Los Angeles Times

No knowledge of a Russian bounty on U.S. troops?

How presidents get briefed — and why Trump may or may not have heard of a new Afghan threat.

- Associated press

WASHINGTON — The White House says President Trump was never briefed on intelligen­ce that Russia had put a bounty on U.S. soldiers in Afghanista­n because there wasn’t corroborat­ing evidence.

But former intelligen­ce officials say presidents are routinely informed about intelligen­ce even when it’s not definitive­ly confirmed. Intelligen­ce that may be on shaky ground today may foreshadow tomorrow’s calamity.

Some questions and answers about how presidents are briefed on intelligen­ce, what sort of informatio­n they receive and how this applies to the situation with Russia:

How do presidents receive national security informatio­n?

Both orally and through a written document known as the President’s Daily Brief.

The briefing is a compilatio­n of intelligen­ce and national security assessment­s from government analysts. It’s material the intelligen­ce community thinks the president should know.

The document has been provided to presidents in some form since Harry Truman occupied the White House. Some presidents are said to have been voracious consumers of their briefings;

Trump, by contrast, is known to demand only the sparest details. Today, the briefing is coordinate­d by the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce and includes contributi­ons from the CIA and other agencies in the intelligen­ce community that effectivel­y pitch stories for inclusion, said Rodney Faraon, a former CIA analyst who served from 1999 to 2001 on the briefing team for the White House.

“It’s not unlike what you would see in a journalist­ic newsroom,” he said.

What sort of informatio­n gets briefed to a president, and how do agencies know if it’s credible?

Depending on the day, and the particular interests of a president, the briefing could include the latest inside informatio­n about a country a president is preparing to visit, intelligen­ce about potential national security threats or other secrets relating to current events.

“There’s no mathematic­al formula” for deciding what gets briefed to the president, said David Priess, a former CIA intelligen­ce briefer and author of “The President’s Book of Secrets: The Untold Story of Intelligen­ce Briefings to America’s Presidents.”

“The job of the analysts is to decide, ‘does the president need to know this today?’ You are writing for the president,” he added. There’s also no formula for evaluating the credibilit­y of intelligen­ce. Sometimes, informatio­n is deemed reliable because it comes from a trusted source, because it matches up with a separate piece of intelligen­ce or fits into a pattern, or because it derives from surveillan­ce or intercepte­d recordings.

“A lot of it comes down to the source of the informatio­n: Did the source have first-hand access?” said former CIA officer Cindy Otis. Or, conversely, “Is it a person with fourth-hand access who heard it from a dude who heard it from a dude and so on down the chain?

“You’re not going to put garbage in front of the president,” she added.

Do presidents receive intelligen­ce only when it’s confirmed?

Absolutely not. If that were the case, the briefing would be both brief — since intelligen­ce deals more often with uncertaint­y than fact — but also boring, restricted to observatio­ns that are obvious and likely already known to the president, Priess said.

“Because it’s intelligen­ce, that means it deals with the unknown, things that are uncertain — but things that are of grave importance to U.S. national security and worthy of the president’s attention,” he said. “Nothing in there says that it has to be fully verified or certain, because intelligen­ce is rarely certain.”

Modern history is loaded with examples of briefings to presidents that contained warnings, or informed suppositio­ns, but not certifiabl­e facts.

One month before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, President George W. Bush was famously warned in a President’s Daily Brief that Osama bin Laden was determined to strike the United States.

The intelligen­ce, including chatter picked up by counter-terrorism analysts, was seen as urgent and credible enough to bring to the president’s attention though it lacked details about date, location and method.

Nearly a decade later, President Obama’s advisors alerted him to their belief that Bin Laden was in a compound in Pakistan — despite disagreeme­nt over the strength of that intelligen­ce. Obama still approved the operation that killed Bin Laden.

In his book “The Great War of Our Time: The CIA’s Fight Against Terrorism — From al Qa’ida to ISIS,” former CIA Deputy Director Michael Morell writes that his confidence level was at 60%. Other analysts felt more secure.

When Obama asked about the disparity, Morell said it reflected difference­s in individual experience­s, not difference­s in the informatio­n people had.

Why would a president receive uncorrobor­ated informatio­n?

Intelligen­ce that may be on shaky ground today may precede an actual crisis, so briefers are expected to ensure that presidents have the fullest possible picture to prepare for something that may soon require maximum attention.

That’s especially true when even unclear or uncorrobor­ated intelligen­ce indicates that American lives or infrastruc­ture could be at risk.

“The president is going to get hard decisions, and those hard decisions normally come with murky facts and gray areas,” said Larry Pfeiffer, a 32-year intelligen­ce community veteran and chief of staff to the CIA director during the Obama administra­tion.

To account for the uncertaint­y, briefers will qualify the informatio­n and detail internal disagreeme­nts among different intelligen­ce agencies so that presidents understand a situation’s nuance.

How does this apply to the situation with Russia?

White House officials have repeatedly insisted that the president had not been briefed that Russia offered bounties to Talibanlin­ked fighters in Afghanista­n to kill American troops, though officials have told the Associated Press and other news organizati­ons that the informatio­n was included in the President’s Daily Brief.

The AP, citing officials familiar with the matter, also has reported that national security advisor Robert O’Brien had discussed the matter with Trump and that former national security advisor John Bolton told colleagues that he had done the same last year. O’Brien has denied that and Bolton has declined to comment.

O’Brien has said the CIA and Pentagon did pursue the lead and briefed internatio­nal allies. But he said the intelligen­ce wasn’t brought to Trump’s attention initially because it was unverified and there was no consensus among the intelligen­ce community.

After news broke about the intelligen­ce, Trump was briefed, the White House said.

Former intelligen­ce officials say it’s a matter Trump absolutely should have been briefed on earlier, whether corroborat­ed or not.

“The safety and security of American troops posted in a war zone is of the highest importance,” said Faraon, a partner at the Martin and Crumpton Group, a business intelligen­ce firm.

 ?? Mikhail Klimentyev Sputnik ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP with Vladimir Putin. U.S. experts say even uncorrobor­ated evidence of a bounty on U.S. troops should be shared with a president.
Mikhail Klimentyev Sputnik PRESIDENT TRUMP with Vladimir Putin. U.S. experts say even uncorrobor­ated evidence of a bounty on U.S. troops should be shared with a president.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States