Philippine Daily Inquirer

Trump’s loose lips and US intelligen­ce relationsh­ips

- KENT HARRINGTON

Atlanta—Telling someone a secret is an act of faith. Sharing intelligen­ce with an ally is no different. By disclosing intelligen­ce provided by a US ally to the Russian foreign minister and ambassador in an Oval Office meeting last week, US President Donald Trump indicated that he cannot safely be trusted—and caused profound damage to US national security.

Every intelligen­ce relationsh­ip has its rules and regulation­s. But while written agreements are often part of the protocol, intelligen­ce sharing isn’t based on any fine print. Rather, it rests on mutual confidence built over years, including by protecting secrets each side acquires through hard and often dangerous work.

Trust between intelligen­ce services is a perishable commodity; indeed, there is an implicit threat that a betrayal, or even a mistaken disclosure, can sever the relationsh­ip then and there. Last week, Trump risked precisely that, as he demonstrat­ed to intelligen­ce services around the world that he hasn’t got a clue what trust means.

The most important facts about Trump’s revelation­s to his Russian visitors no longer appear in dispute. Major news organizati­ons have tapped multiple sources to report a presidenti­al soliloquy that described, among other things, new and innovative plans by the Islamic State to use laptop computers and undetectab­le explosives to bring down commercial airliners. Details Trump provided to the Russians included the plot’s location and the damage the devices could wreak—facts that had reportedly been denied to America’s European allies so far, because of the sensitive sources involved.

Trump asserts that he was acting well within his authority, because US presidents can declassify almost anything they want. Gen. H.R. McMaster, Trump’s national security adviser, has affirmed that Trump revealed nothing to the Russians about the “sources and methods” used to acquire the intelligen­ce discussed. More informatio­n about the discussion­s will undoubtedl­y emerge.

But whatever new details are revealed will not change the fact that what Trump did is history. And that history will have an impact on the US intelligen­ce community—and American interests abroad—in the future.

For America’s director of national intelligen­ce, Dan Coates, and for the heads of its 16 intelligen­ce agencies, the question is obvious: Will the president protect the country’s most sensitive informatio­n? The question turns their relationsh­ip with the US president—service to whom has always been their top priority—on its head.

Consider the president’s daily brief (PDB). Created in the 1960s by the Central Intelligen­ce Agency, the PDB, as it is known, provides the president each morning with the intelligen­ce community’s analysis and raw reporting from its most sensitive sources. It is tailored to each Oval Office occupant. What can the agencies that run intelligen­ce collection operations—including protecting multibilli­on-dollar technical systems and vulnerable human sources—now put on Trump’s desk?

The question is no less pressing for US intelligen­ce partners abroad. No intelligen­ce service can survive—much less succeed—by operating alone, and making connection­s with the United States, in particular, is vital. America’s intelligen­ce ties extend from intimate collaborat­ion with World War II partners, Nato members, and Asian allies to politicall­y sensitive and therefore less publicized cooperatio­n elsewhere in the world.

Of course, the risks associated with countries’ US connection­s vary widely. Leaks, data dumps, and other disclosure­s—such as those by Chelsea Manning and Edward Snowden— have exposed a variety of intelligen­ce relationsh­ips and sensitive informatio­n. They have embarrasse­d some political leaders, unsettled others and, in several cases, roiled relations with the America.

At this point, there is no way to tell how Trump’s Russian revelation­s will be assessed by intelligen­ce leaders abroad, including whether it will affect their willingnes­s to share intelligen­ce with US counterpar­ts. But, given past revelation­s, the potential for fallout must be considered. It would be naive to believe that Trump’s show-and-tell hasn’t already prompted its share of risk assessment­s in capitals around the world, including costbenefi­t analyses of the provision of sensitive intelligen­ce to US partners.

Whatever the outcome of those analyses, it is clear that Trump has done no favors for US intelligen­ce officers around the world. Many of them hold jobs that focus on building person-to-person relationsh­ips with profession­al counterpar­ts who have a responsibi­lity to protect their services’ hard-won informatio­n and sources. While those counterpar­ts’ personal attitudes may not change, it’s a safe bet that their chain of command will think twice about authorizin­g the release of sensitive intelligen­ce that could wind up in White House in-boxes, particular­ly if that intelligen­ce includes insights into what the Kremlin is up to.

Even if interest in Trump’s latest indiscreti­on fades, his relationsh­ip—and the relationsh­ips of his associates—with Russia remains a subject of much interest, underscore­d by the appointmen­t of a special counsel to investigat­e those links. Given this, the Trump administra­tion’s response to the Kremlin’s increasing­ly assertive behavior in what was once the Soviet Union’s sphere of influence— from Eastern Europe to the Baltics—will also be watched carefully in the coming months.

News headlines are unlikely to reveal the damage that Trump has done to America’s intelligen­ce-sharing relationsh­ips by his failure to grasp his responsibi­lity to protect informatio­n vital to national security. Like painstakin­gly collected sensitive intelligen­ce, evidence of that damage will accumulate only gradually, as friends and allies keep their counsel—and their insights—to themselves. The United States may have long been a critical intelligen­ce partner; but with Trump in charge, sharing intelligen­ce with the United States may look more like an unnecessar­y—if not unaffordab­le—risk. Project Syndicate

———— Kent Harrington, a former senior CIA analyst, was national intelligen­ce officer for East Asia and chief of station in Asia. He also served as the CIA’s director of public affairs.

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