For those of you who might have missed the Senate Intelligence Committee testimony of FBI Director Christopher Wray, CIA Director Mike Pompeo, Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats, NSA Director Mike Rogers, Defense Intelligence Agency Director Robert Ashley, and National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency Director Robert Cardillo this afternoon, I can sum it up in three points… […]
Tag Archives: Defense Intelligence Agency
U.S. Intelligence chiefs warn that our government is lying to us, placing our democracy in peril. (At what point can we start using the word treason?)
Posted in Politics, Uncategorized Also tagged 2016, 2018, Angus King, Chris Wray, CIA, conspiracy theory, cybersecurity, Dan Coats, Devin Nunes, Director of National Intelligence, disinformation, domestic abuse, Donald Trump, election hacking, election integrity, election meddling, FBI, intelligence community, Jack Reed, Joe Kennedy, John Kelly, Martin Heinrich, midterm elections, Mike Pompeo, Mike Rogers, National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, national security, National Security Agency, NSA, Nunes memo, Republican lies, Rob Porter, Robert Ashley, Robert Cardillo, Russia, Russiagate, sanctions, Senate Intelligence Committee, Sheldon Whitehouse, social media, treason, Vladimir Putin, voter suppression 62 Comments
It looks like the intelligence community isn’t going to let us forget about Trump’s ties to Russia
As I suspect all of you know, it’s the opinion of our intelligence community that the Russian government played a role in helping Donal Trump win the presidency. That isn’t fake news. That isn’t a conspiracy theory. That’s the opinion of not one, but 17 U.S. intelligence agencies. And, toward the end of his tenure […]
Posted in Politics, Uncategorized Also tagged alternative facts, Christopher Steele, diplomat, election fraud, emoluments clause, fake news, hacking, Hillary Clinton, House Judiciary Committee, intelligence, Jerrold Nadler, lies, managerial incompetence, Michael Flynn, Mike Pence, National Security Council, pizzagate, resolution of inquiry, Russia, sanctions, Sergey Kislyak 7 Comments