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Trump pushes back against US spy chiefs on North Korea

January 30, 2019
(L-R) FBI Director Christopher Wray; CIA Director Gina Haspel; and Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats testify at a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on
(L-R) FBI Director Christopher Wray; CIA Director Gina Haspel; and Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats testify at a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on "Worldwide Threats" in Washington, DC. The intelligence leaders discussed North Korea, Russia, China and cybersecurity among other topics. — AFP

WASHINGTON — US President Donald Trump dismissed assessments by top US spy chiefs of the threat posed by North Korea on Wednesday, offering a more optimistic view that there was a “decent chance of denuclearization” on the Korean Peninsula.

Leaders of the US intelligence community told a Senate panel on Tuesday that the threat from North Korea remained unchanged from a year ago and said Pyongyang viewed its nuclear program as vital to the country’s survival and was unlikely to give it up.

The Republican president has repeatedly clashed with leaders of the US intelligence community, most strikingly in disputing their finding that Russia intervened in the 2016 presidential election to help him win the White House.

Trump has invested heavily in improving relations with Pyongyang in hopes of getting the reclusive communist nation to abandon its nuclear ambitions.

He broke with decades of US policy when he agreed to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un last June and planned a second summit in February.

“North Korea relationship is best it has ever been with US No testing, getting remains, hostages returned. Decent chance of Denuclearization,” Trump said in a Twitter post, drawing a comparison to the “horrendous” relationship with his Democratic predecessor Barack Obama.

“Now a whole different story. I look forward to seeing Kim Jong Un shortly. Progress being made-big difference!”

Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats and CIA Director Gina Haspel, however, told the Senate Intelligence Committee that North Korea was committed to developing a nuclear missile capable of threatening the United States.

North Korea is “unlikely to completely give up its nuclear weapons and production capabilities because its leaders ultimately view nuclear weapons as critical to regime survival,” Coats said.

A number of North Korea analysts agree. “There is absolutely no reason or sufficient incentives for North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons. North Korea wants to play Trump and get sanctions off its back,” said Srinivasan Sitaraman, a political science professor at Clark University.

Trump also defended his decision to withdraw 2,000 US troops from Syria on grounds that Daesh (so-called IS) no longer poses a threat, saying “we’ve beaten them.”

“Caliphate will soon be destroyed, unthinkable two years ago,” Trump said on Twitter.

Trump has given the military about four months to withdraw the troops in Syria, backtracking from his abrupt order last month that the military pull out within 30 days.

The US spy chiefs said Daesh would continue to pursue attacks from Syria and Iraq against regional and Western adversaries, including the United States.

Intelligence committee member Senator Angus King, an independent who caucuses with Democrats, said he was disturbed by Trump’s comments.

“It’s still disturbing that the president doesn’t seem to want to listen to the people whose job it is to give him this information,” King told CNN on Wednesday.

China and Russia pose the biggest risks to the United States, and are more aligned than they have been in decades as they target the 2020 presidential election and American institutions to expand their global reach, US intelligence officials told senators on Tuesday.

The directors of the CIA, FBI, National Security Agency and other intelligence agencies flanked Coats at the Senate Intelligence Committee hearing. They described an array of economic, military and intelligence threats, from highly organized efforts by China to scattered disruptions by terrorists, hacktivists and transnational criminals.

“China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea increasingly use cyber operations to threaten both minds and machines in an expanding number of ways — to steal information, to influence our citizens, or to disrupt critical infrastructure,” Coats said. “Moscow’s relationship with Beijing is closer than it’s been in many decades,” he told the panel.

“The Chinese counterintelligence threat is more deep, more diverse, more vexing, more challenging, more comprehensive and more concerning than any counterintelligence threat I can think of,” FBI Director Christopher Wray said. He said almost all the economic espionage cases in the FBI’s 56 field offices “lead back to China.” — Reuters


January 30, 2019
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