Just hours after Donald Trump took the stage on election night to deliver his acceptance speech, critics warned that the inexperienced new leader would inject a previously unknown level of instability into the world of U.S. intelligence and security.
That remains a strong possibility, especially after Mike Rogers, the hawkish former chair of the House Intelligence oversight committee, and Matthew Freedman, who had been in charge of the planning for the National Security Council, left the transition team on Monday in what NBC described as a “Stalinesque purge.”
But the national security establishment has one hope left: Army Lt. Gen. Ronald Burgess, former director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, remains in charge of intelligence hiring, and his record harkens back to a GOP establishment focused on powerful espionage and influence on the world stage. He’s reportedly favored to be the new director of National Intelligence, replacing James Clapper.
In other words, there’s still a chance the spies will be just fine.
Burgess’s 38-year military career has reassured some former spies and intelligence experts that the administration might not devolve into amateur-led chaos.
Unlike Gen. Michael Flynn, one of Trump’s trusted campaign advisors, Burgess hasn’t made outspoken comments in support of the incoming president’s more rash positions, like jailing his one-time opponent, Hillary Clinton.
“Burgess is a fairly well-known figure and, by comparison with Gen. Flynn, at least, a fairly conventional one,” Steven Aftergood, director of the Federation of American Scientists’ Project on Government Secrecy, wrote in an email to The Intercept.
The Republican Congress, along with the Pentagon, has consistently praised Burgess as one of the “quiet heroes.” He has advised Congress on wide-ranging intelligence topics, such as threats posed by al Qaeda, North Korea and its potential nuclear capabilities, and the increase of intelligence sharing among the many spy agencies. He was one of the earliest defense officials to caution the administration to place a high value on cyber security — something he advocates for in his current job as a senior counsel for research security and cyber at Auburn University.
“Boy, I don’t know a member of the [intelligence community] that has been more direct, more straightforward, and given us better briefings over the years than General Burgess,” former Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., said during a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing in 2007. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, Democratic ranking member of the Intelligence Committee, also lauded Burgess’s leadership in 2011 on the 50th anniversary of the DIA.
“We must always tell our leaders at all echelons what they need to know not what they want to hear,” Burgess said when he retired as DIA director. “As our nation’s intelligence professionals we have a non-negotiable obligation to the American people to call it the way we see it.”
However, for advocates of transparency and limiting the vast powers of the espionage establishment, Burgess is less than ideal. “Burgess has a traditional view of national security secrecy, and has resisted moves to modify and modernize classification policy,” Aftergood wrote, noting that Burgess refused to release documents under the Freedom of Information Act — some that were later released by his successors.
Additionally, Burgess was reportedly one of the architects of the expansion of the DIA’s powers, adding hundreds of new foreign spies to its ranks, rivaling even the CIA in numbers. “The plan reflects the Obama administration’s affinity for espionage and covert action over conventional force,” wrote Greg Miller of the Washington Post, at the time of the original shift.
Earlier in his career, Burgess served as the director of intelligence for the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the Southern Command, at a time when torture at Guantanamo Bay was well underway. When the Senate Armed Services Committee questioned him in 2004 concerning torture at Abu Ghraib, he insisted he had no previous knowledge of complaints about abuses there.
Whoever Burgess taps, intelligence officials remain hopeful that Trump’s views will moderate once in the White House. “National security looks different from the Oval Office than it does from a hotel room in Iowa,” former CIA and NSA Director Michael Hayden told the Cipher Brief, an online national security publication.
Burgess did not respond to request for comment from The Intercept.
However, for advocates of transparency and limiting the vast powers of the espionage establishment, Burgess is less than ideal. “Burgess has a traditional view of national security secrecy, and has resisted moves to modify and modernize classification policy,” Aftergood wrote, noting that Burgess refused to release documents under the Freedom of Information Act — some that were later released by his successors.
Good to know he’s a coward. I wonder why the nsa told him to not release those documents cited that eventually were released anyway.
“Earlier in his career, Burgess served as the director of intelligence for the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the Southern Command”
I think the author meant “director of intelligence for US Southern Command” or the “US SouthCom J2″?
It may be time for some remedial reading – going by Wikipedia ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defense_Intelligence_Agency ) it sounds like the DIA, though remaining little-known, has been involved with Guananamo and other tortures even as other agencies bowed out. How that tracks to this official I don’t know … but I don’t think it is hard to guess.
I’m reminded of the Bush administration and Colin Powell. Just because they have experience on their team doesn’t mean they’ll listen to it.
A lot can happen between now and January 20, 2017. No one should get too comfortable until after that date, and even then. ;)
Disarray is is merely asymmetrical walk trot and cantor. What you wish for is failure, what we perceive is self loathing.
Trump outplays your desire. apu
It is so tiring to hear liberal progressives complain about non-loyalist to their cause. They use the same old spin: spewing hate by throwing names and labels on people they hate.
I hope you do realize this crap is what got Trump elected. People are tired of the liberal progressive hate and anger at everything they don’t agree with. I didn’t vote for Trump but I’m at least glad he is exposing more of the haters so everyone knows who they are.
