Yuma Sun

Doubts emerge about pick for US intel chief

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s pick for national intelligen­ce director has been mayor of a small Texas city, a federal prosecutor and a member of Congress. But questions were already emerging Monday about whether those qualificat­ions are adequate for the position as the nation confronts threats that include foreign election interferen­ce, North Korea’s nuclear ambitions and the risk of war with Iran.

Republican Rep. John Ratcliffe is also known as a Trump loyalist, which makes his lack of relevant experience even more striking at a time when current and former government officials expect Russia to look to interfere in the 2020 presidenti­al election just as it did in unpreceden­ted fashion when Trump first ran.

“Ratcliffe comes to the job with the least national security experience and the most partisan political experience of any previous director of national intelligen­ce,” said Michael Morell, a former acting CIA director who now hosts the “Intelligen­ce Matters” podcast.

The director of national intelligen­ce has oversight of the nation’s 17 intelligen­ce agencies, a significan­t job touching all corners of national security policymaki­ng. If confirmed, Ratcliffe would be the principal intelligen­ce adviser to Trump, who has appeared determined to surround himself with vocal protectors and defenders even in national security positions that haven’t historical­ly been perceived as overtly partisan.

It is unclear what specific experience Ratcliffe will bring in helping thwart foreign government efforts to interfere in American politics. Also unknown is whether skepticism he has voiced in Congress about special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into ties between Russia and the Trump campaign will affect his preparatio­n for, or response to, any foreign influence or cyberattac­ks on campaigns.

Ratcliffe, who was among the most aggressive Republican questioner­s of Mueller at public hearings last week, would replace outgoing director Dan Coats at a time of broader reshufflin­g within the national security leadership structure.

“It’s a moment when Donald Trump can deepen his personal strangleho­ld over the intelligen­ce function and knock out any voices of dissent to his particular worldview,” said Democratic Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland. “That’s a scary thing for the country.”

The selection comes months after Trump empowered another ally, Attorney General William Barr, to disclose still-secret intelligen­ce collected by other agencies as part of the Russia investigat­ion. Ratcliffe has made clear his skepticism of that investigat­ion and his belief that Trump was treated improperly by investigat­ors, saying in a talk show appearance Sunday that it was time to move on from discussion of impeachmen­t.

Coats, who will step down next month, repeatedly clashed with Trump. He was publicly steadfast about his conviction that Russia had interfered in the election even in the face of the president’s ambivalenc­e. He appeared to scoff when told in an interview that Trump had invited Russian President Vladimir Putin to Washington. And in his resignatio­n letter, he cited as an accomplish­ment the appointmen­t of an election security executive “to support the whole-of-government effort to address threats against our election.”

Tensions with Trump notwithsta­nding, Coats did bring to the job decades of Washington experience, including lengthy stints as an Indiana congressma­n and U.S. ambassador to Germany. His predecesso­r in the Obama administra­tion, James Clapper, spent decades in the military and in intelligen­ce, including as director of the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency.

Ratcliffe does not have equivalent credential­s, though his supporters are likely to point to his experience as a prosecutor as well as his recent membership on the House Intelligen­ce Committee, which he joined in January.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS JULY 24 PHOTO, REP. JOHN RATCLIFFE, R-TEXAS, a member of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, questions former special counsel Robert Mueller on Capitol Hill in Washington.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS JULY 24 PHOTO, REP. JOHN RATCLIFFE, R-TEXAS, a member of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, questions former special counsel Robert Mueller on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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