The following article by Robert Costa was posted on the Washington Post website February 16, 2018:
Here’s what the changes to the security clearance process in the White House could mean for Jared Kushner, President Trump’s senior adviser and son-in-law. (Video: Bastien Inzaurralde/Photo: Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
White House Chief of Staff John F. Kelly, under pressure over his handling of allegations of domestic abuse against a top aide, has approved an overhaul of how the White House manages security-clearance investigations, acknowledging missteps but putting the onus on the FBI and the Justice Department to now hand-deliver updates and provide more information.
The five-page document, signed by Kelly on Friday, was obtained by The Washington Post.
Kelly worked closely with White House Counsel Donald McGahn in discussing and outlining the changes, according to officials, who were not authorized to speak publicly. McGahn has also been criticized for his response to former White House aide Rob Porter’s clearance. Porter, who resigned last week, remained as staff secretary, with access to highly classified material, months after the claims of emotional and physical abuse by his two ex-wives were reported to the FBI.
Kelly begins the memo by stating that in the wake of the Porter scandal, “We should — and in the future, must — do better” and concedes that problems in the security-clearance process demanded attention.
Later, Kelly writes, “But recent events have exposed some remaining shortcomings,” beyond the changes Kelly implemented since taking over as chief of staff last year. “Now is the time to take a hard look at the way the White House processes clearance requests.”
The document, titled “Improvements to the clearance process,” is addressed to McGahn and national security adviser H.R. McMaster. Attorney General Jeff Sessions, Director of National Intelligence Daniel Coats and FBI Director Christopher A. Wray are copied.
The memo says the FBI and Justice Department have offered their cooperation with Kelly’s requests in recent days, and that “going forward, all [background investigations] of potential Commissioned Officers should be flagged for the FBI at the outset and then hand-delivered to the White House Counsel personally upon completion. The FBI official who delivers these files should verbally brief the White House Counsel on any information in those files they deem to be significantly derogatory.”
The White House has struggled over the past week to explain how the security clearance process worked in Porter’s case and when top officials were informed about the allegations against him, offering shifting explanations of what occurred.
There also have been recent reports of dozens of White House aides working under interim clearances, raising further questions about the Trump administration’s handling of the issue and whether it is jeopardizing classified information.
“Effective one week today, discontinue any Top Secret or SCI-level interim clearances for individuals whose investigations or adjudications have been pending since June 1, 2017 or before,” the memo states as one of the White House’s new guidelines.
The time frame laid out in the memo between derogatory information being found in a background check and it being reported to the White House is 48 hours. Kelly writes he is still not sure whether this is achievable.
Director of National Intelligence Daniel Coats said if officials only have preliminary clearance, their access to sensitive information “has to be limited.” (Reuters)
White House officials said this was one key area of the document that reflects their frustration with the FBI and Justice Department as they deflect blame in the Porter fallout.
The Trump administration has said Porter’s security-clearance investigation remained open because the White House Personnel Security Office, which approves clearances, had not finished its work. Administration officials also have suggested results of that investigation were closely held within the office.
But people who worked on both sides of such investigations in past administrations said in interviews this week that the White House’s portrayal of the role played by the security office is inconsistent with how it previously operated. For instance, they said if the security office became aware of something in an aide’s background check that could jeopardize their security clearance, it would likely inform the White House Counsel’s Office.
Wray this week also pushed back against the idea that his agency did anything improper in its handling of Porter’s clearance.
“I am quite confident that in this instance, the FBI followed established” protocols, Wray told the Senate Intelligence Committee Tuesday.
Kelly puts an emphasis in the memo on how it is not the White House’s sole responsibility to adapt and move faster to learn about the FBI’s conclusions on background investigations, despite Wray’s statement.
He says the White House will now require “estimated return dates to create bench marks and set expectations on timing,” although he does not cite details for how that would work.
Kelly, who prizes his reputation for order, veers throughout the document from talking up his efforts to bring stability to the White House while also stating that reforms must be implemented, reflecting his desire to stay on as President Trump’s top aide rather than step away following Porter’s resignation.
The chief of staff states that a “number of reforms have already been implemented,” but does not offer a timeline of when some of these changes have been made, such as requiring all security clearances to be approved by his office and having the Personnel Security Office make a “suitability determination before being on-boarded and granted access to the White House complex.”
Kelly goes on to say that office, referred to as “PSO,” needs major changes to reduce redundancies and bottlenecks.
View the post here.