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And again, the crisis of the US capitalist class that cannot trust its own
president. From today's WSJ:

"WASHINGTON—President Trump’s combative relationship with U.S. intelligence
agencies has made it difficult for officials to speak candidly to him or
the public about national security threats throughout his tenure,
particularly those involving Russia, according to current and former
officials.

Blunt talk by officials about threats ranging from North Korea’s nuclear
program to Russian election interference has resulted in Twitter-powered
fusillades or private tongue-lashings from Mr. Trump—and contributed to his
dismissals of senior intelligence officials seen as insufficiently loyal,
the officials said.

The challenges of communicating intelligence that President Trump may not
want to hear are on renewed display amid revelations about intelligence
assessments that Russia paid bounties to the Taliban to carry out attacks
on U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

The White House said Mr. Trump wasn’t briefed on the intelligence because
it was unverified. However, Republican lawmakers have acknowledged it was
contained in the daily intelligence brief prepared for the president, and
several said they take the potential threat seriously. Mr. Trump has called
reports of the intelligence a “hoax.”

Tensions between Mr. Trump and the intelligence community existed even
before Mr. Trump took office. During the presidential transition, Mr. Trump
blamed intelligence agencies for leaks of unsubstantiated claims about his
relationship with Russia and accused them of acting like “Nazi Germany.”
But the Russia bounties episode has offered a rare look at the impact of
Mr. Trump’s distrust of intelligence agencies, former officials said.

Mr. Trump is known among intelligence officials to be especially sensitive
to issues involving Russia. Marc Polymeropoulos, who was a senior Central
Intelligence Agency officer until last summer, said that when a briefer
would raise issues related to Russia, “Trump would flip out.”

“There’s probably a lot of self-censorship” in terms of what the
president’s intelligence briefers raise in oral presentations, he said.

From the perspective of the president and many White House officials, the
mistrust goes both ways. Former senior intelligence officials from the
Obama administration are vocal critics of Mr. Trump in the media, where
they routinely call him a threat to national security and the rule of the
law—something many current and former officials privately concede is
unhelpful. And Mr. Trump and other officials have claimed the investigation
into Russian election interference was motivated by a desire to damage his
presidency, pointing to the largely discredited Steele dossier that alleged
Moscow had compromising information on the president—as well as the
applications for surveillance of one-time campaign adviser Carter Page,
which a Justice Department watchdog concluded were riddled with errors—as
evidence of bad faith.

The Central Intelligence Agency prepares the President’s Daily Brief, a
classified digest gleaned from human spies, electronic intercepts and other
sources of information. An intelligence official typically meets with the
president and other senior White House officials to highlight key takeaways
from the prepared brief, according to former officials.

Beth Sanner, a CIA officer, works as Mr. Trump’s briefer, presenting main
elements of the daily report, which is supplied on an iPad but rarely read
by Mr. Trump, former officials have said.

National security adviser Robert O’Brien said in a televised interview this
week that Ms. Sanner, whom he didn’t name, was an “outstanding officer” who
chose not to verbally raise the Russian bounty intelligence because it was
uncorroborated.

However, Ms. Sanner doesn’t unilaterally decide what issues from the daily
brief to raise directly with Mr. Trump, former officials said, adding such
decisions typically are made in consultation with senior White House
advisers.

Mr. Polymeropoulos, the former CIA officer, said the breakdown in
presenting the bounty intelligence to Mr. Trump wasn’t the briefer’s fault
and that Mr. O’Brien and others should have flagged it to the president,
particularly as he was in the process of trying to get Russia back into the
Group of Seven leading nations.

“Throwing Beth Sanner under the bus, that’s just grotesque,” he said.

The National Security Council and CIA didn’t respond to a request for
comment. White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany this week, when
questioned about Mr. Trump’s use of intelligence, called him “the most
informed person on planet Earth” and blamed “some rogue intelligence
officer” for leaking information.
The issue of intelligence verifiability has become a central defense of the
White House to explain why Mr. Trump wasn’t briefed.