Why not Burgess? He is just as capable of lying as any of them. Lying is like breathing to these folks.
It is going to be fun watching the Trump the Trainwreck administration eventually run off the tracks and explode into giant pyrotechnic balls of its own creation.
I’m stocking up on popcorn. The Trump family and its closest advisors are simply too inept and stupid, and too ignorant of how bureaucratic institutions work (assuming they can’t be bribed or elected officials can’t be donated to), to actually do what they think they want to do.
Now maybe knowledgeable members of House and Senate on GOP side step up to help them, but they aren’t really any good at doing anything but opposing everything and passing off pre-written ALEC legislation in the few instances when they hold the legislative and executive branches. Not saying that isn’t destructive in itself, but they are shit at actually “governing” anything, much less their own caucus(es), so I expect the self-immolation to continue when push starts coming to shove. And it is going to be sweet sweet sweet.
Of course I’m alternatively stocking up on guns, ammo and popcorn in case I’m horribly wrong in that respect. I’ve already got a defensible place out in the boonies all staked out should the wheels really come off.
Until then no choice but to fight, pushback and sit back and see if the GOP lights itself on fire . . . more boots on the ground all over the world, getting rid of Medicare, and a whole host of other perceived crap they want to accomplish is going to go over like a lead balloon once folks really understand how that effects them personally.
Then again I used to say the GOP base really didn’t care if everyone was reduced to roasting pigeons on an old shower curtain rod over a can of Sterno while living in an old refrigerator box so long as those “others” weren’t getting anything either. In which case we could be in for a very rough ride, and then I’ll be banking on the fact their fetish for Busch beer and opioids will succumb to my backwoods tactical genius if/when the shooting starts.
So who knows. Interesting times. All empires eventually fold, not sure why ours should or would be any different. We’ll just go down in history as the youngest and most short lived, and there would be a certain degree of karmic justice in that given how this nation was founded and built on the backs of enslaving their fellow human beings and near extermination of this land’s indigenous peoples.
Not really sure the world would care, nor would history assuming anyone survives our self-inflicted implosion.
I just wish they’d dismantle or secure our nuclear arsenal before it happens so we don’t take the rest of the globe with us.
And of course I can’t take credit for the old “roasting pigeon on an old shower curtain rod . . . .” bit. Just something someone else once wrote that I found highly amusing and arguably pretty insightful about some of the GOP base.
You sound like someone in desperate need of a friend…but folks don’t really like hanging out with people who have total disdain for others’ success and think so highly of only themselves. Good luck with your ‘boonie’ jaunt…SCHMUCK!
MOLON LABE!
Arrogance is the hallmark of the progressive. Hubris destroyed Clinton and Obama, and infuriated many, as you say. USMC 72-76
Good reporting — thanks
Yeah, the US intelligence establishment has been doing such a *great* job. We certainly wouldn’t want any “amateurs” to come in and mess things up.
What a relief!
All the snooping and pooping here so we don’t have to fight them over there, or something like that?
Yes, but more generally, the Washington establishment is the most talented, “exceptional” group of people the world has ever known. We are truly blessed.
At home, the FBI and DHS Keep Us Safe(TM) by deftly foiling their own terrorist plots, just in the nick of time. Abroad, our military, assisted by the penetrating analysis of our intelligence agencies, has liberated the peoples of Iraq and Libya from their Brutal Dictators(TM), conferring on them the blessings of Democracy(TM). It’ only the evil machinations of arch-villian Vladimir Putin (grrr! [pause here for hate minute]) that prevent them from bestowing similar gifts on the people of Syria.
With a track record like that, the last thing in the world we need is a bunch of “unqualified” people coming in and screwing things up. Of course, Hillary was The Most Qualified Presidential Candidate Ever(TM). Sadly, the poor benighted “losers” and “deplorables” of the American electorate were too stupid to appreciate her brilliance.
That’s why I was so relieved to read that Trump, despite his scary anti-establishment rhetoric, has finally seen the light in choosing a properly “qualified” person as his intelligence advisor. We really dodged a bullet there!
I’ve noticed something about Trump, and that is that at times he appears to be deceptively stupid. I think it’s at least possible that he is gathering intel about leadership and shadow government by pretending, if you will, to seriously consider folks like Bolton, and now Burgess. Think how much he could learn from them without in the end hiring them. Trump plays dumb, they provide entire lists of insiders and their specialities, Trump now has an up-to-date list of people to keep an eye on. Do you see what I mean? His learning curve is steeper than most and I think he may be learning as much as he can in a covert manner.
Now you mentioned it, so true – President Trump is a very smart man. The Libtarded freak out from the left is delicious!
Could be. More likely he considers them hired help. As long as they get the job done they have a job. Screw up and they are fired.
That explains the Reince Priebus appointment. He did well on the campaign so he has the job as Chief of Stall. Maybe under Trump you can say and think what ever you want, but you DO have to deliver the goods.
Contrast that with the Politically Crowd, where you can screw up royally time after time but still be considered for important positions, like Donna Brazile for example.