Tulsi Gabbard, Trump’s pick for intel chief, faces questions on Capitol Hill amid Syria fallout
WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for intelligence chief, Tulsi Gabbard, faced fresh scrutiny on Capitol Hill about her proximity to Russian ally Syria amid the sudden fall of that country’s hard-line leader.
Gabbard ignored shouted questions about her 2017 visit to war-torn Syria as she ducked into one of several private meetings with senators who are being asked to confirm Trump’s unusual nominees.
But the Democrat-turned-Republican Army National Reserve lieutenant colonel delivered a statement Monday in which she reiterated her support for Trump’s America First approach to national security and a more limited U.S. military footprint overseas.
“I want to address the issue that’s in the headlines right now: I stand in full support and wholeheartedly agree with the statements that President Trump has made over these last few days with regards to the developments in Syria,” Gabbard said while exiting a Senate meeting.
The incoming president’s Cabinet and top administrative choices are dividing his Republican allies and drawing concern, if not full opposition, from Democrats and others. Not just Gabbard, but other Trump nominees including Pentagon pick Pete Hegseth, were back at the Capitol ahead of what is expected to be volatile confirmation hearings next year.
The incoming president is working to put his team in place for an ambitious agenda of mass immigrant deportations, firing federal workers and rollbacks of U.S. support for Ukraine and NATO allies.
Syrian insurgents’ sweep concludes a lightning offensive that ended the half-century Assad dynasty. President Bashar Assad reportedly has fled to Russia.
Syria now searches for a new identity, as Damascus residents face a future without President Bashar Assad.
“We’re going to sit down and visit, that’s what this is all about,” said Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) as he welcomed Gabbard into his office.
The president-elect announced other appointments Monday, including his lawyer Harmeet Dhillon for assistant attorney general for civil rights and Mark Paoletta as the returning general counsel of the Office of Management and Budget.
Meanwhile, Defense secretary pick Hegseth appeared to be picking up support from once-skeptical senators, the former Army National Guard major denying sexual misconduct allegations and pledging to not drink alcohol if he is confirmed.
The president-elect’s choice to lead the FBI, Kash Patel, who has written extensively about locking up Trump’s foes and proposed dismantling the agency, launched his first visits with senators Monday.
“I expect our Republican Senate is going to confirm all of President Trump’s nominees,” said Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) on social media.
Donald Trump’s pick for director of national intelligence is facing scrutiny over her past remarks that supported Kremlin propaganda.
Despite widespread concern about the nominees’ qualifications and demeanors for the jobs that are among the highest positions in the U.S. government, Trump’s team is portraying the criticism against them as political smears and innuendo.
Showing that concern, nearly 100 former senior U.S. diplomats and intelligence and national security officials have urged Senate leaders to schedule closed-door hearings to allow for a full review of the government’s files on Gabbard.
Gabbard, who represented Hawaii in Congress, arrived a decade ago in Washington, her surfboard in tow, as part of a new generation of potential leaders. She ran unsuccessfully for president as a Democrat in 2020. But Gabbard left the party and briefly became an independent before joining with Trump’s 2024 campaign, in large part over his disdain for U.S. involvement overseas and opposition to helping Ukraine battle Russia.
Donald Trump’s pick for director of national intelligence is facing scrutiny over her past remarks that supported Kremlin propaganda.
Her visit to Syria to meet with then-President Bashar Assad around the time of Trump’s first inauguration during the country’s bloody civil war stunned her former colleagues and the Washington national security establishment. The U.S. had severed diplomatic relations with Syria, and her visit was seen by some as legitimizing a brutal leader accused of war crimes.
Gabbard defended the trip, saying it was important to open dialogue, but critics noted in her commentary echoes of Russia-fueled talking points. Assad fled, reportedly to Moscow, over the weekend after rebels overtook Syria in a surprise attack, ending his family’s five decades of rule.
She said her views were shaped by “my multiple deployments and seeing firsthand the cost of war and the threat of Islamist terrorism.”
Gabbard said, “It’s one of the many reasons why I appreciate President Trump’s leadership and his election, where he is fully committed, as he has said over and over, to bring about an end to wars.”
In their letter to Senate leaders last week, the nearly 100 former officials, who served in both Democratic and Republican administrations, said they were “alarmed” by the choice of Gabbard to oversee all 18 U.S. intelligence agencies, that her past actions “call into question her ability to deliver unbiased intelligence briefings to the President, Congress, and to the entire national security apparatus.”
The office of the director of national intelligence was created after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks to coordinate the nation’s intelligence agencies and act as the president’s main intelligence advisor.
Mascaro and Amiri write for the Associated Press. AP writer Stephen Groves contributed to this report.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.