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Intel official: 'It's a sad day'
Trump attacks set intelligence community on edge
Story highlights
- Officials say Trump behaves differently in private
- They are trying to understand why he doubts the intel
(CNN)Intelligence
officials are increasingly dismayed about President-elect Donald
Trump's tweets and continued public attacks against them, describing his
conduct as distressing, officials told CNN Wednesday.
"Nobody
wants to get off on the wrong foot with the new boss. We're heading
into this different era where it's hostile," one official said.
Another official added, "It's a sad day when politicians place more
stock in (Russian President Vladimir Putin and (WikiLeaks founder)
Julian Assange than in the Americans who risk their lives daily to
provide objective, non-partisan intelligence analysis."
That was a reference to Trump's tweet on Wednesday noting that Assange said he didn't get hacked Democratic Party emails from the Russians, who have also denied the hacking allegations.
Adding to the concern, officials said there is a disconnect between Trump's public pronouncements about the intelligence community and his behind-the-scenes behavior when he's sitting across the table at closed-door intel briefings.
US
officials familiar with the briefings said Trump is for the most part
professional, deferential and polite. He listens but does not engage
frequently during the briefings, other officials said, although at times
he has challenged and questioned information.
A
senior transition source told CNN that Trump does ask questions,
adding, "Questions are good." The transition official said the
President-elect does not question the data presented to him but he does
question some of the conclusions drawn from the data.
US
officials said the alleged election hacks and Russia have come up in
briefings with Trump, but the full picture of what all the different
intelligence threads mean has not been presented to him yet. That will
happen during a briefing that is scheduled Friday with leaders of the
intelligence community.
As
officials try to make sense of Trump's skepticism, one theory is that
the President-elect is acting out because he believes that the
intelligence community is trying to undermine his victory with
information that Russia tried to affect the 2016 vote.
"The
intelligence community is not saying that Vladimir Putin won the
election for Trump," the official said. "We're saying they did a series
of things to sow doubt and some people think they wanted Trump to win,
but no one has ever said they got into the mechanics of the ballot
boxes."

















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