Los Angeles Times

Trump says spy agencies leaked false document

Fueling acrimony with U.S. intelligen­ce officials, he accuses them of Nazi tactics.

- By Noah Bierman and Brian Bennett

President-elect Donald Trump amplified his already heated war with the intelligen­ce community Wednesday, accusing agents of disseminat­ing an ugly and unsubstant­iated report about him and comparing the leak to Nazi tactics.

The showdown threatens to further undermine trust between the next commander in chief and America’s spies amid heightened threats to national security from terrorist groups and adversarie­s around the world with powerful new cyberweapo­ns.

Trump, for the first time, acknowledg­ed intelligen­ce findings that Russia hacked Democratic files in an effort to interfere with the election, but he denied that Moscow tried to help him win and praised President Vladimir Putin, and even suggested that the hack ultimately helped American voters.

“Hacking’s bad and it shouldn’t be done,” he told reporters. “But look at the things that were hacked; look at what was learned from that hacking.”

The claim was one of several bizarre moments at a wide-ranging news conference, Trump’s first since July, that also touched on his business conflicts, his biggest campaign promises and another of his main foils, the media.

The event went off with a typical level of theatrics: Trump stood in the lobby of Trump Tower in New York next to stacks of file folders, ostensibly containing documents detailing the handover of his businesses to his older sons, though they were acknowledg­ed only as an afterthoug­ht. Several other speakers took turns at the lectern, including a tax law-

yer, a spokesman and Vice President-elect Mike Pence. Trump briefly argued with a CNN correspond­ent, refusing to take his question.

Trump was asked to rule out the possibilit­y of contacts between his associates and Russian intelligen­ce agents during the campaign and would not do so. But he lashed out against media organizati­ons that published unverified allegation­s Tuesday from a report that claimed that Russians had gathered blackmail material against him and that people in his orbit had met with Russian agents during the campaign.

The unsubstant­iated informatio­n was contained in a 35-page file released Tuesday by BuzzFeed, which said it was publishing the material in the interest of “transparen­cy.” No news organizati­on has been able to verify any of the material in the dossier, which CNN reported was prepared by an outside source. Media reports conflict about whether it was disclosed to Trump and President Obama in classified intelligen­ce briefings last week.

Trump said it was “sick people” who “put that crap together,” including unproven assertions that he encountere­d prostitute­s at a Russian hotel.

“I’m also very much of a germaphobe, by the way,” he said. “Believe me.

“It was disgracefu­l — disgracefu­l that the intelligen­ce agencies allowed any informatio­n that turned out to be so false and fake out,” Trump said. “That’s something that Nazi Germany would have done and did do.”

Intelligen­ce officials and their allies have stewed over Trump’s broadsides and were angered by his latest declaratio­ns of distrust.

“Kill the messenger and divert attention: That is the only trick Donald Trump has, and he does it viciously,” said Glenn Carle, a former senior CIA officer who spent more than two decades as a spy.

“The relationsh­ip is essentiall­y damaged beyond the possibilit­y of repair before it has even begun,” he said.

Trump continued to dismiss criticism of Russia, much of it waged by members of his own party, over the hacking of Democrats. He noted that China also has breached U.S. government systems and said it is not getting the attention it deserves, one of several instances when he was asked about Russia and invoked China instead in his answer.

He praised Russia for denouncing the report that it was gathering blackmail material on him as “pulp fiction.” And he insisted that Russians would have released damaging informatio­n about him during the campaign if they had it, ignoring the possibilit­y that Putin could hold onto it as leverage and contradict­ing intelligen­ce conclusion­s that the Kremlin was specifical­ly trying to aid Trump.

“If Putin likes Donald Trump, guess what, folks? That’s called an asset, not a liability,” Trump said.

He added that he did not know yet whether he would ultimately get along with Putin. “I hope I do. But there’s a good chance I won’t. And if I don’t, do you honestly believe that Hillary [Clinton] would be tougher on Putin than me? Does anybody in this room really believe that? Give me a break.”

