Rachel
Maddow reports on a new DHS whistleblower complaint that Trump administration
DHS officials have ordered a stop to intelligence reports on the thread of
Russian interference in the election, reports state and local officials need to
protect the security of the election. Aired on 09/09/2020.
Trump loyalists interfered to downplay Russia
election threat – whistleblower
Brian Murphy claims he was demoted for refusing to
accept fabrication of intelligence to match Donald Trump’s rhetoric
Julian
Borger in Washington
Wed 9 Sep
2020 22.31 BSTLast modified on Thu 10 Sep 2020 02.48 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/sep/09/trump-whistleblower-russia-election-threat
Trump
loyalists running the Department of Homeland Security manipulated intelligence
reports to play down the threat of Russian election interference and white
supremacists and exaggerate the threat of antifa and anarchist groups,
according to the department’s former top intelligence official.
The
official, Brian Murphy, said he was demoted in August from his position running
the department’s office of intelligence and analysis because of his refusal to
go along with the fabrication of intelligence to match Donald Trump’s rhetoric,
and for making formal complaints about the political pressure. He filed a
whistleblower reprisal complaint on Tuesday.
Murphy was
transferred to a DHS management position after his team was found to have
collected information on reporters and protesters in Portland, Oregon. In his
complaint, he claims the office “never knowingly or deliberately collected
information on journalists, at least as far as Mr Murphy is aware or ever
authorized”, and he described the reporting as “significantly flawed”.
He insists
the real reason for his transfer was his refusal to manipulate vital
intelligence on national security.
Murphy alleges
that the efforts to falsify DHS intelligence date back to 2018, when the then
homeland security secretary, Kirstjen Nielsen, asked his office to inflate the
numbers of known or suspected terrorists crossing the border with Mexico, in
support of Trump’s demand for a border wall.
Murphy says
the intelligence identified three such terrorist cases. In December 2018,
Nielsen told the House judiciary committee there were 3,755.
According
to Murphy’s testimony, Nielsen and her successor, Chad Wolf, continued to
exaggerate the terrorist threat at the border in 2019, while being aware of the
real figures.
Murphy’s
most serious allegations concern the effort to downplay Russian meddling in the
election while it was under way. In May this year, Murphy says, Wolf told him
“to cease providing intelligence assessments on the threat of Russian
interference in the United States, and instead start reporting on interference
activities by China and Iran”.
Wolf told
Murphy the orders came from the national security adviser, Robert O’Brien.
“Mr Murphy
informed Mr Wolf he would not comply with these instructions, as doing so would
put the country in substantial and specific danger,” the whistleblower
complaint says.
On 7 July,
Murphy was told to stop circulating any information about Russian
disinformation efforts until he met Wolf. The next day, according to the
complaint, the acting homeland security secretary told Murphy the assessment of
the Russian role “should be ‘held’ because it ‘made the president look bad’”.
When Murphy
objected, he was excluded from meetings on the subject, and an alternative
assessment was leaked to the press which put Russian interference on a par with
China and Iran – an equivalence which Murphy, and most intelligence experts,
say is not supported by the facts.
“This is a
huge deal,” the former National Security Agency lawyer Susan Hennessey wrote on
Twitter. “Is [national security adviser] O’Brien directing the [intelligence
community] and others to lie about or distort the China election threat to hurt
Biden and help Trump?”
Top
administration officials, including the director of national intelligence, John
Ratcliffe; the secretary of state, Mike Pompeo; and the attorney general,
William Barr, have claimed that China is as big a threat, if not a much greater
danger, to the integrity of the US elections than Russia, with the implication
that China favours Trump’s Democratic challenger, Joe Biden. No substantial
evidence has been presented to support that claim, which is contradicted by a
vast amount of material, including reports by the special counsel Robert
Mueller, and the Republican-led Senate intelligence committee, detailing
Russian interference.
According
to the whistleblower complaint, a homeland threat assessment (HTA) drawn up by
Murphy’s intelligence analysts in March this year was also blocked by Wolf and
other DHS political appointees because of its sections on Russian interference
and the white supremacist threat.
Murphy was told
by his superiors he “needed to specifically modify the section on white
supremacy in a manner that made the threat appear less severe, as well as
include information on the prominence of violent ‘leftwing’ groups”. When he
refused, the HTA was taken out of his hands.
“It is Mr
Murphy’s assessment that the final version of the HTA will more closely
resemble a policy document with references to antifa and ‘anarchist’ groups
than an intelligence document,” his complaint says.
Hennessey,
a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and the executive editor of the
Lawfare blog, urged some scepticism over Murphy’s claims in view of his
office’s involvement in the monitoring of journalists in Portland.
“Murphy’s
account is especially weak on key allegation that he was reassigned as
retaliation for whistleblowing, as opposed to astonishingly bad judgment. It
could be that, in an effort to tell a self-serving story, he is also revealing
very serious (and real) wrongdoing at DHS,” she wrote.
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