Ex-Spy Chief Admits Role In ‘Deep State’ Intelligence War On Trump

Tyler Durden's picture

An ex-spy chief who spoke out publicly against Trump while inspiring other career intelligence figures to follow suit has admitted his leading role in the intelligence community waging political war against the president, describing his actions as something he didn’t “fully think through”. In a surprisingly frank interview, the CIA’s Michael Morell – who was longtime Deputy Director and former Acting Director of the nation’s most powerful intelligence agency – said that it wasn’t a great idea to leak against and bash a new president.

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Morell had the dubious distinction of being George W. Bush’s personal daily briefer for the agency before and after 9/11, and also served under Obama until his retirement. In the summer of 2016 he took the unusual step (for a former intelligence chief) of openly endorsing Hillary Clinton in a New York Times op-ed entitled, I Ran the C.I.A. Now I’m Endorsing Hillary Clinton, after which he continued to be both an outspoken critic of Trump and an early CIA voice promoting the Russian collusion and election meddling narrative.


Acting director of the CIA Michael Morell with Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta
in 2013. Image source: Wiki Commons, DoD

As Politico’s Susan Glasser put in a newly published interview, Morell “has emerged out of the shadows of the deep state” to become one of Trump’s foremost critics speaking within the intel community. However, Politico summarizes the interview as follows:

But in a revealingly self-critical and at times surprising interview for this week’s Global POLITICO, Morell acknowledges that he and other spy-world critics of the president failed to fully “think through” the negative backlash generated by their going political. “There was a significant downside,” Morell said in the interview.

Not only had Morell during his previous NYT op-ed stated that he was committed to doing “everything I can to ensure that she is elected as our 45th president” but he went so far as to call then candidate Trump “a threat to our national security” – while making the extraordinary claim that “in the intelligence business, we would say that Mr. Putin had recruited Mr. Trump as an unwitting agent of the Russian Federation.”

Curiously, Morell in his latest Politico interview indicates when asked about his “public profile” and activism so soon after leaving the agency (something that was relatively unusual prior to Trump taking office) that his post-retirement media appearances have been approved and/or received some level of oversight by the CIA. In the interview Morell states, “I did a 60 Minutes interview about my life inside CIA, and it’s something the agency thought that was a good thing to do, and I taped most of it before I left the agency.”

While such CIA review of former employees’ publications and media interaction is nothing new, in Morell’s case was an unprecedented example of a very high profile intelligence figure explicitly campaigning for a presidential candidate and against another while specifically invoking his role at the CIA (he began his NYT column with, “During a 33-year career at the Central Intelligence Agency, I served presidents of both parties — three Republicans and three Democrats…” followed by a litany of key national security events he was central to).

The other important confirmation to come out of the discussion is the clear guiding assumption of the interview – that the intelligence “deep state” did in fact go to war with Trump – which has now been confirmed by Morell himself, which is essentially to hear it straight from the horse’s mouth.

The key exchange in the Politico interview begins as follows:

Glasser: Okay, so, flash-forward a year. Was that a mistake?

 

Morell: So, I don’t think it was a mistake. I think there were downsides to it that I didn’t think about at the time. I was concerned about what is the impact it would have on the agency, right? Very concerned about that, thought that through. But I don’t think I fully thought through the implications.

 

And one of the ways I’ve thought about that, Susan, is—okay, how did Donald Trump see this? Right? And from—it’s very important—one of the things we do as intelligence analysts is make sure that our guy—the president—understands the other guy. Right?

 

So, let’s put ourselves here in Donald Trump’s shoes. So, what does he see? Right? He sees a former director of CIA and a former director of NSA, Mike Hayden, who I have the greatest respect for, criticizing him and his policies. Right? And he could rightfully have said, “Huh, what’s going on with these intelligence guys?” Right?

Morell here seems to confirm Trump’s narrative of events concerning Russiagate “fake news” and willful intelligence leaks intended to damage the president, despite his opening obfuscation of “I don’t think it was a mistake” (so he’s essentially admitting the negative consequences but with no regrets).

Surprisingly, Morell even implicates himself with the words, “And then he sees a former acting director and deputy director of CIA criticizing him and endorsing his opponent.”  The interview continues:

Glasser: It embroiders his narrative.

