美国情报官员面临新任局长上任后的裁员潮


2026-06-09T21:24:34.229Z / reuters.com

2025年2月27日,美国华盛顿国会山,获提名担任联邦住房金融局局长的比尔·普尔特尔在参议院银行、住房和城市事务委员会的确认听证会上作证。路透社/安娜贝尔·戈登 购买授权许可,打开新标签页

  • 内容摘要
  • 消息人士称,在塔尔西·加巴德此前已削减40%人员后,员工被告知预计将迎来更多裁员
  • 消息人士称,部分被标记为“人员过剩”的员工被劝另寻工作
  • 普尔特尔的任命加剧了国家情报总监办公室与中央情报局之间的紧张关系,令《外国情报监控法》重新授权复杂化

纽约6月9日路透电——三位知情人士向路透社透露,在唐纳德·特朗普总统表态希望新任临时国家情报总监缩减情报机构规模后,美国国家情报总监办公室的管理人员已告知员工,未来几个月将迎来大规模裁员。

特朗普上周宣布,将在塔尔西·加巴德本月晚些时候离任后,任命联邦住房监管官员比尔·普尔特尔担任临时国家情报总监。由于普尔特尔缺乏情报工作经验,这一决定遭到了民主党人和部分共和党人的强烈批评。

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特朗普表示,他认为普尔特尔应当进一步削减国家情报总监办公室的人员编制。该机构成立于2001年9·11袭击事件后,负责协调美国18个情报机构,部分共和党人称该机构人员臃肿。

“我希望看到它规模更小。我认为里面有很多人本就不该在那里,”特朗普上周在接受《华尔街日报》采访时说道。

这些消息人士因谈及敏感内部事务而要求匿名。

加巴德自去年上任以来,已将该机构的员工人数削减了约40%。目前尚不清楚该机构目前还剩多少员工,此前该机构员工超过1000人。

两位消息人士称,在加巴德去年进行机构重组后,部分员工的工作岗位被取消,但他们并未被解雇,而是被标记为“人员过剩”。

这些员工中已有部分离职。消息人士称,最近几周,机构管理层告诉其他一些员工,他们不太可能被安排到其他常设岗位,应当另寻就业机会。

“特朗普的宣布实际上加速了他们的离职,”其中一位消息人士说道。

一位情报官员告诉路透社,所有这些员工都已“转向其他工作机会”。

当被问及该机构是否会迎来更多裁员时,国家情报总监办公室发言人奥利维亚·科尔曼表示,加巴德最初的裁员节省了“近10亿美元,使该机构在为美国民众提供成果方面效率和成效大幅提升”。

情报机构间的紧张关系

普尔特尔被任命为临时国家情报总监之际,正值国家情报总监办公室与中央情报局之间的地盘争夺战——这一裂痕源于加巴德成立了一个任务部队,公开目标是“根除”情报界的政治化问题。

正如路透社此前报道的那样,这种内讧导致两家机构之间的合作破裂,尤其是在分析产品方面。

一位知情人士表示,进一步削减国家情报总监办公室的人员编制,可能会减少协助国家情报委员会的工作人员人数。国家情报委员会是情报界内顶尖的分析机构。

加巴德去年的裁员已经给该委员会带来了挫折,其中包括解雇了两名在国家情报委员会任职的中央情报局官员。

知情人士称,由于与国家情报总监办公室的紧张关系,中央情报局也不再向该委员会的部分情报评估报告供稿。

部分共和党人呼吁废除国家情报总监办公室,称该机构规模过大。

“长期以来,我一直主张缩减该官僚机构的规模,即便不是彻底取消它,”参议院情报委员会主席汤姆·科顿参议员上周在X平台上说道。

普尔特尔的任命也令一项关键监控权限的重新授权工作复杂化,民主党人威胁将阻止该权限续期,除非特朗普重新考虑这一任命。普尔特尔的批评者称,考虑到他缺乏相关经验且对特朗普效忠,他可能会进一步加剧情报界的政治化问题。

这项被称为《外国情报监控法》第702条的权限,允许美国情报机构在无需单独司法令状的情况下,监控位于美国境外的外国人的电子邮件和其他通信内容。该权限将于本周五到期。

