The Columbus Dispatch

Gap between Trump, spy agencies widens

- By Julie Pace, Eileen Sullivan and Vivian Salama

WASHINGTON — The White House’s handling of intelligen­ce reports on the Russia investigat­ion has been labeled unorthodox and, to the Democrats, suspicious. But when it comes to Donald Trump’s relationsh­ip with his spy agencies, that’s par for the course.

Since taking office, Trump has challenged the integrity of intelligen­ce officials, moved to exert more control over U.S. spying agencies and accused his predecesso­r of using government spycraft to monitor his presidenti­al campaign.

This week, Trump’s White House is facing allegation­s that it funneled secret

intelligen­ce reports to a top Republican investigat­ing his campaign’s possible ties to Russian officials as well as Moscow’s interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

The approach appears to be based, at least in part, on the White House’s anxiety over the Russia investigat­ions, which threaten to seriously weaken his presidency. It also reflects a deep distrust of the intelligen­ce community among his political advisers, including government newcomers who have never dealt with classified informatio­n or covert programs.

“It reveals a chasm of ignorance about how stuff is done,” said Michael Hayden, the former head of the CIA and National Security Agency.

Trump, with the backing of political advisers Steve Bannon and Jared Kushner, initially sought to put Wall Street billionair­e Stephen Feinberg in charge of a review of the intelligen­ce agencies. An early iteration of the review explored eliminatin­g the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce, the umbrella agency created after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks to streamline and coordinate intelligen­ce.

Officials say they viewed the agency as an unnecessar­y and bloated bureaucrac­y that can manipulate or distort informatio­n.

But the review was recalibrat­ed after Dan Coats, Trump’s intelligen­ce director, complained about being undermined in the midst of his confirmati­on hearings, according to U.S. officials. Coats is now leading the review, though it does not include potentiall­y scrapping the office he now runs, according to the officials.

“This is going to be more … ‘trim and optimize’ as opposed to ‘dismantle,’” said L. Roger Mason Jr., a member of the Trump transition team that focused on the national intelligen­ce directorat­e.

White House officials have expressed an interest in having more raw intelligen­ce sent to the president for his daily briefings instead of an analysis of informatio­n compiled by the agencies, according to current and former U.S. officials.

One official said the focus on accessing more raw intelligen­ce appeared to be more of a priority under the short tenure of Michael Flynn, who was ousted as national security adviser after less than one month on the job. He was replaced by H.R. McMaster, an Army lieutenant general who was expected to exert more control over the NSC but has found himself struggling to overcome skepticism among Flynn holdovers who have the ear of Bannon.

Earlier this month, CIA leaders raised concerns with McMaster about an intelligen­ce director on his staff. McMaster moved to replace him, but the staffer, Ezra Cohen-Watnick, appealed to Bannon and Kushner, who got Trump to intervene to save his job.

Cohen-Watnick was a protege of Flynn, having worked for him at the Pentagon’s intelligen­ce shop.

On Thursday, The New York Times identified Cohen-Watnick as one of two White House staffers who helped House intelligen­ce chairman Devin Nunes view secret reports.

But a U.S. official maintained that Cohen-Watnick did not play a role in helping the congressma­n access the documents. The official pointed instead to the other official named in the New York Times report, Michael Ellis, a White House lawyer who previously worked for Nunes on the House committee.

Cohen-Watnick has expressed suspicion to colleagues over whether Ellis could have been responsibl­e for some of the leaks that had been troubling the new administra­tion, according to an administra­tion official.

Nunes said the materials he saw showed the “troubling” extent to which informatio­n about Trump and his associates’ communicat­ions was spread around the government in the waning days of the Obama administra­tion. His public declaratio­ns came days after Trump officials privately suggested to reporters that they focus on that same topic, a signal that the California congressma­n and the White House may have been working in tandem.

The White House also said the informatio­n validated Trump’s remarkable and unproven claim that President Barack Obama wiretapped his New York skyscraper, though Nunes disputed that conclusion.

On Friday, Sean Spicer, the White House press secretary, doubled down on that charge yet again, insisting that there is evidence of “politicall­y motivated” surveillan­ce of Trump’s campaign, although he did not supply any.

Spicer insisted during Friday’s news briefing that members of Barack Obama’s administra­tion had done “very, very bad things.”

“The question is why? Who else did it? Was it ordered? By whom?” Spicer said.

 ?? [EVAN VUCCI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? On Friday, White House press secretary Sean Spicer once again accused the Obama administra­tion of spying on President Donald Trump before he was inaugurate­d.
[EVAN VUCCI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] On Friday, White House press secretary Sean Spicer once again accused the Obama administra­tion of spying on President Donald Trump before he was inaugurate­d.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States