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CIA Hiring List Sent to White House Labeled ‘Disastrous National Security Development

| Chase Tactical | Tactical Gear

The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) reportedly sent an unclassified email to the White House listing recent hires, raising concerns about national security risks, particularly regarding U.S. intelligence on China.

According to a New York Times report, the list, sent as part of the Trump administration’s efforts to reduce the federal workforce, included the first names and first initials of the last names of new hires who remain on probationary status. Many of the employees listed are reportedly young analysts and operatives recruited specifically to bolster the CIA’s focus on China, who is known for aggressively targeting information regarding U.S. intelligence personnel.

According to the report, former officials warned that such sensitive information, while partially anonymized, could be pieced together by adversaries using other publicly available data, posing a risk of exposure to foreign intelligence services such as those from China and Russia.

A former CIA officer described the decision to send this information via an unsecured, unclassified email as a “counterintelligence disaster.” In a post on X, Senator Mark Warner (D-Va.), the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, called the release of the officers’ names “a disastrous national security development.”

Former CIA analyst and author Sarah Adams pointed to broader failures in the agency’s ability to protect sensitive information, stating, “I’ve been saying the biggest issue right now at the CIA is they are completely failing on the counterintelligence front. If this was done—heads should roll!”

The email was sent as the Trump administration extended a buyout offer to all CIA employees.

According to The Wall Street Journal, the agency offered staff the option to resign while retaining eight months of pay and benefits.

Critics argue that the buyout program disproportionately incentivizes highly skilled employees, such as Mandarin speakers and technology experts, to leave—potentially weakening the agency’s capabilities in critical areas. Some also warn that this could undermine the agency’s recent efforts to diversify its ranks and enhance its focus on China.

John Ratcliffe, who was appointed CIA Director and is a close ally of former President Donald Trump, defended the measures.

In a statement, Ratcliffe said the changes were designed to align the agency with the administration’s national security priorities. “These moves are part of a holistic strategy to infuse the agency with renewed energy, provide opportunities for rising leaders to emerge, and better position the CIA to deliver on its mission,” Ratcliffe said.