


WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - President Donald Trump on Wednesday called top U.S.
intelligence chiefs "extremely passive and naive" on Iran and dismissed
their assessments of the threat posed by North Korea a day after they
contradicted his views during congressional testimony.
Leaders
of the U.S. intelligence community told a Senate committee on Tuesday
that the nuclear threat from North Korea remained but that Iran was not
taking steps toward making a nuclear bomb, differing with Trump's views
on those countries.
"The
Intelligence people seem to be extremely passive and naive when it
comes to the dangers of Iran. They are wrong!" Trump said in a Twitter
post.
The
Republican president said Iran was "coming very close to the edge" and
suggested. "Perhaps Intelligence should go back to school!"
Trump
last year pulled out of an international nuclear deal with Iran put in
place under his Democratic predecessor Barack Obama and re-imposed
sanctions on Tehran.
The
U.S. intelligence officials told the Senate Intelligence Committee Iran
was not developing nuclear weapons in violation of the 2015 nuclear
agreement, even though Tehran threatened to reverse some commitments
after Trump pulled the United States of the deal.
Their
assessments also broke with other assertions by Trump, including on the
threat posed by Russia to U.S. elections, the threat that the Islamic
State militant group poses in Syria and North Korea's commitment to
denuclearize.
Trump
has clashed with leaders of the U.S. intelligence community, most
strikingly in disputing their finding that Russia intervened in the 2016
U.S. election to help him win the presidency.
Trump
has invested heavily in improving relations with North Korea in hopes
of getting the reclusive communist nation to abandon its nuclear
ambitions. He broke with decades of U.S. policy when he agreed to meet
with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un last June and has planned a second
summit in February.
"North
Korea relationship is best it has ever been with U.S. No testing,
getting remains, hostages returned. Decent chance of Denuclearization,"
Trump said in a Twitter post, drawing a comparison to the "horrendous"
relationship under Obama.
"Now a whole different story. I look forward to seeing Kim Jong Un shortly. Progress being made-big difference!"
However,
Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats and CIA Director Gina
Haspel told lawmakers Pyongyang viewed its nuclear program as vital to
the country's survival and was unlikely to give it up.
A
number of North Korea analysts agree. "There is absolutely no reason or
sufficient incentives for North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons.
North Korea wants to play Trump and get sanctions off its back," said
Srinivasan Sitaraman, a political science professor at Clark University
in Massachusetts.
Trump
also defended his decision to withdraw 2,000 U.S. troops from Syria on
grounds that Islamic State no longer poses a threat, saying "we've
beaten them."
"Caliphate will soon be destroyed, unthinkable two years ago," Trump said on Twitter.
Trump
has given the U.S. military about four months to withdraw the troops in
Syria, backtracking from his abrupt order last month that the military
pull out within 30 days.
The
U.S. spy chiefs said Islamic State would continue to pursue attacks
from Syria and Iraq against regional and Western adversaries, including
the United States.
Intelligence
committee member Senator Angus King, an independent who caucuses with
Democrats, told CNN, "It's still disturbing that the president doesn't
seem to want to listen to the people whose job it is to give him this
information."
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu and Susan Heavey; Editing by Alison Williams and Jeffrey Benkoe)
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FBI
Director Christopher Wray, CIA Director Gina Haspel and Director of
National Intelligence Dan Coats appeared before the Senate Intelligence
Committee Tuesday with their annual assessment of global threats. The
U.S.-Mexico border did not make the list.
2 hours ago