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LetMyPeopleVote

(157,117 posts)
Wed Jan 15, 2025, 05:56 PM Jan 15

Will U.S. allies curtail intelligence sharing in Trump's second term? [View all]

New reporting suggests foreign intelligence officials are taking steps to “limit how much sensitive intelligence they share with the Trump administration.”
https://bsky.app/profile/stevebenen.com/post/3lfmxca4ejc2u

This is a little off the beaten path, but we're due for a conversation about whether U.S. allies are going to curtail intelligence sharing with us once Trump is back in the White House



https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/will-us-allies-curtail-intelligence-sharing-trumps-second-term-rcna187037

When Donald Trump sat down with reporters from Time magazine in late November, the president-elect faced a rather pointed question that he apparently wasn’t expecting: “Mr. President, some foreign officials have expressed concern about sharing intelligence with Tulsi Gabbard, given her positions in support of Russia and Syria. Would her confirmation be worth the price of some of our allies not sharing intelligence with us?”....

More than a month later, Shane Harris has an interesting new report in The Atlantic on Trump’s former DNI, Texas Republican John Ratcliff, whom the president-elect intends to nominate to lead the CIA. The piece added this tidbit:

Several foreign intelligence officials have recently told me that they are taking steps to limit how much sensitive intelligence they share with the Trump administration, for fear that it might be leaked or used for political ends.


While the underlying point hasn’t been independently verified by MSNBC or NBC News, the intelligence dynamic highlighted by The Atlantic and Time magazine is both striking and unfamiliar.

In recent generations, U.S. allies abroad didn’t feel much of a need to curtail intelligence sharing with American officials. But as 2025 gets underway and Trump prepares to return to the White House, it’s a qualitatively different landscape. If all goes according to the president-elect’s plans, the U.S. will soon have:

an erratic president with a track record for allegedly mishandling classified information and blurting out sensitive intelligence secrets for reasons that have never been fully explained;
a director of national intelligence who repeatedly defended Bashar al-Assad’s Syrian regime and has been accused of “repeatedly echoing propaganda spread by Russia”;
and a CIA director with a reputation as a knee-jerk partisan operative, who was accused by a former CIA station chief of being “among the most destructive intelligence officials in U.S. history.”

It’s certainly possible that nothing will come of this. Perhaps the new administration will get underway, officials will manage to reassure U.S. allies abroad, and intelligence sharing will continue as if Trump’s team were normal.
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