U.S. intelligence officials to do in-person election security briefings
for lawmakers after all
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[September 17, 2020]
By Mark Hosenball
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Top U.S.
intelligence officials will provide in-person briefings to congressional
intelligence committees on foreign efforts to meddle in the 2020
election after all, having previously said they would communicate mainly
in writing, senators said on Wednesday.
The leaders of the Senate Intelligence Committees said in a statement
that John Ratcliffe, the former Republican Congressman who is President
Donald Trump's new Director of National Intelligence (DNI), had
confirmed that their committee would continue receiving in-person
briefings.
In late August, a DNI statement said that it would stop in-person
election-related briefings because it had concerns information had been
leaked to the public, a plan that drew immediate criticism from
Democrats.
"Ratcliffe reaffirmed that the Senate Intelligence Committee will
continue receiving briefings, including in-person, on all oversight
topics – including election matters," Senators Marco Rubio and Mark
Warner, the committee's top Republican and Democrat, said in a
statement.
Ratcliffe in a statement said in-person election intelligence briefings
would continue for intelligence committees in both the Senate and the
House of Representatives, but not for the full Congress.
"To protect sources and methods, the IC will not provide all-member
briefings, but we will work to provide appropriate updates primarily
through written finished intelligence products," Ratcliffe said.
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U.S. Capitol is seen in Washington, U.S., December 6, 2018.
REUTERS/Yuri Gripas
The director of the National Counterintelligence and Security Center
on Aug. 7 warned that Russia, China and Iran were all trying to
interfere in the Nov. 3 election, with Russia already trying to
undercut Democratic candidate Joe Biden.
Multiple reviews by U.S. intelligence agencies have concluded that
Russia acted to boost Trump's 2016 campaign and undermine his rival
Hillary Clinton. Trump has long bristled at that finding, which
Russia denies.
House intelligence panel chairman Adam Schiff, a Democrat, said
lawmakers were working to confirm a date and time for briefings,
which he said in a statement "must not obviate the need to keep all
Members and the American people appropriately and accurately
informed about the active threats to the November election."
(Reporting By Mark Hosenball; Editing by Scott Malone and Grant
McCool)
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