Cordial Trump belies mistrust of U.K. intelligence
By David Ignatius
The Washington Post
President Trumps love-hate relationship with Britain has been on display in London this week. This ambivalence takes an especially bizarre turn in comments by the president and his supporters about British intelligence, historically Americas most important secret partner.
After bashing prominent British figures on his way to London, Trump was on good behavior Tuesday, after a glittering state dinner the night before with the queen. He paid ritual homage to the special alliance between Britain and America and the love
great love showed him during his visit.
We have an incredible intelligence relationship, Trump told reporters, evoking the historic partnership between Britains Secret Intelligence Service (known as MI6) and the CIA, with departing Prime Minister Theresa May at his side.
At that, members of the British intelligence establishment must surely have rolled their eyes. Trump and his political allies have in fact been straining the covert alliance to the point that some insiders on both sides worry that trust and cooperation could eventually begin to erode.
he Trump camps suspicion about British intelligence is part of its counternarrative to the investigations of possible Trump campaign links with Russia. The centerpiece is the famous dossier compiled by former MI6 officer Christopher Steele which, it was hoped, would come to light prior to Nov. 8 to defeat Trump, according to a recently declassified State Department memo. Trumps supporters speculate further that Steele was aided by MI6 and GCHQ, the British signals-intelligence agency.
Theres no evidence of official British support for Steele, and U.S. sources tell me that Mark Lyall Grant, then British national security adviser, disavowed Steeles dossier in a January 2017 message to Trumps advisers. But that didnt stop Rep. Devin Nunes, R-California, the ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee, from sending Trump a letter May 22 urging him to ask the British prime minister about the British governments knowledge of the Steele dossier.
Nunes fired a bullet-point list of questions: Did Christopher Steele inform any current or former British intelligence or government officials about the allegations he put forward in the Steele dossier?
Is the British government aware of
activities by any government to surveil or otherwise target active or former associates of the Trump campaign?
If this paranoia about Britain sounds familiar, thats because it has been gathering momentum for more than two years. Back in March 2017, Sean Spicer, then White House press secretary, floated a Fox News analysts unsubstantiated claim that GCHQ had helped spy on Trump during the campaign. The British spy agency dismissed the charge as utterly ridiculous.
-more-
https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/ignatius-cordial-trump-belies-mistrust-of-u-k-intelligence/