Las Vegas Review-Journal

Intel chief doesn’t know what leaders said at summit

Coats also in dark about Putin’s invitation to D.C.

- By Deb Riechmann The Associated Press

ASPEN, Colo. — Even Donald Trump’s intelligen­ce chief doesn’t know what was said in the president’s one-on-one meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin this week in Helsinki.

Director of National Intelligen­ce Dan Coats was also unaware that Putin was being invited to Washington.

Coats made those admissions Thursday in his first public comments since rebutting Trump’s questionin­g of the U.S. intelligen­ce assessment that Russia interfered in the 2016 election.

Speaking at the Aspen Security Forum in Colorado, Coats tiptoed around any potential conflict with his boss, but was upfront about some of his misgivings, saying that he wished Trump had made different statements Monday in Helsinki after meeting Putin.

Coats, who is charged with overseeing the nation’s 17 intelligen­ce agencies, also said that if he had been asked, he would have advised Trump against meeting Putin alone, with just interprete­rs.

“That’s not my role. That’s not my job. It is what it is,” Coats said in a verbal shrug.

“I don’t know what happened in that meeting.”

Coats said he was just doing his job when he quickly issued a statement Monday after the president appeared to give credence to Russia’s denial of election interferen­ce. In that statement, Coats restated the U.S. intelligen­ce assessment about Russian meddling and Moscow’s “ongoing, pervasive efforts to undermine our democracy.”

“I just felt, at this point in time, that what we had assessed and reassessed, and reassessed … still stands and that it was important to take that stand on behalf of the intelligen­ce community and behalf of the American people,” Coats said.

Coats, who has criticized Russia for years, has had to clash loudly with Trump’s pro-kremlin remarks, leaving the soft-spoken spy chief in a tight spot. Asked how he deals with Trump’s conflictin­g statements about Russia, Coats said: “This is the job I signed up for.”

He said he understood what Trump was saying when he noted earlier this week that “others” could be to blame for trying to meddle in U.S elections because other adversarie­s have the capabiliti­es to do so. But he stood firmly with the intelligen­ce assessment, saying it’s “undeniable” that Russia has taken the lead on this kind of interferen­ce.

“Basically, they are the ones that are trying to undermine our basic values and divide with our allies,” Coats said. “They are the ones who are trying to wreak havoc over our election process.”

As with other Trump administra­tion officials attending Aspen, Coats was asked whether he ever considered resigning from what has been a volatile Trump presidency.

Coats didn’t answer the question directly. He said when he has frustratin­g days, he reminds himself about why he agreed to accept the job and what he hoped to accomplish.

“As long as I’m able to have the ability to seek the truth and speak the truth, I’m on board,” Coats said.

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