Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

New CIA director

- KEN THOMAS AND DEB RIECHMANN

President Donald Trump and Central Intelligen­ce Agency director Gina Haspel leave a swearing-in ceremony at CIA Headquarte­rs on Monday, in Langley, Va.

LANGLEY, Va. — New CIA Director Gina Haspel pledged to send more spies into the field during her swearing-in Monday as President Donald Trump offered up praise for the rank and file who felt snubbed during his first visit to the headquarte­rs of the premier U.S. intelligen­ce agency.

“We must learn from the past, but we cannot dwell in the past,” said Haspel, whose ascent from undercover operative to the top job was challenged because of her role in a program to harshly detain and interrogat­e terror suspects after 9/11.

“We must constantly learn, adjust, improve and strive to be better. We demand it of ourselves and America deserves nothing less,” she said, drawing loud applause from her co-workers assembled inside the headquarte­rs at Langley, in northern Virginia.

Haspel, 61, succeeds Mike Pompeo, whom Trump tapped to become secretary of state. Pompeo was present at the swearing-in, and the oath was administer­ed by Vice President Mike Pence.

Critics have said Haspel’s role in the now-banned program should have disqualifi­ed her from becoming CIA director, although she has vowed not to restart it. Her supporters cited her three decades of experience at the spy agency both domestical­ly and at many posts abroad.

Haspel, who has spent 33 years with the CIA, pledged to boost foreign language proficienc­y, strengthen the CIA’s partnershi­ps with intelligen­ce agencies in the United States and abroad and deploy more officers to the field. She said the CIA also needed to focus on strategic threats to U.S. national security as well as the ongoing one from global terrorism.

As the first female CIA director, Haspel said she was indebted to female intelligen­ce officers who blazed the trail for women in the field. “I stand on the shoulders of heroines who never sought public acclaim, but served as inspiratio­ns to the generation­s that came after them,” she said.

She also referred to her rocky confirmati­on, during which lawmakers had called for her mostly classified past career to be open to public scrutiny.

“It has been nearly 50 years since an operations officer rose up through the ranks to become the director, and after the experience of the last two months, I think I know why that is,” Haspel joked.

Trump said she showed courage during the Senate confirmati­on process in the face of “very negative politics.”

The president struck a different tone than on his previous visit to CIA headquarte­rs. He hailed the agency rank and file, calling them the “most elite intelligen­ce profession­als on the planet” and promised them the “the tools, the resources and the support they need.”

When Trump visited the CIA headquarte­rs in January 2017, a day after taking office, it was on the back of his repeated criticisms of the U.S. intelligen­ce community over its conclusion that Russian had interfered in the presidenti­al election.

That day, many of his remarks were focused on settling scores with the media. His comments raised the ire of former intelligen­ce officials because he spoke in front of a wall marked with stars representi­ng fallen CIA officers, which was viewed as disrespect­ful.

This year, he paid tribute to the lost lives, saying “their stories of service and sacrifice and daring will live for all time.”

Only hours before Trump visited CIA headquarte­rs, he was promoting criticism of former CIA Director John Brennan. He suggested Brennan was to blame for the investigat­ion into possible collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia.

On Twitter, Trump referred to comments from conservati­ve commentato­r Dan Bongino on Fox and Friends, which argued that Brennan “started this entire debacle.” Bongino, a former Secret Service agent, also said Brennan had “disgraced the intelligen­ce community.”

Brennan became the agency’s director in 2013 under President Barack Obama and served until January 2017. He has been a vocal critic of Trump.

On Sunday, Brennan warned Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan, tweeting: “If Mr. Trump continues along this disastrous path, you will bear major responsibi­lity for the harm done to our democracy. You do a great disservice to our Nation & the Republican Party if you continue to enable Mr. Trump’s self-serving actions.”

 ?? AP/EVAN VUCCI ??
AP/EVAN VUCCI

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States