The National Security Agency dissented from the CIA’s view on some of the
intelligence, according to people familiar with the matter. While some said
that the difference of opinion was substantive, others said it was more
technical and didn’t concern the central assessment that operatives with
Russia’s GRU intelligence agency paid the Taliban to kill Americans.

The CIA is confident the bounty program existed, two of the people familiar
with the matter said. Former intelligence officials have said uncertainty
is pervasive in their profession.

Both Republicans and Democrats demanded information about the intelligence.
Democratic critics said Mr. Trump should have been made directly aware of
the intelligence. Rep. Elissa Slotkin (D., Mich.), a former CIA analyst,
noted that the president had several calls with Russian President Vladimir
Putin within recent months, a key reason he should have been kept informed
even if the intelligence weren’t fully corroborated.

“The thing that gets me is the frequency with which the president was
engaging personally with Vladimir Putin, moving the relationship forward
into a much more friendly, peer-to-peer status and bringing them into the
G-7,” she said in an interview.

Mr. Trump has dismissed intelligence officials on whom he soured. At least
six senior intelligence officials have been pushed out of their posts since
last summer. They include former intelligence chief Dan Coats and his
deputy, Sue Gordon, as well as Joseph Maguire, who replaced Mr. Coats, and
one of his deputies, Andrew Hallman.

Mr. Trump also fired Michael Atkinson, the intelligence community inspector
general, who played a key role in shepherding to Congress a whistleblower
complaint that eventually would lead to his impeachment by the
Democratic-controlled House.

Intelligence officials have come to prefer avoiding possible conflict with
Mr. Trump, current and former officials said. The heads of leading U.S.
intelligence agencies haven’t appeared this year before Congress for annual
hearings on world-wide threats. Their absence—despite bipartisan requests
to appear—stemmed from concerns of contradicting the president, people
familiar with the dynamics have said.

Last year, Mr. Coats, then the director of national intelligence, and other
senior officials differed from Mr. Trump in their analysis of threats
related to North Korea, Syria, Iran and elsewhere. Though the disagreements
were carefully worded, the president later upbraided them on Twitter,
saying they should “go back to school.”

Election security also is a sensitive issue. Some officials have been
reluctant to directly bring up the issue of Russian election interference,
past or present, officials have said. Mr. Trump repeatedly has questioned
the conclusions of the intelligence community that Moscow interfered in the
2016 election to his benefit. Election security efforts across various
federal agencies have become a balancing act that requires addressing
Moscow’s intentions without upsetting the president, according to current
and former officials.

In February, Mr. Trump grew irate during an Oval Office briefing on
election security after learning that lawmakers received a classified
hearing on the same topic a day earlier, people familiar with the meeting
have said. In the meeting, Mr. Trump expressed frustration that lawmakers
were told about Russia’s possible interest in interfering on his behalf,
these people said.

The result is that the White House now is minimally involved in election
security efforts, an arrangement that many officials have come to prefer
because it creates less friction.

“There are efforts on the parts of many stakeholders to monitor what the
president sees and hears,” said Andrea Kendall-Taylor, a former senior
intelligence official who worked on issues related to Russia and
Afghanistan. “Certainly the election meddling stuff and what Russia is
doing in the run-up to the election is an area where this has been most
apparent.”

Ms. Kendall-Taylor, who now works as the director of the Transatlantic
Security Program at the Center for a New American Security, said the lack
of a full picture being raised to the president increases the likelihood of
foreign policy miscalculations. She compared the situation to authoritarian
regimes where officials are “not passing up information that a leader
doesn’t want to hear.”

“These are the hard choices that people are having to make that they
shouldn’t have to make,” Ms. Kendall-Taylor said."
https://www.wsj.com/articles/a-new-chapter-in-fraught-ties-between-president-spies-11593777654?mod=hp_lead_pos11

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