investigat­ion and echoed Trump’s baseless charge that the Obama administra­tion spied on his campaign.

In January, Trump attacked Coats and other intelligen­ce agency chiefs on Twitter after they told Congress that Iran was adhering to the 2015 pact designed to block its developmen­t of a nuclear bomb and North Korea was unlikely to comply with Trump’s demand that it eliminate its nuclear arsenal.

Asked about Trump’s comments, Senator Mark Warner, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, said in an email that, “The men and women of our intelligen­ce community deserve our thanks and support, not more baseless attacks.”

“It’s striking how the president so often seems completely incapable of viewing matters of intelligen­ce and national security through any lens but his own political wellbeing,” Warner added.

 ?? — AFP ?? US President Donald Trump speaks to the media after arriving on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington on Tuesday, following a trip to the 400th anniversar­y of Jamestown, Virginia.
— AFP US President Donald Trump speaks to the media after arriving on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington on Tuesday, following a trip to the 400th anniversar­y of Jamestown, Virginia.
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