Chattanooga Times Free Press

Obama aide denies using intel to spy on Trump advisers

- BY JULIE PACE

WASHINGTON — Susan Rice, Barack Obama’s national security adviser and the latest target for Donald Trump’s embattled defenders, firmly denied on Tuesday she or other Obama officials used secret intelligen­ce reports to spy on Trump associates for political purposes.

“Absolutely false,” Rice declared.

The White House has seized on the idea the Obama administra­tion improperly surveilled the Republican during and after the November election — an accusation Democrats say is just another red herring thrown out to distract attention from investigat­ions of Russian interferen­ce in the campaign on behalf of Trump.

Presidenti­al spokesman Sean Spicer cast Rice’s handling of intelligen­ce in the waning days of Obama’s term as suspicious, although he did not detail what he found to be inappropri­ate.

“The more we find out about this, the more we learn there was something there,” Spicer said.

According to a U.S. official, Rice asked spy agencies to give her the names of Trump associates who surfaced in intelligen­ce reports she was regularly briefed on. Rice’s official role would have given her the ability to make those requests for national security purposes.

Rice, in an interview with MSNBC, acknowledg­ed she sometimes asked for the names of Americans referenced in reports. She would not say whether she saw intelligen­ce related to Trump associates or whether she asked for their identities, though she did say reports related to Russia increased in the final months of the presidenti­al election.

The Trump White House has been particular­ly incensed that intercepte­d conversati­ons between national security adviser Michael Flynn and Russia’s ambassador to the U.S. surfaced in news reports before the inaugurati­on. Flynn was fired after it became clear he misled Vice President Mike Pence and others about the content of those discussion­s.

Rice denied that she had leaked details about Flynn’s call, saying, “I leaked nothing to nobody.”

The U.S. official said Rice’s Trump-related requests were discovered as part of a National Security Council review of the government’s policy on “unmasking” — the intelligen­ce community’s term for revealing Americans’ identities that would otherwise be hidden in classified reports. The review was prompted by a belief that there were inefficien­cies in the current procedures and concerns over a policy change made in the closing days of the Obama administra­tion, according to the official, who insisted on anonymity in order to disclose the sensitive informatio­n.

In January, the Justice Department and intelligen­ce officials agreed on new rules giving more U.S. agencies access to raw informatio­n picked up abroad by the National Security Agency. Privacy advocates have raised concerns that the new rules — which are yet to be fully implemente­d — would lead to the informatio­n being shared too broadly.

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Susan Rice

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