Porterville Recorder

Trump says intelligen­ce chief is resigning

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WASHINGTON — Dan Coats, director of national intelligen­ce, will leave his job next month, President Trump announced Sunday, after a turbulent two years in which Coats and the president were often at odds over Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

Trump announced Coats’ departure as Aug. 15 in a tweet that thanked Coats for his service. He said he will nominate Rep. John Ratcliffe, Rtexas, to the post and that he will name an acting official in the coming days. Ratcliffe is a frequent Trump defender who fiercely questioned former special counsel Robert Mueller last week during a House Judiciary Committee hearing.

Coats often appeared out of step with Trump and disclosed to prosecutor­s how he was urged by the president to publicly deny any link between Russia and the Trump campaign. The frayed relationsh­ip reflected broader divisions between the president and the government’s intelligen­ce agencies.

Coats’ public, and sometimes personal, disagreeme­nts with Trump over policy and intelligen­ce included Russian election interferen­ce and North Korean nuclear capabiliti­es. Trump had long been skeptical of the nation’s intelligen­ce agencies, which provoked his ire by concluding that Russia interfered in the 2016 presidenti­al election with the goal of getting him elected.

In a letter of resignatio­n released Sunday night, Coats said serving as the nation’s top intelligen­ce official has been a “distinct privilege” but that it was time for him to “move on” to the next chapter of his life. He cited his work to strengthen the intelligen­ce community’s effort to prevent harm to the U.S. from adversarie­s and to reform the security clearance process.

A former Republican senator from Indiana, Coats was appointed director of national intelligen­ce in March 2017, becoming the fifth person to hold the post since it was created in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks to oversee and coordinate the nation’s 17 intelligen­ce agencies.

Coats had been among the last of the seasoned foreign policy hands brought to surround the president after his 2016 victory, of whom the president steadily grew tired as he gained more personal confidence in Oval Office, officials said. That roster included Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, and later national security adviser H.R. Mcmaster. Coats developed a reputation inside the administra­tion for sober presentati­ons to the president of intelligen­ce conclusion­s that occasional­ly contradict­ed Trump’s policy aims.

His departure had been rumored for months, and intelligen­ce officials had been expecting him to leave before the 2020 presidenti­al campaign season reached its peak. Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, the ranking Democrat on the Senate’s intelligen­ce committee, tweeted Sunday: “The mission of the intelligen­ce community is to speak truth to power. As DNI, Dan Coats stayed true to that mission.”

Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell praised Coats, saying he had been reassured knowing that such a man as his former Senate colleague “took such a deliberate, thoughtful, and unbiased approach was at the helm of our intelligen­ce community.”

Trump’s announceme­nt that Coats would be leaving came days after Mueller’s public testimony on his two-year investigat­ion into Russian election interferen­ce and potential obstructio­n of justice by Trump, which officials said both emboldened and infuriated the president.

Coats had been among the least visible of the president’s senior administra­tion officials but, in his limited public appearance­s, repeatedly seemed at odds with the administra­tion, including about Russia.

For instance, he revealed to Mueller’s investigat­ors how Trump, angry over investigat­ions into links between his campaign and Russia, tried unsuccessf­ully in March 2017 to get him to make a public statement refuting any connection.

“Coats responded that the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce (ODNI) has nothing to do with investigat­ions and it was not his role to make a public statement on the Russia investigat­ion,” Mueller’s report said.

Trump later called Coats to complain about the investigat­ion and how it was affecting the government’s foreign policy. Coats told prosecutor­s he responded that the best thing to do was to let the investigat­ion take its course.

In February, he publicly cast doubt on the prospects of persuading North Korea to end its nuclear weapons program despite the diplomatic efforts of the administra­tion, which has touted its outreach to the isolated country as one of its most important foreign policy achievemen­ts. Coats, in testimony to Congress as part of annual national intelligen­ce assessment, said North Korea would be “unlikely” to give up its nuclear weapons or its ability to produce them because “its leaders ultimately view nuclear

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