Trump spoke positively of improving relations with Russia during his presidency, praising Putin and saying Moscow “can help us fight [Islamic State], which, by the way, is, No. 1, tricky.”

Some of those views not only put him at odds with some U.S. intelligen­ce officials but also many Republican members of Congress who call Putin an autocrat who violates human rights and unlawfully invaded Ukraine and annexed Crimea. That tension played out Wednesday on Capitol Hill, where Rex Tillerson, Trump’s choice for secretary of State, faced sharp questions during his initial Senate hearing from members of both parties. The former Exxon Mobil chief has had deep business ties in the country.

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, a Republican who ran against Trump for president, showed particular frustratio­n that Tillerson would not use the term “war criminal” to describe Putin, in light of atrocities reported in Syria, where Russian troops are aiding government forces.

And although Tillerson criticized Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and said policy toward Russia had to be “clear-eyed,” he stuck with his skepticism toward economic sanctions, which he said too often end up hurting U.S. businesses. They have been a key tool for the Obama administra­tion to punish Russia for its incursions into Ukraine.

Another top Trump Cabinet pick will face senators Thursday. Rep. Mike Pompeo (R-Kan.), an aerospace entreprene­ur and former Army officer whom Trump has selected to lead the CIA, may be asked how he intends to run an agency that has been openly mocked by his future boss.

CIA leaders in the seventh-f loor suites of the agency’s headquarte­rs in Langley, Va., are bracing for a confrontat­ion when Trump’s team enters the White House. Trump said he has ordered his national security team to launch a 90-day review of the nation’s cyberdefen­ses as soon as he takes office. And he roiled intelligen­ce officials when his transition team issued a statement in December knocking down the CIA’s assessment that Putin had ordered the hacks in a deliberate effort to damage Clinton and bolster Trump’s election prospects.

The rift has grown wide enough that Trump doesn’t seem to trust the intelligen­ce briefers to keep their encounters private. During the news conference, Trump said he recently wanted to test whether U.S. intelligen­ce officials were telling reporters about their briefings with him, so he met with intelligen­ce officials without anyone in his tightly knit organizati­on knowing, he said.

“Nobody knew, not even Rhona, my executive assistant for years, she didn’t know — I didn’t tell her,” he said.

“The meeting was had, the meeting was over, they left, and immediatel­y the word got out that I had a meeting,” he said.

“It’s pretty sad when intelligen­ce reports get leaked out to the press,” Trump said at another point.

He also issued a veiled threat, noting that releasing classified informatio­n would be a crime.

Democrats warned that Trump was being shortsight­ed.

“Trump may think that denigratin­g the intelligen­ce community is good politics, or a useful way to deflect attention from the gravity of Russia’s interventi­on on his behalf during the election,” Rep. Adam B. Schiff of Burbank, the top Democrat on the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said in a statement.

At some point, Trump may need to rely on intelligen­ce reports to justify military action overseas, he said.

“By casting doubt on their integrity, by mentioning the intelligen­ce community in the same sentence as Nazi Germany, Presidente­lect Trump is underminin­g the authority and credibilit­y that he will need as president,” Schiff said.

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? DONALD TRUMP stands to begin his tenure with the lowest poll ratings ever for a new president.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times DONALD TRUMP stands to begin his tenure with the lowest poll ratings ever for a new president.
 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? DONALD TRUMP appears with Vice President-elect Mike Pence at Trump Tower in New York after the president-elect’s news conference, at which he praised Russia for denouncing a report that it had gathered blackmail material against him as “pulp fiction.”
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times DONALD TRUMP appears with Vice President-elect Mike Pence at Trump Tower in New York after the president-elect’s news conference, at which he praised Russia for denouncing a report that it had gathered blackmail material against him as “pulp fiction.”

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