House panel asks Trump's acting spy chief to explain spate of firings
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[April 08, 2020]
By Jonathan Landay
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The House
Intelligence Committee chairman on Tuesday called on U.S. President
Donald Trump's acting spy chief to explain the removals and resignations
of top intelligence officials and whether he ever tried to block probes
by the intelligence community's recently fired internal watchdog.
Democrat Adam Schiff also wrote in a letter that the panel will examine
whether any of acting Director of National Intelligence Richard
Grenell’s staff interfered “with the production and dissemination" of
intelligence for a March 10 congressional briefing on election
interference.
The letter to Grenell, a fierce Trump loyalist who also serves as U.S.
ambassador to Germany, set the stage for a fresh confrontation with a
president still fuming over his December impeachment by the
Democratic-led House of Representatives on charges of abuse of office
and obstruction of Congress. Schiff was the lead manager in that effort.
The Republican-majority Senate in January acquitted Trump of the charges
stemming from his attempt to pressure Ukraine to probe former Vice
President Joe Biden, the leading Democratic challenger to Trump’s
re-election in November, and his son, Hunter.
Grenell said on Twitter that Schiff's letter went to the media before he
received it, adding "These press leaks politicizing the intelligence
community must stop."
Trump in January named Grenell, who has no intelligence experience,
acting director of national intelligence, the overseer of all 17 U.S.
intelligence agencies.
Grenell ordered a hiring freeze and a review that officials said is
aimed at improving resource and personnel uses. But some lawmakers and
former intelligence officials expressed concerns that Grenell was
targeting officers whose analyses differed with the views of Trump, who
has clashed with U.S. intelligence agencies.
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Richard Grenell U.S. Ambassador to Germany attends the "Rally for
Equal Rights at the United Nations (Protesting Anti-Israeli Bias)"
aside of the Human Rights Council at the United Nations in Geneva,
Switzerland, March 18, 2019. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
The intelligence committee, Schiff wrote, is concerned that Grenell
is pursuing changes without seeking congressional authorization.
"This effort appears to be proceeding despite the Coronavirus
pandemic and amid indications... of political interference in the
production and dissemination of intelligence," he wrote.
The committee also is concerned, he said, by the removals or
departures of all Senate-confirmed ODNI officials.
Schiff asked Grenell to explain those actions in writing by April
16.
He set the same deadline for Grenell to disclose whether he blocked
any investigations by Michael Atkinson, whose firing by Trump last
week as the inspector general for the intelligence community the
committee is reviewing.
Trump said Atkinson did “a terrible job” by sending to Congress the
whistleblower complaint that led to his impeachment, calling it
"fake.”
(Reporting by Jonathan Landay; editing by Mary Milliken and Dan
Grebler)
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