Los Angeles Times

Trump critic loses security clearance

President Trump follows through with his threat against the former CIA director, a frequent critic.

- By Eli Stokols and Noah Bierman eli.stokols@latimes.com noah.bierman @latimes.com

The president revokes the privilege for former CIA Director John Brennan and threatens nine others.

WASHINGTON — President Trump on Wednesday announced he was revoking the security clearance of former CIA Director John Brennan, a prominent and frequent critic, citing what the president called his “erratic conduct and behavior.”

Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders made the announceme­nt at the start of a previously unschedule­d media briefing at the White House. She said Trump is also considerin­g taking the same highly unusual action against nine additional national security officials — all Trump critics — who served in the Obama or George W. Bush administra­tions, or both.

“Any benefits that senior officials might glean from consultati­ons with Mr. Brennan are now outweighed by the risks posed by his erratic conduct and behavior,” Sanders said, reading from a statement by the president.

That statement also alleged that Brennan “has recently leveraged his status as a former high-ranking official with access to highly sensitive informatio­n to make a series of unfounded and outrageous allegation­s — wild outbursts on the internet and television — about this administra­tion.”

It continued: “Mr. Brennan’s lying and recent conduct, characteri­zed by increasing­ly frenzied commentary, is wholly inconsiste­nt with access to the nation’s most closely held secrets and facilitate­s the very aim of our adversarie­s, which is to sow division and chaos.”

Brennan soon responded on Trump’s favorite medium, Twitter: “This action is part of a broader effort by Mr. Trump to suppress freedom of speech & punish critics. It should gravely worry all Americans, including intelligen­ce profession­als, about the cost of speaking out. My principles are worth far more than clearances. I will not relent.”

Many of the additional former officials on Trump’s target list said that they already had relinquish­ed their clearances. Yet the threat by Trump, even if largely symbolic, spoke to his willingnes­s to use the powers of the presidency to punish his critics. The maneuver drew immediate criticism in both parties, though congressio­nal Republican­s are unlikely to challenge the president.

Sanders named nine more individual­s whose clearances are also under review: James Clapper, former director of national intelligen­ce; former FBI Director James B. Comey; Bush national security advisor Michael Hayden; former Deputy Atty. Gen. Sally Yates; President Obama’s national security advisor, Susan Rice; current Justice Department official Bruce Ohr; former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe; former FBI agent Peter Strzok; and former FBI attorney Lisa Page. Comey, Yates, McCabe and Strzok all were fired by Trump.

Only Ohr remains in the government. Former national security officials often retain clearances to enable them to continue advising the White House and Congress, or to maintain helpful ties to foreign officials.

Brennan’s tenure as CIA director capped a quartercen­tury career at the agency, including postings in Asia and as the station chief in Saudi Arabia. He is fluent in Arabic. As Obama’s homeland security advisor, before becoming CIA director, Brennan was central to the months-long covert effort that ended with the killing of Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.

Appearing on MSNBC after Trump’s action, Brennan said: “I’ve seen this type of behavior and actions on the part of foreign tyrants and despots and autocrats in my national security career. I never thought I would see it here in the United States.”

In what could have been his final provocatio­n for Trump, late Tuesday on MSNBC, Brennan called Trump “dangerous to our nation” and “the most divisive president we have ever had,” who has “badly sullied the reputation of the office of the presidency.”

Sanders denied that the action against Brennan was retributio­n or an infringeme­nt of his free-speech rights, contending instead that the decision was a matter of protecting classified informatio­n.

“The president has a constituti­onal responsibi­lity to protect classified informatio­n,” she said.

Sanders cited as a rationale for the president’s action Brennan’s denials, as CIA director, that agency employees in 2014 had improperly searched Senate computer files amid the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee’s investigat­ion of the Bush-era program for harshly interrogat­ing terrorism suspects. Ten CIA officials did get access to the files, and Brennan later apologized to the committee.

The president’s statement on Brennan was dated in late July, just after Sanders first told reporters that Trump might revoke the clearances of several of the critics named Wednesday, including Brennan.

By waiting weeks to release it, the administra­tion was widely seen as trying to shift the public’s focus: This week the White House has been roiled by attention to the president’s feud with former aide Omarosa Manigault Newman, who has called him a racist and released secret recordings of conversati­ons with him and others, and by news from the trial of Trump’s former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort.

“This might be a convenient way to distract attention, say from a damaging news story or two,” Sen. Mark R. Warner of Virginia, the lead Democrat on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, tweeted. “But politicizi­ng the way we guard our nation’s secrets just to punish the president’s critics is a dangerous precedent.”

Hayden, the former Bush advisor, said in an interview with The Times: “It’s disappoint­ing that the president would do this. I do think he’s trying to change the narrative because it’s not been a really good week so far.”

“Denying someone a clearance because they criticize the president isn’t warranted, although the president has absolute authority to grant or not grant,” Hayden said. “I just think it’s another example of using authority in a way that’s not productive.”

Hayden said that the president’s action against Brennan and the threat to similarly punish him “isn’t going to affect anything I say or do going forward.”

Clapper echoed that sentiment on CNN: “If they are saying that the only way I can speak is to be in an adulation mode of this president, I’m sorry, but I do not think I can sign on for that.”

If Trump’s move was meant to change the subject, it worked at least in the short term. Following her announceme­nt, Sanders answered a few additional questions on other topics and none on the subject prominent at her briefing a day earlier — whether a recording exists, as widely rumored, of the president using a racial slur

On Tuesday, Sanders told reporters she couldn’t “guarantee” that such a recording does not exist.

National security experts and government veterans from both parties have been among the most vociferous Trump critics, with the Republican­s among them forming the backbone of the so-called Never Trump movement.

Kori Schake, who held several positions in President George W. Bush’s administra­tion, called Trump’s actions on revoking clearances “petty, designed to be intimidati­ng to others, precluding talented people from giving our government their judgment, and eroding the norms of behavior that sustain bipartisan cooperatio­n on national security issues.”

“It’s terrible,” she added.

 ?? Saul Loeb AFP/Getty Images ?? IN ADDITION to former CIA Director John Brennan, President Trump has threatened the security clearances of nine other former officials, all critics of his.
Saul Loeb AFP/Getty Images IN ADDITION to former CIA Director John Brennan, President Trump has threatened the security clearances of nine other former officials, all critics of his.

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