艾琳·班科报道;唐·德菲和迪帕·巴宾顿编辑

US intelligence employees brace for cuts under new director

2026-06-09T21:24:34.229Z / reuters.com

Bill Pulte, nominated to be the director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, testifies during a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 27, 2025. REUTERS/Annabelle Gordon Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab

  • Summary
  • Staff told to expect more cuts after Gabbard’s previous 40% reduction, sources say
  • Some employees labeled ‘excess to need’ urged to seek jobs elsewhere, sources say
  • Pulte’s appointment heightens ODNI-CIA tensions, complicates FISA reauthorization

NEW YORK, June 9 (Reuters) – Staff at the office of the top U.S. spy have been told by managers to ​expect extensive cuts in the coming months following comments by President Donald Trump that he wants the new interim director to shrink the agency’s ranks, ‌three people familiar with the matter told Reuters.

Trump announced last week that he would appoint federal housing regulator Bill Pulte as interim Director of National Intelligence when Tulsi Gabbard leaves her post later this month, a decision that has drawn sharp criticism from Democrats and some Republicans given Pulte’s lack of intelligence experience.

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Trump said he thought Pulte should make further ​staff cuts at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, an agency created after the attacks of September 11, 2001, to coordinate the 18 ​U.S. intelligence agencies and which some Republicans say has become bloated.

“I’d like to see it smaller. I think there are ⁠a lot of people in there that shouldn’t be there,” Trump told the Wall Street Journal in an interview last week.

The sources were granted anonymity ​to speak about sensitive internal matters.

Gabbard has already cut the workforce of the agency by about 40% since taking up the position last year. It is unclear how many staff remain ​at the agency, which had more than 1,000 people previously.

Following Gabbard’s restructuring last year, some employees found their jobs eliminated, though they were not fired and instead labeled as “excess to need,” two of the sources said.

Some of those employees have since left the agency. Others were told by agency management in recent weeks that they would likely not be placed ​in another permanent position and that they should seek employment elsewhere, the sources said.

“Trump’s announcement has essentially accelerated their exit,” one of those sources said.

An ​intelligence official told Reuters that all those employees had already “moved on to other opportunities.”

Asked for comment on more cuts expected at the agency, ODNI spokeswoman Olivia Coleman said that Gabbard’s ‌initial workforce ⁠reduction saved “nearly $1 billion, making the agency exponentially more efficient and effective in delivering results for the American people.”

TENSIONS BETWEEN INTELLIGENCE AGENCIES

Pulte’s appointment as interim Director of National Intelligence comes amid a turf war between ODNI and the CIA – a rift that originated with Gabbard’s formation of a task force with the stated goal of “rooting out” politicization from the intelligence community.

The infighting has led to a breakdown in collaboration between the agencies, particularly on analytical products, as Reuters previously reported.

Further cuts at ​ODNI would likely reduce the number ​of staff assisting the National Intelligence Council, ⁠the premier analytical group inside the intelligence community, one of the sources familiar with the matter said.

That group has already faced setbacks following Gabbard’s cuts last year, which included the firing of two CIA officers who served on ​the NIC.

The CIA is also no longer contributing to some of the council’s intelligence assessments as a result of its ​tensions with ODNI, people ⁠familiar with the matter have said.

Some Republicans have called for the abolishment of ODNI, arguing the agency has become too big.

“I’ve long advocated for downsizing, if not outright eliminating this bureaucracy,” said Senator Tom Cotton, the chair of the Senate intelligence committee, on X last week.

Pulte’s appointment has also complicated efforts to reauthorize a key surveillance authority, ⁠with Democrats ​threatening to block the renewal unless Trump reconsiders his decision. Pulte’s critics say he is ​likely to further politicize the intelligence community, citing his lack of experience and loyalty to Trump.

The authority, known as FISA 702, allows U.S. intelligence agencies to monitor emails and other communications of foreigners ​located outside the United States without individual judicial warrants. The authority is set to expire Friday.

Reporting by Erin Banco; Editing by Don Durfee and Deepa Babington

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