James Clapper, the former director of national intelligence-turned CNN pundit, first denied and then admitted to discussing the anti-Trump 'Steele dossier' with a CNN journalist while in office, an intelligence report reveals.
The 253-page US House Intelligence Committee report on the alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential elections outlines Clapper's "inconsistent testimony to the Committee about his contacts to the media, including CNN." Pages 107-108 feature the record of how Clapper "flatly denied" discussing the dossier compiled by Christopher Steele with the media during a congressional testimony in July, but then "subsequently acknowledged discussing the dossier with CNN journalist Jake Tapper."
Tapper co-authored a breaking CNN report on a briefing that US President Donald Trump received from senior intelligence officials on a Steele Dossier.
The heavily-redacted House report notes that Clapper discussed the topic with Tapper around the same time that Trump and outgoing President Barack Obama received their respective briefings on the Steele dossier. The conversation took place in "early January," which runs counter to Clapper's own account of events, in which he previously insisted that he had not leaked any info to the media about the infamous dossier before he left office on January, 20.
The House report also says that the CNN article served as a trigger for all the subsequent dossier-related publications, becoming a "proximate cause of BuzzFeed News' decision to publish the dossier for the first time just a few hours later." The report notes that the dossier had long been circulating in the intelligence community and among the media, but only following the CNN release that cited "multiple US officials with direct knowledge of the briefings" in its report, Pandora's box was opened.
Ironically, a day after CNN published its report, which it now turns out could have been sourced by Clapper himself, the former DNI chief publicly denounced the leaks, voicing his "profound dismay," and saying that he does not "believe the leaks came from within the IC [ intelligence community]," the report notes.
The Steele dossier features unverified, salacious details about Trump's stay in Moscow, sparking speculations that Russia might be in possession of compromising material, which it could use to blackmail the US president.
Topping off the Clapper-CNN controversy is the fact that soon after leaving office, he was hired by none other than CNN as its national security analyst. The timing is mentioned specifically in the House report, which says Clapper started working for CNN "shortly after his testimony to the committee."
This is not the first time that Clapper has been caught red-handed lying to lawmakers. Last month marked five years since he told the US Select Committee on Intelligence how the National Security Agency (NSA) was not collecting the data on millions of Americans. Three months later, NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden uncovered a mass surveillance program that had been run by the agency for years.