Analyst Quits CIA and Blames His Departure on Trump

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[h=1]I didn’t think I’d ever leave the CIA. But because of Trump, I quit.[/h]By Edward Price February 20 at 5:26 PM

Edward Price worked at the CIA from 2006 until this month, most recently as the spokesman for the National Security Council.

Nearly 15 years ago, I informed my skeptical father that I was pursuing a job with the Central Intelligence Agency. Among his many concerns was that others would never believe I had resigned from the agency when I sought my next job. “Once CIA, always CIA,” he said. But that didn’t give me pause. This wouldn’t be just my first real job, I thought then; it would be my career.

That changed when I formally resigned last week. Despite working proudly for Republican and Democratic presidents, I reluctantly concluded that I cannot in good faith serve this administration as an intelligence professional.

This was not a decision I made lightly. I sought out the CIA as a college student, convinced that it was the ideal place to serve my country and put an otherwise abstract international- relations degree to use. I wasn’t disappointed.


The CIA taught me new skills and exposed me to new cultures and countries. More important, it instilled in me a sense of mission and purpose. As an analyst, I became an expert in terrorist groups and traveled the world to help deter and disrupt attacks. The administrations of George W. Bush and Barack Obama took the CIA’s input seriously. There was no greater reward than having my analysis presented to the president and seeing it shape events. Intelligence informing policy — this is how the system is supposed to work. I saw that up close for the past three years at the White House, where I worked on loan from the CIA until last month.

As a candidate, Donald Trump’s rhetoric suggested that he intended to take a different approach. I watched in disbelief when, during the third presidential debate, Trump casually cast doubt on the high-confidence conclusion of our 17 intelligence agencies, released that month, that Russia was behind the hacking and release of election-related emails. On the campaign trail and even as president-elect, Trump routinely referred to the flawed 2002 assessment of Iraq’s weapons programs as proof that the CIA couldn’t be trusted — even though the intelligence community had long ago held itself to account for those mistakes and Trump himself supported the invasion of Iraq.

Trump’s actions in office have been even more disturbing. His visit to CIA headquarters on his first full day in office, an overture designed to repair relations, was undone by his ego and bluster. Standing in front of a memorial to the CIA’s fallen officers, he seemed to be addressing the cameras and reporters in the room, rather than the agency personnel in front of them, bragging about his inauguration crowd the previous day. Whether delusional or deceitful, these were not the remarks many of my colleagues and I wanted to hear from our new commander in chief. I couldn’t help but reflect on the stark contrast between the bombast of the new president and the quiet dedication of a mentor — a courageous, steadfast professional — who is memorialized on that wall. I know others at CIA felt similarly.

The final straw came late last month, when the White House issued a directive reorganizing the National Security Council, on whose staff I served from 2014 until earlier this year. Missing from the NSC’s principals committee were the CIA director and the director of national intelligence. Added to the roster: the president’s chief strategist, Stephen K. Bannon, who cut his teeth as a media champion of white nationalism.

The public outcry led the administration to reverse course and name the CIA director an NSC principal, but the White House’s inclination was clear. It has little need for intelligence professionals who, in speaking truth to power, might challenge the “America First” orthodoxy that sees Russia as an ally and Australia as a punching bag. That’s why the president’s trusted White House advisers, not career professionals, reportedly have final say over what intelligence reaches his desk.

To be clear, my decision had nothing to do with politics, and I would have been proud to again work under a Republican administration open to intelligence analysis. I served with conviction under President George W. Bush, some of whose policies I also found troubling, and I took part in programs that the Obama administration criticized and ended. As intelligence professionals, we’re taught to tune out politics. The river separating CIA headquarters in Langley, Va., from Washington might as well be a political moat. But this administration has flipped that dynamic on its head: The politicians are the ones tuning out the intelligence professionals.

The CIA will continue to serve important functions — including undertaking covert action and sharing information with close allies and partners around the globe. If this administration is serious about building trust with the intelligence community, however, it will require more than rallies at CIA headquarters or press statements. What intelligence professionals want most is to know that the fruits of their labor — sometimes at the risk of life or limb — are accorded due deference in the policymaking process.

Until that happens, President Trump and his team are doing another disservice to these dedicated men and women and the nation they proudly, if quietly, serve.
 

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Fuck him and his politics, let's not pretend his resignation means something or changes anything

He's as relevant as Ashley Judd, and he's only getting 15 seconds of fame is because he hates Trump
 

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fuck yes
 

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:nohead:


Look at that woman.

Who raises a pussy like that? That is literally a snowflake.
 

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CIA Analyst Who Quit Over Trump Is A Hillary Donor

Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2017/02/21/cia-analyst-who-quit-over-trump-is-a-hillary-donor/#ixzz4ZNdvzfLw

Loser!@#0azzkick(&^^^:)byebye)(&^:bigfinger:realtongu


That's not news. Wolf asked him about it in the interview.


