CIA slams CNN's 'misguided' and 'simply false' reporting on alleged CIA spy's extraction from Kremlin
The Central Intelligence Agency on Monday evening slammed what it called CNN's "misguided" and "simply false" reporting, after the cable channel's chief national security correspondent authored a hole-filled piece claiming
that the CIA had pulled a high-level spy out of Russia because
President Trump had "repeatedly mishandled classified intelligence and
could contribute to exposing the covert source as a spy."
The extraordinary CIA rebuke came as The New York Times published a bombshell piece late in the evening,
which largely contradicted CNN's reporting. According to the Times, CIA
officials "made the arduous decision in late 2016 to offer to extract
the source from Russia" -- weeks before Trump even took office.
Concerns
about media reporting on Russian election interference drove the
decision, according to the Times, which described the source as "the
American government’s best insight into the thinking of and orders” from
Russian President Vladimir Putin.
"Former intelligence officials
said there was no public evidence that Mr. Trump directly endangered the
source, and other current American officials insisted that media
scrutiny of the agency’s sources alone was the impetus for the
extraction," the Times wrote.
The
purported spy refused the 2016 offer of extraction, the Times reported,
citing family concerns. But the CIA "pressed again months later after
more media inquiries" threatened the source, and he relented, according
to the paper.
The whirlwind developments continued into the night on Monday, when NBC News exclusively reported that a possible Russia spy was now living under apparent U.S. protection,
using his true identity, in Washington, D.C. -- and that his life could
be in danger. Sources told NBC News that the Russian living in
Washington was the same individual who was referenced in the reporting
by CNN and the Times, and NBC said he "fits the profile of someone who
may have had access to information about Putin’s activities."
An
NBC reporter who knocked at the Russian's door was confronted by
unidentified men in an SUV, presumed to be security personnel, within
minutes. Speculation about the purported spy's identity, using publicly available records, quickly circulated on social media after NBC News' report revealed identifiable details about his living situation.
Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a reception for
graduates of Russian military education institutions in the Kremlin in
Moscow, Russia, on Thursday, June 27, 2019. (Alexei Druzhinin, Sputnik,
Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)
"CNN's narrative that the Central Intelligence Agency
makes life-or-death decisions based on anything other than objective
analysis and sound collection is simply false," CIA Director for Public
Affairs Brittany Bramell said in a statement.
Bramwell continued:
"Misguided speculation that the President's handling of our nation's
most sensitive intelligence — which he has access to each and every day —
drove an alleged exfiltration operation is inaccurate."
According
to the report by CNN chief national correspondent and former Obama
administration official Jim Sciutto, the decision to carry out the
extraction "occurred soon after a May 2017 meeting in the Oval Office in
which Trump discussed highly classified intelligence with
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and then-Russian Ambassador to
the US Sergey Kislyak. The intelligence, concerning ISIS in Syria, had
been provided by Israel."
The disclosure "prompted intelligence
officials to renew earlier discussions about the potential risk of
exposure," CNN reported.
Sciutto later posted on Twitter,
after the Times report was published, that the double agent in
jeopardy had the "remarkable ability to take photos of presidential
documents," as well as "direct access" to Putin.
"CNN's
narrative that the Central Intelligence Agency makes life-or-death
decisions based on anything other than objective analysis and sound
collection is simply false." — CIA Director for Public Affairs Brittany Bramell
It
was not clear from the CNN piece how exactly Trump's comments in the
Oval Office would have further compromised the Russian source.
Numerous other holes quickly surfaced in CNN's reporting. Commentator Aaron Mate pointed out in a Twitter thread
that several major news organizations had previously cited a high-level
official in the Russian government as a source -- suggesting that the
intelligence community itself, not Trump, had compromised the spy.
For example, The Washington Post reported in June 2017
of "'sourcing deep inside the Russian government' -- so deep that it
purportedly 'captured Putin’s specific instructions' to launch a
pro-Trump influence campaign," Matte noted.
And the Times reported in August 2018 of
"anonymous intel officials complaining that their 'vital Kremlin
informants have largely gone silent.'" But "if these Kremlin informants
are so vital, why are US intel officials talking about them?" Matte
asked.
The source resurfaced in May 2019, when the Times "reported on intel fears of this source being exposed."
"Again,
the irony is lost that it's the ones who are complaining who are the
ones revealing this supposed source," Matte wrote. "So there's a pattern
here of intel leaks in order to: create a false link between
Trump-Russia; to reveal supposed high-level Russian sources that advance
the Russiagate narrative & then falsely blame Trump for these
sources' supposed vulnerability."
Fox News understands that the
CIA typically makes the decision to withdraw an asset only after a long
deliberative process, and that the move would not ordinarily be taken
based on a single event involving classified information, as CNN
implied.
CNN has been faulted for its inaccurate intelligence reporting
in the past. In December 2017, CNN falsely reported that Donald Trump,
Jr. had advance access to hacked WikiLeaks emails, in what Glenn
Greenwald called "one of the most humiliating spectacles in the history of the U.S. media." Several of the organization's much-touted journalists were forced out earlier that year for a separate false Russia bombshell.
CNN did not immediately reply to Fox News' request for comment. Sciutto claimed on CNN's "Anderson Cooper 360" late Monday that the Times had "confirmed" his reporting. Numerous other news organizations, including Vox, The Hill, and the Guardian, picked up CNN's original story uncritically.
The developments led to speculation as to who had leaked the information to CNN -- especially in light of previous anti-Trump leaks that found their way from the intelligence community to CNN's airwaves -- and led commentators to again fault the accuracy of CNN's initial reporting.
"In
their fervor to blame President Trump for mishandling classified
information, CNN potentially risked lives," a source familiar with the
matter told The Daily Wire. "They
had multiple on-the-record quotes from Administration officials telling
them. Their story was not only wrong, but irresponsible and dangerous,
and CNN decided to run with it anyway." Fox News' Catherine Herridge contributed to this report.
No comments:
Post a Comment