Albuquerque Journal

Trump’s intelligen­ce shakeup could prove very dangerous

- DAVID IGNATIUS Columnist

WASHINGTON — Among intelligen­ce profession­als, President Trump’s nomination of an inexperien­ced, partisan politician to oversee America’s spy agencies prompted deep dismay — but also a stolid reaffirmat­ion of the spymaster’s credo: Let’s get on with it.

This combinatio­n of incredulit­y and stoicism was voiced by a half-dozen current and former officers I spoke with Monday about Trump’s choice of Rep. John Ratcliffe, R-Texas, to become director of national intelligen­ce. The worry is partly that Ratcliffe lacks any real experience, and perhaps more that he has embraced Trump’s “deep state” conspiracy theories about the CIA and FBI.

“This makes the work force wonder, what are we doing here?” said one veteran CIA station chief. But a few moments later, he affirmed: “This place is under siege. People say, carry on, protect the mission, avoid the firing range.”

“Analysts will be asking how well (Ratcliffe) will represent our product downtown,” said a second former officer who served in a senior position under Dan Coats, the departing DNI. This former official predicted that it would take Ratcliffe a year just to understand the vast array of 17 intelligen­ce agencies he will oversee, if he’s confirmed.

The deepest worry among intelligen­ce profession­als is how the Ratcliffe nomination, and the intense partisansh­ip that fueled it, will be perceived by America’s intelligen­ce partners overseas. “They’re in wait-and-see mode,” said a former senior CIA officer after canvassing a group of colleagues.

If the White House exerts political control through Ratcliffe, “foreign government­s will be wondering if they should be sharing informatio­n” with the CIA and NSA, said the veteran station chief.

The most successful DNI since the creation of the post in 2004 was Coats’ predecesso­r, James Clapper, a career intelligen­ce officer whom Trump recklessly attacked because of his supposed political bias. In fact, Clapper was the model of an independen­t intelligen­ce chief, who told the truth about intelligen­ce failures in assessing the Islamic State, for example, when it made colleagues in the Obama administra­tion uncomforta­ble.

Coats showed similar willingnes­s to give honest, if politicall­y awkward, assessment­s in congressio­nal testimony in January of North Korea’s continuing nuclear weapons developmen­t and Iran’s continuing compliance with the 2015 nuclear deal

— both contradict­ing Trump’s line.

This truth-telling standard is in the DNI’s job descriptio­n. Trump instead chose “a man who tells the president what he wants to know, rather than what he needs to know,” said the veteran station chief. A decisive factor in how the intelligen­ce community views Ratcliffe will be his treatment of his two most senior prospectiv­e lieutenant­s: Gina Haspel, the CIA director; and Sue Gordon, who has been Coats’ deputy.

Haspel benefits from having a solid relationsh­ip with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who preceded her as CIA director. Pompeo is probably Trump’s most influentia­l adviser and his patronage will shield Haspel, if it continues. Foreign spy services, too, are hoping that Pompeo can protect Haspel, but they will begin hedging their bets if she’s isolated.

“If Gina gets cut out, the liaison services will begin to shut everything down,” said the former CIA officer who had talked with colleagues. Similarly, CIA employees will ask, “What the hell am I here for?” said this former case officer.

The future role of Gordon, a 39-year veteran of the intelligen­ce community, will be especially important. She would normally become acting DNI with Coats’ departure, but Trump signaled he planned to announce a new acting director. The DNI’s lawyers have concluded that Trump has that power, legally, but it wasn’t clear Monday who would take the post and the situation appeared to be fluid.

Gordon is widely admired within the inbred, sometimes back-biting, world of intelligen­ce. She served in all four of the CIA’s directorat­es — operations, analysis, support, and science and technology. She helped launch the agency’s in-house technology incubator, known as “In-Q-Tel,” and ran the agency’s high-tech informatio­n operations center. If Gordon leaves, Ratcliffe’s problems will multiply.

Because Ratcliffe is such a partisan and inexperien­ced nominee, his confirmati­on hearings will be a crucial baseline. A former top-level CIA official said he should be quizzed: “If analysts say Kim Jong Un won’t give up his nuclear weapons, would you so testify? If the analysts say Iran is complying with the nuclear agreement, would you so testify?”

Trump is governing these days with the destructiv­e power of a sledgehamm­er. The intelligen­ce shakeup could be his most dangerous move yet. If Ratcliffe doesn’t promise to strictly safeguard the intelligen­ce community’s independen­ce, his nomination should be tossed. This one really matters.

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