President Donald Trumpâs National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard is looking for ways to change the presidentâs intelligence briefings to align with his media consumption habits and gain his trust, possibly adopting a video format, NBC News reports.Â
Gabbard has apparently consulted current and former intelligence officials for solutions. One possibility would be to turn the briefings into videos styled after Fox News, four sources told the outlet in its report published Saturday. The Presidentâs Daily Brief, or PDB, is currently a daily digital document containing text, graphics, and images. In order to carry out this new approach, the national intelligence directorâs office could even hire one of Fox Newsâ talking heads and one of the networkâs producers. Gabbard herself was a paid contributor to the network.Â
Trump has received the PDB, which can influence the presidentâs decisions, just 14 times since he took office, according to his public schedule. During his first administration, the PDB was changed to a one-page outline that included less writing and more pictures, and was presented verbally. He received the briefing 55 times during this same period in 2017. President Joe Biden had received 90 PDBs by this time.
According to the sources, Gabbard thinks Trumpâs infrequency could be because of his distrust of intelligence officials, but also because he consumes media differently than how the PDB is formatted. Fox News has been his favorite news source, at least since his first administration.Â
âThe problem with Trump is that he doesnât read,â a source said. âHeâs on broadcast all the time.â
Another idea for the PDB would be to include graphics and maps with animations of exploding bombs âsimilar to a video game,â per NBC Newsâ report.
Getting Trump to welcome the PDB âis a very uphill fightâ because of his distrust of the intelligence community, one source told the outlet.
Gabbardâs office denied the story. âThis so-called âreportingâ is laughable, absurd, and flat-out false. In true fake news fashion, NBC is publishing yet another anonymously sourced false story,â Olivia Coleman, the press secretary for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, said in a statement to NBC News. Editorâs picks
The story is âlibelous garbage from unnamed sources,â White House spokesman Davis Ingle told the outlet, adding: âPresident Trump has assembled a world-class intelligence team who he is constantly communicating with and receiving real time updates on all pressing national security issues. Ensuring the safety and security of the American people is President Trumpâs number one priority.â
Gabbard has also considered shifting the PDB to focus on topics that Trump is more interested in, like economics and trade, and less on the war in Ukraine, three sources said.Â
âYou shift with the priorities of the administration,â one source told NBC News.
Earlier this month, Gabbard changed who prepared the PDB, giving her more control over it, PBS News reported. She also fired two top National Intelligence Council officials after the NIC said in a report that the Venezuelan government was not sending Tren de Aragua gang members to the U.S., contradicting Trumpâs claims.
âAbsent evidence to justify the firings, the workforce can only conclude that their jobs are contingent on producing analysis that is aligned with the Presidentâs political agenda, rather than truthful and apolitical,â Connecticut Rep. Jim Himes, the senior Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said in a statement. Trending Stories
A CIA report published in 2021 outlined the struggles of briefing Trump during his first administration. âBriefing Trump presented the IC with the most difficult challenges it had ever faced,â wrote retired intelligence officer John L. Helgerson. Trump, he said, âdoubted the competence of intelligence professionals and felt no need for regular intelligence support.â
At the time, Trump was also not prone to receiving the PDB. âHe touched it,â said Ted Gistaro, a CIA analyst who frequently briefed Trump, said in 2021. âHe doesnât really read anything.â