Watchdog report shows just how bad another Trump term would be – MSNBC

A recent Office of Inspector General report from the Department of Homeland Security reads like a Charles Dickens novel in that it helps us to see the ghosts of Trump's past, present and future, each one bringing bad tidings.

A recent report helps us see the ghosts of Trump past, present and future, each one bringing bad tidings.

An April 26 report finding that former President Donald Trumps DHS diluted and delayed a 2020 intelligence report that told of Russias plans to aid Trumps re-election with propaganda casting doubts on candidate Joe Bidens health is more than just official confirmation of what has already been alleged by a whistleblower. Its added value is that it provides a window into what the intelligence community was like under Trump, what it might have been like if hed been re-elected and how it would likely operate in the event of a future Trump regime.

Prompted in part by that high-level whistleblowers assertions, the OIG investigated whether then acting Secretary Chad Wolf and his leadership team properly handled the drafting, approval and dissemination of a report revealing that Russias government had a propaganda strategy to denigrate candidate Bidens health. The report found that their treatment of the intelligence and analysis report was anything but proper under the standards of the intelligence community.

We found that DHS did not adequately follow its internal processes and comply with applicable policy standards and requirements when editing and disseminating an I&A [information and analysis] intelligence product regarding Russian interference with the 2020 U.S. Presidential election.

The OIG identified three significant problems. First, it cited DHS for altering the scope of its intelligence reporting for reasons that appear to be based in part on political considerations. Second, the OIG concluded that Wolf participated in the review process multiple times despite lacking any formal role in reviewing product. Third, it determined that delays and deviations put I&A at risk of creating a perception of politicization.

No kidding.

Essentially, certain higher-ups at DHS treated as toxic the intelligence reporting that Russia was going to support Trumps re-election by using its social media propaganda machine to malign Bidens mental health. According to the OIG findings, career intelligence analysts were told the revelations of Russian help must be held because, as the whistleblower told OIG, Wolf said it made the President look bad. A DHS executives notes reflect that Wolf stated in a meeting that the report "will hurt POTUS kill it per his authorities.

Suddenly, the OIG found, the report on Russias intentions was transformed into a draft with dubious claims that it was Trumps campaign that was being targeted, specifically, that Iran and China were trying to support Biden by questioning Trumps health. The OIG found that this alteration was misleading and inconsistent with intelligence information.

The original report, first conceptualized in the spring of 2020, wasnt fully disseminated until six months later on October 15, 2020, 18 days away from the election not with a bang but with a whimper. Thats because the report ultimately watered down the solid intelligence that Russia would help Trump by targeting Biden, by inserting the notion not fully vetted -- that Iran and China might help Biden by targeting Trump.

The OIGs report confirmed what we already knew: Trump disdained and distrusted the intelligence community, even when it meant siding with our adversaries, and he appointed a string of unqualified, but loyal "acting" officials so they could protect his interests but avoid the scrutiny that comes with the Senate confirmation process. As an acting secretary at DHS for more than a year, Chad Wolf was a poster child of an unaccountable lackey. Thats how the OIG report gives us insight into the ghost of the Trump administrations past. But it offers a picture of what a Trump present might have looked like had he won the election, and foretells what a future Trump administration would look like particularly regarding Russia, the U.S. intelligence community and the battle for Ukraine.

The report confirms what we already knew: Trump disdained and distrusted the intelligence community, even when it meant siding with our adversaries.

Under President Biden, weve seen the opposite of intelligence suppression. In fact, theres been an unprecedented public disclosure of intelligence as a strategy against Russia and its leader, Vladimir Putin, and in support of a democratic Ukraine. Bidens reliance on U.S. intelligence has allowed Ukraine and the world to better understand the peril posed by Putin. And, in the interest of freedom and democracy, Biden has promised even more American intelligence sharing with Ukraine moving forward.

The OIG report prompts us to imagine what a present Trump administration might do to defend or not defend Ukraine against Russia. Despite the alleged war crimes perpetrated by Russia in Ukraine, Trump continues to brag of his enduring bond with Putin. If he were still president, would we see the kind of skillful and strategic intelligence collection and disclosures Biden is executing in support of Ukraine? That's unlikely. Might we instead see Trump share with Putin intelligence about Ukraines plans and vulnerabilities? We cant discount that possibility. Hes disclosed highly classified intelligence to the Russians, at the expense of an ally, before.

In the OIG report, we also see the ghost of a Trump future, that is, a second term of even more sinister sycophants primed to pervert the intelligence process for political purposes. The OIG report contains one seemingly simple recommendation: Improve the review and dissemination process for election related intelligence products. The report reflects that the Biden administration concurs with this recommendation, and it has 30 days to implement it.

Would a new Trump administration honor such improvements to the intelligence process? Would they even read the OIG findings? More than likely, wed be faced with an even greater contrast between the Biden and the Trump approaches to intelligence. A contrast that is reminiscent of yet another Dickens novel, A Tale of Two Cities. Because for our intelligence community, depending on whos running the Oval Office, it can be the best of times or the worst of times. It can be the season of Light or the season of Darkness.

Frank Figliuzzi is an MSNBC columnist anda national security contributor for NBC News and MSNBC. He was the assistant director for counterintelligence at the FBI, where he served 25 years as a special agent and directed all espionage investigations across the government. He is the author of "The FBI Way: Inside the Bureau's Code of Excellence."

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Watchdog report shows just how bad another Trump term would be - MSNBC

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