pleasure. well, it s great to have you here. what do you think are the qualities you possess that made you a good spy? no one s asked me that before. um. i m tenacious, i m a. ..a bit adventurous. that s how i got into it to begin with. and i think the biggest piece of it was hoping that i had done something worth doing, and that it had made a difference. so the values behind the work were important to you, but on a day to day basis, you were having to deceive and to lie. are you good at that? and protect. she chuckles and i got rather good at it indeed. yes, ican. ican. i can prevaricate with the best of them. let me take you back to the beginning. you ve described entering the cia through a side entrance, by which i think you mean that you weren t sort of formally recruited. that s right. you sort of fell into it because you married a guy who, it turned out, just before your wedding, you learned was in the cia. wasn t there a movie or a book? something titled marrying the m
Tonight. Thank you for being at the first times live event of 2018. After what happened in 2017, we thank you for coming back for more. [laughter] is a greatof all, it honor to be on this panel tonight with two friends and colleagues that i have it through a lot of battles with together, as well as a new friend, joanna mendez, who i authority theent piece of critical information that, after being a Washington Post reporter for decades, recently decided she could not do without the New York Times and became a paid subscriber. [applause] thats all you need to know tonight. Trump and thec is Russian Investigation and this consuming, competitive, maddening story we have been a part of over the past year, some as reporters, some as readers. No doubt if you came tonight, you have been following this closely. I dont know if tonight it will all be clear, and if it is, please tell us because we would love clarity on anything. Hopefully it will be a lively discussion. To start, i thought i would
Colleagues that i have been through a lot of battles with together, as well as a new friend, jonna mendez, who i have on excellent authority the piece of critical information that, after being a Washington Post reporter for decades, recently decided she could not do without the New York Times and became a paid subscriber. [applause] thats all you need to know tonight. We already love her. Tonights topic is trump and the Russian Investigation and this consuming, competitive, maddening story we have been a part of over the past year, some as reporters, some as readers. No doubt if you came tonight, you have been following this quite closely. And i dont know if tonight it will all be clear, and if it is, please tell us because we would love clarity on anything. [laughter] hopefully it will be a lively discussion. So to start, i thought i would first of all say it has been almost a year since the Intelligence Communitys assessment about what happened in the 2016 election came out, about ru
First of all, it is a great honor to be on this panel tonight with two friends and colleagues that i have it through a lot of battles with together, as well as a new friend, jonna mendez, who i have on excellent authority the piece of critical information that, after being a Washington Post reporter for decades, recently decided she could not do without the New York Times and became a paid subscriber. [applause] thats all you need to know tonight. Tonights topic is trump and the Russian Investigation and this consuming, competitive, maddening story we have been a part of over the past year, some as reporters, some as readers. No doubt if you came tonight, you have been following this closely. I dont know if tonight it will all be clear, and if it is, please tell us because we would love clarity on anything. Hopefully it will be a lively discussion. To start, i thought i would first of all say it has been almost a year since the Intelligence Communitys assessment about what happened in
Times know about the drones, i guess. [laughter] i think we can say that. No, i think, i think journalists have done their work in developing a lot of information about what our National Security apparatus thinks, how its motivated and how its acting. I think thats true. But what we, but we have not had a fundamental policy discussion in the country that we need to have. And i think and i think we can define that along many different lines. But for me the key issue is, um, if we look at whats going on in pakistan, for instance, you know, we have the cia engaged on a traditional, in a traditional theater of war in what historically have been viewed as military tactics over a sustained period of many years involving hundreds of strikes with clear military objectives. And is that a correct use of an Intelligence Service . I think thats a very fundamental question, and weve got the same issue with respect to yeaman, i think yemen, i think, potentially other places. So this is the cia growi