12-15-2016, 05:22 PM
(12-15-2016, 04:32 PM)Dill Wrote: He did not exactly share with foreign agencies. But during combat operations on several occasions he apparently shared intel with allied officers--that could be British, Germans or Czechs, possibly even Afghans. He says he was not aware of protocol, and I am guessing it was local DIA intel, like who was located in what village and maybe exposing collection methods--still classified though. But you probably know from personal experience how loose local intel got in Afghanistan. I don't find this disqualifying.
I am more disturbed about the active effort to circumvent security protocol by putting in his own internet line in his office at the Pentagon and attending classified briefings as a private citizen working for foreign interests. Couple that with his volatile behavior at the Pentagon, which got him canned, and I don't find him a good choice for National Security Advisor. Someone steady, a stickler for protocol, needs to be in that role.
It was with a number to include Austrailia. If he did out of ignorance alone he should be disqaulified. If he did it knowingly then he should be charged.
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