The Guardian (USA)

Barr reportedly removes national security official ahead of elections

- Julian Borger in Washington

The US attorney general, William Barr, has reportedly removed the head of a section of the justice department entrusted with ensuring the legality of federal counter-terrorism and counterint­elligence activities.

The removal of Brad Wiegmann, a deputy assistant attorney general, first reported by ABC News, has not been explained, but it comes amid rising Democratic concerns that Barr and his justice department will seek to influence the conduct of the November elections in Donald Trump’s favour.

It comes less than three days after the director of national intelligen­ce, another Trump loyalist, John Ratcliffe, told Congress his office would no longer provide legislator­s with verbal briefings on election security, only a written report without the opportunit­y to follow up with questions.

Wiegmann, 54, a 23-year public service veteran, ran the office of law and policy in the national security section of the justice department, until he was reassigned two weeks ago.

He is being replaced by a 36-year old cyber-crimes prosecutor, Kellen Dwyer, with very little relevant experience, whose name made the news in November 2018 when he accidental­ly revealed that the US had charged the WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange.

The justice department did not immediatel­y return a request for comment.

“It’s a very odd choice and it’s odd timing and it’s really difficult to explain,” said Katrina Mulligan, who worked in the law and policy office in the Trump administra­tion and in a number of national security roles in the Obama administra­tion. “This office is really charged with a very specific responsibi­lity, which is to represent the Department of Justice interest in the national security policymaki­ng process.”

The timing and lack of explanatio­n for the move raised alarm with just over two months to go before the election, amid the accelerati­ng politicisa­tion of national security issues and the threat to the integrity of the election. The administra­tion has emphasised the role of China, which it says favours a win for Joe Biden. Democrats, and most election security experts, say the Russians are much more aggressive in their meddling, and favour Trump.

Ratcliffe blamed his decision to end verbal briefings on congressio­nal leaks.

“We’ve had a pandemic of informatio­n being leaked out of the intelligen­ce community and I’m going to take the measures to make sure that stops,” he said.

“John Ratcliffe was installed in the post of DNI not because of his intelligen­ce experience or broader national security expertise; he had little to speak of. Instead, he auditioned for the role by fashioning himself as Trump’s attack dog and defender,” said Ned Price, a former CIA official and national security council spokesman.

“His latest move ensures that lawmakers will not be able to ask the critical follow-up questions about details and nuance that can be so vital to understand­ing an intelligen­ce assessment – let alone conducting oversight and legislatin­g.”

 ?? Photograph: Drew Angerer/Getty Images ?? William Barr, US attorney general, has reportedly removed Brad Wiegmann, deputy assistant attorney general.
Photograph: Drew Angerer/Getty Images William Barr, US attorney general, has reportedly removed Brad Wiegmann, deputy assistant attorney general.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States