 

Morell: Exactly. And then he sees a former acting director and deputy director of CIA criticizing him and endorsing his opponent. And then he gets his first intelligence briefing, after becoming the Republican nominee, and within 24 to 48 hours, there are leaks out of that that are critical of him and his then-national security advisor, Mike Flynn.

 

And so, this stuff starts to build, right? And he must have said to himself, “What is it with these intelligence guys? Are they political?” The current director at the time, John Brennan, during the campaign occasionally would push back on things that Donald Trump had said.

 

So, when Trump talked about the Iran nuclear deal being the worst deal in the history of American diplomacy, and he was going to tear it up on the first day—John Brennan came out publicly and said, “That would be an act of folly.” So, he sees current sitting director pushing back on him. Right?

 

Then he becomes president, and he’s supposed to be getting a daily brief from the moment he becomes the president-elect. Right? And he doesn’t. And within a few days, there’s leaks about how he’s not taking his briefing. So, he must have thought—right?—that, “Who are these guys? Are these guys out to get me? Is this a political organization? Can I think about them as a political organization when I become president?”

 

So, I think there was a significant downside to those of us who became political in that moment. So, if I could have thought of that, would I have ended up in a different place? I don’t know. But it’s something I didn’t think about.

Despite Morell’s attempts to mitigate his own significant contributions toward creating a climate of distrust between the White House and the intelligence bureaucracy, it seems clear to the interviewee that Morell’s admissions lend credence to Trump’s side.

Indeed, Susan Glasser reasons, based on Morell’s unexpected confessions, that “you or others who spoke out and have continued to speak out actually tend to underscore his feeling that there’s a political divide.”

Glasser: Well, it’s very interesting, because of course, there are so many things you don’t know at that moment in time, including, of course, I’m sure you assumed, along with everybody else, that Hillary Clinton was likely to be elected, and you saw this as contributing to that in some way. But it’s certainly relevant in the context of the situation we find ourselves in a year later. And, if it tends to embolden Trump in his critique of your former colleagues who are still serving in the intelligence agencies, and not only has this been a theme that he has struck repeatedly to criticize—but also to politicize this.

 

And inadvertently, perhaps, you or others who spoke out and have continued to speak out actually tend to underscore his feeling that there’s a political divide, and now you and others are on one side of it, and potentially all your former colleagues, and then he’s on the other side of it…

 

Morell: Yeah, and you can’t pick and choose like that. And when people in the intelligence community—particularly people in CIA, because for every other part of the intelligence community except CIA, you’re working for a cabinet member. At CIA, you are working for the president of the United States. That is your customer. Right? 00:08:03 So, when you see your customer questioning what it is that you are providing to him or her, and that person seems to be cherry-picking what they accept and what they don’t accept, it’s demoralizing. And when it’s demoralizing, people take actions, right? So, I live pretty close to the agency, and there’s a coffee shop between me and the agency, and I’ve met a number of agency officers in that coffee shop who have said to me, “I’m thinking about leaving.”

Yet Morell in a round about way previously admitted that he is personally one of the chief authors of precisely this “demoralizing” scenario in which the president doesn’t fully trust his intelligence briefers.

But we should all remember that this is a man who on the one hand described “Russia’s hacking is the political equivalent of 9/11” and constantly hyped “Russian propaganda”, while on the other he went on a lengthy RT News segment in order to promote his newly published book.

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14 Comments
CCRider
CCRider
December 12, 2017 7:37 am

Go easy trump fans. At least they didn’t grassy knoll him.

Yet

Vodka
Vodka
December 12, 2017 7:56 am

A rat will take extreme measures when they realize the ship they’re on is sinking.

Morell is surely a rat.

Southern Sage
Southern Sage
December 12, 2017 8:10 am

Morell was a paper pushing bureaucrat. He was never a real CIA officer, just like that Commie shit Brennan.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  Southern Sage
December 12, 2017 11:30 am

Most of the CIA are paper pushers. Dangerous ones. The number of people working for the US who speak Pashto or Urdu can be counted on one hand.

Anonymous
Anonymous
December 12, 2017 8:28 am

There are probably some very serious laws being broken here, not that anyone is going to be willing to bring charges against anyone (they’re all too busy investigating Trump’s illegal ties with Russia, even if they can’t find any).

