Chattanooga Times Free Press

TRUMP’S NOMINEE TO LEAD THE CIA SPLITS THE RESISTANCE

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One of the surreal features of the Trump era in Washington is the compositio­n of “the resistance.”

There are of course many progressiv­es online who warn against becoming inured to Donald Trump’s transgress­ions, to “normalizin­g” his presidency. That’s to be expected. But among their allies is also a cadre of former national security insiders who resist Trump primarily on the grounds that he may be unduly influenced by Russia.

With Trump’s nomination of his current deputy director of the CIA, Gina Haspel, to lead the agency, these strange bedfellows are breaking up.

On one side you have the Democrats. They argue that Haspel, whose open confirmati­on hearing in the Senate took place Wednesday, was too closely associated with the CIA’s torment and interrogat­ion of terrorism suspects after 9/11 to be approved as director now.

When Sen. Dianne Feinstein led the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, the Democratic staff produced a comprehens­ive report on the CIA’s program. Tensions boiled over in 2014 when CIA staffers breached the database used by the Senate investigat­ors. John Brennan, then director of the CIA, was forced to publicly apologize to Feinstein, but only after his agency initially counter-charged that her staffers had mishandled state secrets.

The rise of Trump smoothed things over between the Democrats and the intelligen­ce mandarins. It gave them a common cause. Retired CIA leaders like Michael Hayden and Michael Morell, who served Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, broke precedent and publicly accused Trump of being a Russian patsy.

Since Trump’s inaugurati­on last year, other former spy chiefs have followed suit. Former director of national intelligen­ce James Clapper is now a member of filmmaker Rob Reiner’s “Committee to Investigat­e Russia.” Former CIA director John Brennan is now a paid contributo­r to the broadcast home of the resistance, MSNBC.

This is why it’s interestin­g that all four men signed an open letter last month with 46 other retired intelligen­ce pros endorsing Haspel’s nomination. Some of the former leaders have gone even further. Jeremy Bash, who served as chief of staff to CIA director Leon Panetta during the Obama administra­tion, wrote on Wednesday that Haspel should not be blamed for destroying the waterboard­ing tapes because she believed she was following the orders of Porter Goss, who was then CIA director.

The ending of Bash’s op-ed gets to the heart of the rift that Haspel’s nomination has torn in the resistance. “Confirming Gina Haspel would send exactly the right signal to the intelligen­ce community and the rest of the country about the importance of profession­al intelligen­ce and service over self,” he wrote.

In other words, Bash endorses Haspel in large part because he believes she will place the interests of the CIA over the narrow interests of the president. Feinstein on the other hand opposes Haspel because she still wants to hold the CIA accountabl­e for past torture.

Just as Democrats now find their allies against Trump endorsing his pick for CIA director, the president finds his nominee has support from the former spies his supporters decry as apparats of America’s “deep state.”

When I asked the White House director for legislativ­e affairs, Marc Short, about this on Friday, he acknowledg­ed that some Trump supporters have told him that the support for Haspel from administra­tion critics like Brennan and Clapper gives them anxiety. But Short also said this didn’t factor into the decision to nominate Haspel.

Even if enough senators agree and confirm Haspel, the ironies have now been laid bare: Trump has nominated a woman his national security state adversarie­s believe will check his power. And Democrats will oppose her nomination because of their resistance to the policies of the last Republican president.

 ??  ?? Eli Lake
Eli Lake

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