Even before he became president, Donald Trump went out of his way to dismiss U.S. intelligence assessments he found politically inconvenient. That’s continued throughout 2017: the more intelligence professionals tell him Russia attacked the American election to help put him in office, the more Trump tells the public he’s more inclined to believe Vladimir Putin.
All of which led to a good question for the president yesterday: if Trump has so many doubts about the findings of the U.S. intelligence agencies, how reliable is the intelligence now as it relates to North Korea? The president responded:
“Well, you know, it’s different intelligence. I have Mike Pompeo. I have great confidence in him. That doesn’t mean I had confidence in his predecessor. OK? Which I didn’t, actually, although — although he did say good things about me. He did say he had no information or know anything on collusion. So I shouldn’t maybe say that, but I will say it.
“But I have tremendous confidence in Mike Pompeo, Dan Coats — fantastic. I mean, we have — we have people.”
If we cut through the strange nonsense, what Trump was apparently trying to say was that things are different now. He didn’t believe intelligence assessments before, but now that Mike Pompeo is the director of the CIA, Trump can finally have confidence in the information presented to him.
In other words, if Mike Pompeo gives the president information about the North Korean threat, Trump is going to believe it.









