https://www.newsmax.com/fred-fleitz/.../17/id/963325/
                 Acting DNI Grenell Is Succeeding, Angering Susan Rice and Adam Schiff
 Friday, April 17, 2020 08:15 AM                                        
                                       
By: Fred Fleitz
             
After two months as acting director of National  Intelligence, Richard Grenell has more than made his mark by carrying  out President Trump’s directions to make American intelligence more  efficient and less political.
  Director Grenell’s success has infuriated President Trump’s political  opponents who want U.S. intelligence agencies to continue to violate  its mandate by meddling in domestic politics to undermine the president.
Grenell hit the ground running his first week on the job by removing a  top Office of Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) official and  requesting the intelligence behind a discredited January 2017  Intelligence Community Assessment on Russian meddling in the 2016  presidential election
  He later replaced the head of the bloated ODNI National  Counterterrorism Center (NCTC), announcing plans for staffing  reductions, a move that will reduce the NCTC’s overlap with the more  capable CIA Counterterrorism Center.
  Richard Grenell also reopened proposals under consideration for the  past two years on how to streamline and reduce the huge ODNI staff, now  in the thousands.
  In addition, Director Grenell set the groundwork for President  Trump's decision to fire ODNI Inspector General Michael Atkinson who  helped instigate the Democratic impeachment effort last September when  he informed Congress of a complaint against President Trump by a  supposed CIA whistleblower.
Republican congressmen believe Atkinson was out of line making this  referral because (1) the complaint was not an intelligence matter — and  was therefore not in Atkinson’s jurisdiction — and (2) the CIA officer  was not a whistleblower at all, but a political operative who tried to  help Congressman Adam Schiff and other Democrats manufacture a case for  impeachment.
I recently explained in a New York Post 
op-ed  why the decision to fire Atkinson was the right call for these reasons  and because he committed a cardinal sin for a U.S. intelligence officer —  meddling in domestic politics.
Grenell’s appointment as acting DNI was widely condemned by the  foreign policy establishment as well as current and former intelligence  officers who claimed he would politicize the ODNI.
But they were really concerned that Grenell would 
depoliticize  American intelligence, uncover intelligence community’s political  efforts to undermine the Trump administration, and make U.S.  intelligence more efficient.
As a result, it's no surprise that Grenell’s loudest critics are  Trump’s political opponents who have used U.S. intelligence as a weapon  to destroy the Trump presidency: former National Security Adviser Susan  Rice, former DNI James Clapper former CIA Director John Brennan, as well  as House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff.
Rice, who called Grenell a "hack," accusing him of turning the  intelligence community into a Trump re-election tool, undoubtedly is  worried he will look into how senior Obama officials — including the  Obama administrationcNational Security Council — leaked sensitive  National Security Agency (NSA) intelligence.
These leaks were intended to damage Michael Flynn and Jeff Sessions  during the transition. Obama’s NSC under Rice made hundreds of requests  to "demask" the names of Trump campaign staff from NSA reporting so they  could leak them to the press.
Similar criticism of Grenell by Clapper and Brennan reflects their concern that he will explore 
their roles in promoting the false narrative of collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia.
This includes likely efforts by Brennan to press intelligence  officers to use the discredited Steele Dossier in their analysis of  Russian efforts to interfere in the 2016 election, the misuse of FISA  warrants to spy on Trump campaign staff, and their roles in skewing the  discredited January 2017 "Intelligence Community Assessment" on Russian  meddling in the 2016 election.
Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif.,  has condemned Grenell for all of the  above reasons but is probably more worried that the acting DNI will  sharply curtail Intelligence Community cooperation.
Grenell has reason to act, as the U.S. House Intelligence Committee  under Rep. Schiff has made unprecedented efforts to politicize the  committee’s work to undermine President Trump —and drive him from  office.
  Some Republicans have called for the Trump administration to cease  providing classified material to Schiff because this committee no longer  performs meaningful intelligence oversight. More worrisome is that  classified information is frequently leaked from the committee to damage  President Trump politically.
  Grenell may act on this call.
  Schiff recently sent a letter to Grenell accusing him of undermining  "critical intelligence functions," keeping Congress in the dark about  ODNI organizational changes, and admonishing Grenell that it "would be  inappropriate for you to pursue any additional leadership,  organizational or staffing changes to ODNI during your temporary  tenure."
  Grenell will likely ignore Schiff’s letter.
  If confirmed by the Senate to be the new DNI, Congressman John  Ratcliffe is certain to continue and expand Grenell’s efforts to  depoliticize and streamline the U.S. Intelligence Community.
Because of the coronavirus crisis, Ratcliffe probably will not get a confirmation vote in the Senate any time soon.
  In the meantime, Richard Grenell should stay the course in his  efforts to make sure America’s intelligence operates efficiently and  provides President Trump with the best possible intelligence to keep our  nation safe.
  Sniping from Rice, Brennan, Schiff and other Trump opponents will not slow Grenell down.
  
Fred Fleitz, president of the Center for Security Policy,  served in 2018 as deputy assistant to the president and to the chief of  staff of the National Security Council. He previously held  national-security jobs with the CIA, the DIA, the Department of State,  and the House Intelligence Committee. Twitter: @fredfleitz. Read more  reports from Fred Fleitz 
                © 2020 Newsmax. All rights reserved.