The Oklahoman

CIA nominee pledges to provide `unvarnishe­d' intelligen­ce

- By Eric Tucker The Associated Press

WASHINGTON— President Joe Bid en' s nominee to run the CIA told lawmakers Wednesday that he would keep politics out of the j ob and deliver “unvarnishe­d” intelligen­ce to politician­s and policymake­rs even if they don't want to hear it.

“I've learned that politics must stop where intelligen­ce works begin,” William Burns told members of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee. “That is exactly what President Biden expects of CIA.”

Burns said the first thing Bid en told him when he asked him to take the post is that he “wants the Burns agency to

give it to him straight, and I pledged to do just that and to defend those who do the same.”

The comments from Burns appeared aimed at drawing a contrast with the prior administra­tion, when President Donald Trump faced repeated accusation­s of politicizi­ng intelligen­ce while also publicly disputing the assessment­s of his own intelligen­ce agencies, most notably about Russian election interferen­ce.

Burns, a former ambassador to Russia and Jordan who served at the State Department for more than 30 years under both Democratic and Republican presidents, is well-known in diplomatic circles and appears headed for a smooth confirmati­on.

Despite his decades of experience, he acknowledg­ed that the diverse array of internatio­nal threats — including from an ”aggressive” Russia and “predatory Chinese leadership” — is different from what he encountere­d when he first entered government service and even from the years immediatel­y after the Sept. 11 attacks.

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