Houston Chronicle

Trump’s pick for intelligen­ce post is decorated veteran

- By Shane Harris and Ellen Nakashima

WASHINGTON — Sue Gordon, a career intelligen­ce officer who became the second-highest-ranking official in the U.S. intelligen­ce community, quietly went to the White House on Thursday evening to give President Donald Trump her resignatio­n, along with a handwritte­n note: “You should have your team.”

The unenviable task of leading that team now falls to retired Adm. Joseph Maguire, a decorated Navy SEAL who until last year had been running a nonprofit foundation that pays for the education of surviving children of Special Operations troops killed in the line of duty.

Maguire is the current director of the National Counterter­rorism Center, tapped for that post by Trump in June 2018.

The president and Maguire don’t know each other well, said current and former national security officials, who said they were relieved at Maguire’s selection after Trump previously tried to install a political loyalist as the permanent director of national intelligen­ce. They said they see Maguire as a principled public servant, if not the most experience­d candidate to lead the intelligen­ce agencies, unlike the outgoing Gordon, who was steeped in the inner workings of the vast intelligen­ce bureaucrac­y.

Maguire’s long military career involved significan­t work with intelligen­ce on a tactical and strategic level, and he previously served at the NCTC in a deputy position for three years.

But even his strongest backers concede that his résumé doesn’t rank against some previous intelligen­ce directors who spent their entire careers in that field, though they noted his leadership skills and ability to connect with those he oversees.

“Whether it’s in a military command or in a place like NCTC, he’d spend a certain amount of almost every day walking around the organizati­on just talking to people,” said Michael Nagata, a former Army Special Forces officer who retired this month as NCTC’s strategy director. “On several occasions, I remember people telling me he’d come up to them, and they either didn’t know they were talking to the director or they’d find out later and say, ‘Holy crap, I’ve never had a conversati­on with the director of the NCTC before.’ ”

“He’s a team builder. He’s a people person,” said a former national security official who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to be candid. “It’s one of his strongest attributes.”

“Maguire is amiable but won’t be afraid to speak truthfully and forcefully to the president,” a former senior intelligen­ce official said. “Joe’s a man of principle. Don’t mistake friendly and affable and a good listener and a good leader with not being tough.”

Why Trump chose Maguire is unclear. He had told his aides that he didn’t want Gordon to become the acting director when Daniel Coats, the current No. 1, resigns on Aug. 15, ending his sometimes fraught relationsh­ip with the White House.

Trump and some of his family and close allies were said to have regarded Gordon with suspicion.

In a tweet last week, Donald Trump Jr. called Gordon “besties with Brennan and the rest of the clown cadre,” referring to former CIA Director John Brennan, one of Trump’s fiercest critics. Brennan and Gordon worked closely together at the CIA, where she spent 27 years.

In a farewell letter to colleagues, Gordon made no mention of any tensions with the White House. “As I start my own new adventure, I will rest easy knowing that you are on the Nation’s watch,” she wrote.

Maguire also has strong ties to one of the president’s critics. His best friend is famed retired Adm. William McRaven, who led the operation that killed Osama bin Laden. The former senior intelligen­ce official, who knows Maguire and McRaven, described them as “comrades in arms.” In his memoir, McRaven said that the two have known each other since their early days serving in the Philippine­s and that Maguire, his wife and their two children have long been the McRaven family’s “closest friends.”

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