Journalists' writing about American intelligence is fraught with danger. They usually have few, if any, unauthorized, active-duty sources. Rarely do they have access to working-level officials, especially within the Central Intelligence Agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency, the eavesdropping National Security Agency, or the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which oversees counterespionage investigations of U.S. citizens. Long gone are the days when foreign correspondents rubbed shoulders with and even befriended operatives on the cocktail circuit. Polygraph exams can question press contact.
An original piece of work from one of the most famous painters in the world will highlight The Swope Art Museum s exhibition of Impressionist artwork, now through May.
government about this information. there was a security issue about whether a presidential candidate was being blackmailed. more on all of this by jim sciutto who joins us now. what are you learning about this concern that candidate trump concern by steele may have been blackmailed? anderson, as you laid out there, the trump line, the gop line on the dossier has been that this was a purely political document drummed up by democrats, pursued by democrats, two political ends with no credibility. if you look at simpson s testimony, which is sworn testimony, when you re testifying on the hill you hear a very different story of this. this christopher steele, a former member of mi-6, who gathered this information and was concerned himself enough to go of his own volition to the fbi in june 2016 because he believed there was a national security threat here, the possibility of a presidential