Washington:
The top Democrat of the American Senate intelligence committee said on Thursday that he suspected that a task force constituted by the director of the National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard chased the “witch hunting” for intelligence officials, which is dissatisfied for President Donald Trump.
Virginia’s Senator Mark Warner said in an interview with Reuters that Gabbard’s office did not abbreviate him on the director’s initiative group as his predecessors would have done.
Warner said, “It seems just one pass to a witch hunting and it is going to reduce our national security further.” He did not cite specific evidence.
Gabbard spokesperson, Olivia Coleman, stated that Gabard was “crystal clear” about excavation, and publicly provided publicly comprehensive information about the group, including the announcement of the task force, during the Fox News interview and at a cabinet meeting on Thursday.
Although Gabbard announced the task force on Tuesday, it was working in early January, working in early January based on public announcements of projects, saying it was handled.
Gabbard said on Tuesday that DIG aims to restore “transparency and accountability” to American intelligence agencies as per the executive orders by Trump.
It is also “checking the weaponation, maintaining deep -prone politicization, exposing unauthorized revelations of classified intelligence, and destroying information working in a public interest,” he said.
Gabbard said in the Fox News interview on Tuesday that the excavation “had some of the most talented intelligence officers.”
Trump has promised to overhall the American spy agencies, “vowed to clean the corrupt actors in our national security and intelligence system” that he was doing “weapons” against them.
Gabbard has stated that Dig’s work included the decline of files such as the origin of Kovid announced in late January, and on the killings of President John F. Kennedy released in mid -March.
He said in a cabinet meeting on Thursday that employee Martin Luther King Junior and Senator Robert F. Working intensely to prepare to release files on Kennedy’s killings.
Gabbard told Fox News that the task force is also looking at “Russia’s collusion Hocx”, using Trump to condemn intelligence conclusions that Moscow employed cyber operations to impress the 2016 presidential vote in his favor.
The report of the July 2018 bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee confirmed those findings. The panel of that time was chaired by Marco Rubio, who is now Trump’s Secretary of State.
Warner said that the 18-agency was built in 2005 to oversee the US Intelligence community, as it required a review in the expansion of the office of the Director of National Intelligence.
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