This is beyond politics for me. All I care about is Trump's ability to act on the intelligence presented to him, and not dismiss it with a wave of the hand. I realize he's learning on the job and that doesn't bother me. Happy about his latest appointment, Macmaster. He's his own man.
 

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That's not news. Wolf asked him about it in the interview.


This is beyond politics for me. All I care about is Trump's ability to act on the intelligence presented to him, and not dismiss it with a wave of the hand. I realize he's learning on the job and that doesn't bother me. Happy about his latest appointment, Macmaster. He's his own man.


do you actually think this agent's resignation is anything but politics? is this man supposed to be important to me?

if yes, tell me why

disagreeing with Trump is not good enough, I would hope some agent disagrees with him and every other president on every issue we ever face. How on earth is it possible they would all agree with the POTUS? (on everything I might add)

fuck him and his politics
 

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PS: it's obvious he's not covert, doubt he's very important, just some dude that's mad his gal lost
 

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That's not news. Wolf asked him about it in the interview.


This is beyond politics for me. All I care about is Trump's ability to act on the intelligence presented to him, and not dismiss it with a wave of the hand. I realize he's learning on the job and that doesn't bother me. Happy about his latest appointment, Macmaster. He's his own man.

Fair enough.

This guy's worldview is the same as the failed Clinton-McCain-Romney-Rubio-Kerry-Obama worldview.

The more globalists like him resign the better.

#DrainTheSwamp
 

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Saw this idiot on CNN this am. Adios mother fker...probably him leaking info.
 

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Oh Boo Hoo. This Attention Whore was leaving anyways for a more lucrative gig in "Private Security" made possible for him by CIA favors done for certain Interests. What Sad Attention Whores these Leftists are. I swear it seems to me like this planet has never seen before any group of people so DESPERATE to be the Center of Attention, get those 15 Minutes of Fame. Genuinely Pathetic. Definition of Pathetic online needs to have a photo of a Leftist Crying next to it.
 

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do you actually think this agent's resignation is anything but politics? is this man supposed to be important to me?

if yes, tell me why

disagreeing with Trump is not good enough, I would hope some agent disagrees with him and every other president on every issue we ever face. How on earth is it possible they would all agree with the POTUS? (on everything I might add)

fuck him and his politics

I wasn't taking a side posting this article, only doing so because it is news. But since you asked my opinion of Trump's knowledge of FP is he's naive and sometimes even clueless. Here's the guy who says he's not going to reveal his plans out of one side of his mouth while he spills state secrets out the other. You always said Obama was the least informed man in the room. Well Trump is not the most informed and it isn't even close.
 

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I wasn't taking a side posting this article, only doing so because it is news. But since you asked my opinion of Trump's knowledge of FP is he's naive and sometimes even clueless. Here's the guy who says he's not going to reveal his plans out of one side of his mouth while he spills state secrets out the other. You always said Obama was the least informed man in the room. Well Trump is not the most informed and it isn't even close.

Couldn't agree more Scott. Trump is an ignorant buffoon. These clowns down here are too ignorant (or party blind) to realize though.
 

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I wasn't taking a side posting this article, only doing so because it is news. But since you asked my opinion of Trump's knowledge of FP is he's naive and sometimes even clueless. Here's the guy who says he's not going to reveal his plans out of one side of his mouth while he spills state secrets out the other. You always said Obama was the least informed man in the room. Well Trump is not the most informed and it isn't even close.





it's simply not possible to compare Trump's work ethic and knowledge adversely with Obama, you're flailing away now

but please do tell me of the state secrets you now know, I'm listening


and then tell me why it's news? because people who value stuff like the women's march and BLM and OWS think so?

he's not news to me, he's a nobody that getting attention because little things impress little minds (and I'm talking about liberals, libtards, democrats and their press).
 

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it's simply not possible to compare Trump's work ethic and knowledge adversely with Obama, you're flailing away now

but please do tell me of the state secrets you now know, I'm listening


and then tell me why it's news? because people who value stuff like the women's march and BLM and OWS think so?

he's not news to me, he's a nobody that getting attention because little things impress little minds (and I'm talking about liberals, libtards, democrats and their press).

I did not compare his work ethic with Obama's. Did I go overboard on the state secret comment? Maybe. But I don't think him feuding with our intelligence agencies is a small matter. Nor should it be public knowledge.

Anyway, whether this story is "news" or the fact that Trump's administration feuds with our government's intelligence agencies are two different topics.

Or maybe I should say it's not news and apologize for posting it so everyone here who doesn't embrace BLM and OWS like me can go on head-nodding ;-)
 

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