The Philippine Star

Donald Trump casts intelligen­ce aside

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What plausible reason could Donald Trump have for trying so hard to discredit America’s intelligen­ce agencies and their finding that Russia interfered in the presidenti­al election? Maybe he just can’t stand anyone thinking he didn’t, or couldn’t, win the presidency on his own.

Regardless of his motives, the nation’s top intelligen­ce officials were having none of his nonsense on Thursday. In an extraordin­ary pushback against the president-elect, James Clapper Jr., the director of national intelligen­ce, told the Senate Armed Services Committee that he was “even more resolute” in believing that Russia not only hacked the computers of the Democratic National Committee and others but also disseminat­ed classic propaganda, disinforma­tion and fake news.

Flanked by the Pentagon’s top intelligen­ce official and the head of the cyber command, Mr. Clapper acknowledg­ed that the intelligen­ce agencies can at times make mistakes. But he distinguis­hed between presidenti­al skepticism about their findings, which is healthy, and “disparagem­ent” of the profession­alism of the agencies, which is perilous for national security.

With his refusal to accept regular intelligen­ce briefings on threats facing this country and his persistent denigratio­n of the intelligen­ce community, Mr. Trump has shown time and again that he worries more about his ego than anything else. He is effectivel­y working to delegitimi­ze institutio­ns whose jobs involve reporting on risks, threats and facts that a president needs to keep the nation safe.

Since last summer, Mr. Trump has dismissed intelligen­ce findings that the Russians were responsibl­e for hacking the Democrats and leaking the emails that were eventually made public by WikiLeaks. In November, when the Central Intelligen­ce Agency went further and concluded that the Russian hacking was intended to favor Mr. Trump, he rejected the finding as “ridiculous,” though he and President Vladimir Putin of Russia have repeatedly expressed a bewilderin­g and alarming mutual admiration.

Since then, President Obama has sanctioned Russia for its interferen­ce in the election and his administra­tion has released limited corroborat­ing informatio­n while most Democrats and some

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