HomeWorldTrump’s Russia shift puts US intelligence community in a bind

Trump’s Russia shift puts US intelligence community in a bind

Trump’s growing embrace of Putin and his envoy’s pro-Russia rhetoric are pressuring US intelligence officials to either stick with long-held assessments or align with a shifting White House narrative.

March 25, 2025 / 13:36 IST
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Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump (Courtesy: Reuters file photo)
Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump (Courtesy: Reuters file photo)

When America’s intelligence leaders appear before the US Congress this week to deliver the first public Worldwide Threat Assessment of Donald Trump’s second term, they will be forced to navigate a stark choice: stay true to years of analysis identifying Vladimir Putin as a hostile threat, or recalibrate their tone to match the Trump administration’s increasingly sympathetic view of the Russian president, The New York Times reported.

That choice has become more fraught with the emergence of Steve Witkoff — a longtime Trump associate and now his envoy to Russia and the Middle East — as a vocal advocate for a dramatically softer stance on Moscow. In a recent interview with pro-Trump commentator Tucker Carlson, Witkoff described Putin as “straight up,” questioned the premise that Russia wants to conquer Ukraine, and mocked NATO allies’ fears as outdated Cold War thinking.

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A shifting narrative from within

Witkoff’s comments mark a jarring reversal of the longstanding US and allied position on Russia. Since 2022, the intelligence community has consistently warned that Putin’s ambitions extend beyond Ukraine, seeking to destabilize Western democracies and undermine global norms. But Witkoff now argues that all Russia wants is “stability,” and even floated the idea of future US–Russia partnerships on trade and artificial intelligence.