
Former DNI Ratcliffe Defends Secret CIA Chat, Sparking Controversy Amid Tenure as Director
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Ratcliffe made history when he was sworn in as the CIA Director on January 23, 2025, becoming the first person to have held both the positions of CIA Director and Director of National Intelligence. His confirmation by the Senate was largely bipartisan, with a vote of 74-25, including support from 20 Democrats and Independent Senator Angus King of Maine.
Since taking office, Ratcliffe has implemented several significant policy changes. Just days after his swearing-in, the CIA revised its previous assessment of COVID-19's origin from "undecided" to "low confidence" in favor of the laboratory leak theory in Wuhan. In early February, the agency began offering buyouts to employees in exchange for voluntary resignations.
A controversial development occurred when the CIA complied with an Executive Order from President Trump to send the White House an unclassified email identifying first names and last initials of all employees hired in the previous two years. This action has been criticized by former CIA officials who warned it could compromise the identity of agents and damage the United States' counterintelligence capabilities.
During his confirmation hearing in January, Ratcliffe vowed to keep politics out of the agency's work and promised to "never allow political or personal biases to cloud our judgment or infect our products." He identified China as the most significant national security threat, particularly in the technology sector, while also highlighting concerns about transnational criminal organizations crossing the Southern border, Russia, Iran, and North Korea.
Ratcliffe has emphasized the need to invest more heavily in human intelligence to avoid intelligence failures similar to those that occurred during the previous administration, such as the fall of Kabul in 2021 and the Hamas attack on Israel in October 2023.
Before his CIA appointment, Ratcliffe served as the Director of National Intelligence from May 2020 to January 2021 during Trump's first administration. During that time, he led a shift in intelligence priorities to increase the U.S. advantage over China and oversaw operations that removed designated terrorist leaders from the battlefield. He also elevated space to a priority intelligence domain and added the U.S. Space Force as the 18th member of the U.S. Intelligence Community.
Ratcliffe's current role at the CIA places him at the center of the Trump administration's hawkish foreign policy approach, particularly regarding China and other adversaries.