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
December 12, 2017 9:07 am

We’d be better off without these agencies. If we need intelligence/spying, let the military handle it.

ragman
ragman
December 12, 2017 9:20 am

WTF is President Trump doing about this? Why is Mueller still conducting his non-violent(so far) coup and not in prison. Why hasn’t Sessions fired Rosenstein, Mc Cabe, and the Pit Bull Jew lawyer that destroyed Arthur Andersen among others? Anyone that cannot see that this is the latest installment of said coup that started the day after Trump was elected has his/her head securely up they ass. If Mueller is successful, this country will come unglued. A valid election held in compliance with federal and state laws and decided by the electoral college will become nugatory. If Trump allows this to happen he only has himself to blame.

jamesthedeplorablewanderer
jamesthedeplorablewanderer
  ragman
December 12, 2017 2:09 pm

Right now Mueller seems to be performing several useful functions – he is concentrating Trump’s political enemies inside the FBI and other places into one, easily observable and eventually purgeable location. While lately he’s been LOWERING their credibility and power – everyone with eyes can see his inquiry is LOADED with Hillary partisans, Never-Trumper fanatics and similar bottom-feeders.
When Mueller finally gives up and goes home, everyone who participated with him in this “we gotta get Trump by any means possible, including lying, making up offenses and generally making political moves” farce will be permanently unemployable in government. They will all be so unbelievable that even the MSM Pravda types won’t quote them. That’s going to be quite an accomplishment, even if Trump has to put up with some tremendous stupidity up until then.

Not Sure
Not Sure
December 12, 2017 9:25 am

He seems to be one confused puppy, right? I mean, like when I speak with some one and the end of every one of their sentences are, right? It shows me they are not sure of their position and are fishing for support for their statements, right?

Edit: maybe the deep state is losing, as evidenced in his lack of confidence from his previous bold statements?

Barnum Bailey
Barnum Bailey
December 12, 2017 10:33 am

The CIA is a government-within-a-government. It has basically run foreign policy (which is THE MEANS by which insiders profit from using the USA as their mercenaries) since Kennedy.

The USA’s state divorced itself of any measure of control by citizens in the 1960’s. Elections became nothing but Kabuki Theater, the CIA’s upper echelon, its enablers and its friends all got richer than kings of yore by selling this, toppling that, and always positioning to PROFIT in advance.

No wonder they hate Trump. Trump is the first change Americans have had in 50+ years to say, “BULLSHIT, we’re not playing that game any more.” I don’t figure Trump will entirely succeed against the CIA (which is the Top Hydra Head of the Deep State) but I do think that as the USA eventually rolls over into full scale decline, organs like the CIA will find themselves starved of the rent-seeking opportunities that made their senior managements’ families as rich as the Duke of York.

We will know we’re finally on the right track when, if someone walks in and flashes ID that says, “I’m from the CIA,” the response is to draw a gun instantly and do the obvious.

The USA needs to break up into much smaller (and more difficult to rob blind-deaf-dumb) entities.

Mad as hell
Mad as hell
December 12, 2017 11:09 am

“describing his actions as something he didn’t “fully think through”. ”

This seems to be a chronic affliction of most government “officials” these days. From the military leaders that think it is a good idea to bring freedom to other countries by blowing everyone up, to the idiot local counsel member that somehow thinks it will work out to allow thousands of third world trash in to otherwise nice cities for “diversity”.

The problem though seems to be that our citizenry continues to just shrug their shoulders, watch the stupid unfold, and do nothing about it in large enough numbers to make any change.
I will be the first to admit that “voting” is a joke. However, one can vote with other things besides something with a “hanging Chad” or a button on a touchscreen. Vote with your wallet. Where do you suppose all of these “black budgets” come from. Yes, the Fed, however WE are the tax donkeys that continue to underwrite the debt that this particular den of thieves prints.

Less debt = less money needed = less taxes you are forced to pay for this crap. Quit funding the masters on the plantation. If people would just take a look at what they are personally doing to fund the programs and people that are actively working against their interests, it would go a long way towards removing the cancer of incompetence and authority that currently occupys the organs of government.

GilbertS
GilbertS
December 12, 2017 11:21 am

Don’t worry about it. You can’t effect it, can’t stop it, and can’t even understand it.
You’ll know what really happened in 20-30 years when they’re all dying off and making deathbed confessions or writing books about it.

Centurion44
Centurion44
December 12, 2017 12:31 pm

You think?

ottomatik
ottomatik
December 12, 2017 6:06 pm

For fucks sake, we are getting pretty close to open rebellion…