Former CIA chief Woolsey quits Trump team over intelligence concerns

Former Director of Central Intelligence R. James Woolsey, Jr., announced his resignation from President-elect Donald Trump's transition team on Thursday, citing differences in the billionaire's plans for the U.S. intelligence community -- and a lack of input on matters of national security. His departure comes as Trump is under fire for critical remarks he made regarding U.S. inquiries into Russia's involvement in November's presidential election. File Photo/Roger L. Wollenberg/UPI | License Photo

NEW YORK, Jan. 5 (UPI) — Former CIA director and national security expert R. James Woolsey, Jr., said Thursday he’s resigning from the transition team of President-elect Donald Trump, due to disagreements over the impending leader’s plans for the U.S. intelligence community.

Woolsey, who led the agency for two years under President Bill Clinton, had joined Trump’s team as a senior adviser on matters relevant to his background. Differences over the direction of the country’s intelligence apparatus, however, have led him to quit the team.

In addition to his stint at the CIA, Woolsey, 75, also served as undersecretary of the Navy for President Jimmy Carter and a European military ambassador under President George H.W. Bush.

“Effective immediately, Ambassador Woolsey is no longer a Senior Advisor to President-Elect Trump or the Transition,” Woolsey spokesman Jonathan Franks said Thursday. “He wishes the President-Elect and his Administration great success in their time in office.”

Woolsey’s resignation comes at a time when Trump is under heavy scrutiny for remarks he’s made about the U.S. intelligence community — particularly its conclusions that the Russian government, with authorization from very high-level officials, had acted to sway the election in his favor through a series of cyberattacks.

It wasn’t immediately clear whether those criticisms played a role in Woolsey’s decision to leave the transition team.

A major contributing factor for his departure, people close to Woolsey claim, is that he was not sufficiently involved in shaping the administration’s intelligence vision and became uneasy being a part of a policy for which he was barely consulted.

“Jim is very uncomfortable being considered an adviser in an area where one might consider him an expert when he is not involved in the discussions,” one source said. “To be called ‘senior adviser’ and your opinion is not sought is something he cannot handle.”

The departure follows an interview with CNN that Woolsey gave last week, in which he worried that there was a possibility Trump was “playing” members of the transition team.

Those close to Woolsey say he was also taken aback by the reports that Trump is planning to overhaul U.S. intelligence.

Three top American intelligence leaders testified Thursday before the Senate Armed Services Committee that they were certain the Kremlin had tried to intervene in the presidential election, based on multiple investigations. A report outlining the inquiries was delivered to President Barack Obama on Thursday and is supposed to be presented to Trump on Friday.

Also Thursday, The Washington Post reported that U.S. intelligence agencies have electronic proof that officials in Moscow’s government celebrated Trump’s win in November.

The evidence, reportedly gathered via intercepted communications, factored into the investigating agencies concluding that the Russians had interfered in the vote.

“The Russians felt pretty good about what happened on Nov. 8 and they also felt pretty good about what they did,” a senior U.S. official told the Post.

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