Trump's Pick For CIA Chief Pledges To Be Objective Intel Collector
WASHINGTON: Donald Trump's pick to run the CIA
said Thursday he understands he would have to make the transition from a
partisan, policymaking lawmaker to an objective intelligence collector as the
United States faces a complicated and broad array of threats.
Representative Mike Pompeo, a four-term, conservative
Republican from Kansas, made the comments in testimony prepared for his
appearance before the Senate Intelligence Committee. If confirmed by the Senate
as CIA director, Mr Pompeo could be caught in the role of mending relations
between Trump and intelligence officials after a testy standoff over suspected
Russian meddling during the 2016 election.
Mr Pompeo served on the partisan House committee set up to investigate the
deadly attack on a US diplomatic post in Benghazi, Libya, in 2012. Mr Trump has
for the most part been dismissive of intelligence agencies' findings that
Russia, specifically President Vladimir Putin, interfered in the 2016 US
election with the goal of electing Mr Trump. The CIA is one of three main
intelligence agencies that came to that conclusion. On Wednesday, Mr Trump
acknowledged Russia was responsible but speculated that intelligence agencies
might have leaked to news organizations details about a classified briefing
with him that included unsubstantiated allegations about his ties to Russia. Mr
Pompeo graduated first in the Class of 1986 at the US Military Academy at West Point.
He served in the Army at a time when the Soviet Union was America's main
adversary.
Mr Pompeo has been critical of the Obama administration's nuclear deal with
Iran, which granted Tehran sanctions relief for rolling back its nuclear
weapons program. And he has said that Muslim leaders are "potentially
complicit" in terrorist attacks if they do not denounce those made in the
name of Islam. He has also called for the government to increase surveillance
to counter terrorists, not roll it back, and he wants Congress to play a larger
role in overseeing intelligence agency activity. The congressman also supports
the use of waterboarding to elicit information from suspected terrorists. Mr
Pompeo initially backed Senator Marco Rubio, for the Republican nomination for
president in 2016, but then promoted Mr Trump's bid for the White House. Mr
Rubio is a member of the Senate intelligence committee
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