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Target USA: DNI Jim Clapper reveals unprecedented threats facing U.S.

April 26, 2026 | 蜜桃视频app鈥橲 exclusive interview with James R. Clapper, director of national intelligence (Tiffany Arnold)

WASHINGTON 鈥 For more than 50 years as a military officer and in the U.S. government, James R. Clapper has been getting up early each day to look for the breadcrumbs that the nation鈥檚 adversaries and enemies leave behind.聽His job has been to collect the dots, connect them and report what he鈥檚 learned.

As the director of national intelligence, he reports directly to President Barack Obama. What he鈥檚 telling the president is increasingly disturbing.

鈥淚n my 50-plus years in intelligence, I don鈥檛 know if we鈥檝e been beset by a more diverse array of challenges and crises around the world,鈥 said Clapper in an

In a stunning declaration, he waxed nostalgic when referring to the crushing volume of bad news pouring into聽the U.S. intelligence community. 鈥淪ometimes it almost makes you long for the halcyon days of the Cold War, and a single all-consuming adversary 鈥 the Soviet Union that we came to know pretty well,鈥 Clapper said.

The adversaries of yesteryear were cumbersome, slow and blind to the superior defensive skills the U.S. military, intelligence and law enforcement communities presented to those who sought to attack. But Clapper and other U.S. intelligence officials say the speed, skill and adaptability of today鈥檚 threats pose unprecedented challenges to U.S. national security.

Each day brings a range of threats and issues聽—聽cyber, counterintelligence, terrorism, weapons of mass destruction, transnational organized crime, economics, natural resources and human security all demand Clapper’s聽attention as he prepares to brief the president.

The 鈥楶DB鈥

He starts off each day early. 鈥淚 get up about five o鈥檆lock and start right away, reading the news clips and that sort of thing,鈥 said Clapper.

After getting dressed and preparing to leave home, 鈥淚 get in the car. The protective detail brings me here and I start reading the [secure] iPad that we have for the President鈥檚 Daily Brief [PDB] to find out what鈥檚 going on,鈥 he said.

During the trip from home to work, which takes an unspecified amount of time, he continues to read. Once he arrives at the office, on the days when he briefs the president, 鈥淚 immediately come here and here sit at this table and work with my PDB briefer,鈥 he said.

The first order of business, Clapper said, is 鈥渄etermining what we are going to tee up to brief the president. The PDB briefer will have been up all night and is my research agent, going through all of the traffic, incoming messages and reports from all over the world.鈥

By the time Clapper arrives, 鈥淲e have a set of prepared items teed up to brief. But it鈥檚 entirely up to me what I take into the [Oval Office] or not.鈥

In past decades, the in-person briefing delivered to the president was accompanied by what Clapper called 鈥渁 formal PDB鈥 in a thick binder-type note book. But after the Office of the Director of National Intelligence was established, technology changed the process.

鈥淸The] formal PDB we now do on an iPad,鈥 Clapper said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not a hard copy any longer, so there will be some number of聽 articles on various topics that are all coordinated throughout the [intelligence] community, and normally prepared by multiple agencies.鈥

After two hours of preparation, the 10-mile trip to the White House begins.

鈥淚 try to stay current even as I鈥檓 driving down to the White House. I do have access to secure communications, if I want to check on late-breaking developments,鈥 said Clapper.

He normally uses secure, mobile encrypted-communications channels to talk with officials at U.S. Central Command about tactical developments in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria and Yemen while en route to the White House.

Once he arrives, he lays out the long list of issues, events, people and places that concern him and other U.S. national security officials. He often brings subject-matter experts with him.

Facing the 鈥渦nknown unknown鈥

What聽worries Clapper most is what he doesn鈥檛 know 鈥 something he calls 鈥渢he unknown unknown鈥 鈥 such as undiscovered terror plots.

鈥淔or all of us in the intelligence business, you worry about what you don鈥檛 know at all,鈥 said Clapper. Extremists bent on attacking the U.S. lead the list of unknowns.

Clapper said the U.S. has a robust intelligence community working around the clock, but the terror attack in San Bernardino, California, which left 14 dead, and the Paris attacks, which killed 130 people, exposed a key weakness in the global intelligence community.

Terrorists have learned to avoid detection.

鈥淚f we are aware 鈥 even anecdotally or partially 鈥 of some plot or some threat, we can work on that,鈥 Clapper said. 鈥淲e can attempt to gain more insight, learn more about it, collect more [human intelligence], collect more [signals intelligence], if we have something to start with.鈥

Terrorists鈥 use of encrypted communications and social media tools during recent global attacks have denied intelligence officials that starting point.

Their ability to tap into social media is a聽key factor.

鈥淭errorism as an instrument has grown, and it鈥檚 grown in its sophistication and destructiveness. In order to have more impact to garner more attention (via social and traditional media), they鈥檝e gotten more destructive, more brutal savage, more creative, particularly when it comes to proselyting and recruiting.鈥

April 26, 2026 | Terrorists capitalize on U.S. freedoms (J.J. Green)

Troubling transparency

U.S. intelligence officials are increasingly concerned about聽how much U.S. enemies, especially terrorists, know about their once-secret capabilities.

On May 20, 2013, Edward Snowden, a former U.S. intelligence community contractor, flew to Hong Kong after leaving his job at an National Security Agency facility in Hawaii. In early June 2013, he began leaking thousands of classified NSA documents to journalists. He lives聽in an undisclosed location in Russia, and the leaks continue to surface.

U.S. intelligence sources say leaked classified intelligence has provided a virtual university for enemies of the U.S., especially terrorists.

鈥淭he terrorists have gone to school on how we try to track them, and that鈥檚 made our job harder and harder,鈥 Clapper said.

The Snowden leaks, however, sparked anger in the U.S. about privacy concerns and led to an Obama administration effort to be more forthcoming about its intelligence-gathering efforts.

But for Clapper, transparency is at the heart of his concern. While he believes it is good to tell the American public what the intelligence community is up to, 鈥渢he downside of course is, when we expose what we do, others capitalize, and that’s what’s happened to us in the last two or three years.鈥

On Friday, more details about NSA surveillance activities, revealed in Snowden鈥檚 leaks, were published around the world.

April 26, 2026 | Clapper says U.S. transparency is a double-edged sword (J.J. Green)

ISIL is 鈥榥ot a mortal enemy, but Russia is鈥

In addition to warning the president and Congress about looming threats and challenges, Clapper said, a part of his job is to provide perspective on the situation. In a striking statement, he said that while ISIL is dominating the headlines with brutal murders and scary videos, it is not a 鈥渕ortal enemy鈥 to the U.S., though 鈥淩ussia is.鈥

鈥淚SIL is not a mortal enemy of the U.S. It can cause us harm and can kill our people,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t can鈥檛 inflict mortal damage to the United States聽…聽they don鈥檛 have the destructive power that Russia has.鈥

He cited Russia鈥檚 nuclear arsenal as the driving force behind his聽comment. He acknowledged that ISIL is dangerous, brutal and savage, but said ISIL 鈥渃annot impose the level of destruction on the U.S. as Russia鈥檚 nuclear weapons, should it choose to.鈥

Clapper is preparing for what he calls 鈥渢estimony season,鈥 which consists of several appearances before Congress. In the upcoming Worldwide Threat Assessment hearings, a newly aggressive Russia, a belligerent and nuclear North Korea, Iranian proxy activities, and Chinese espionage are key areas to be addressed, in addition to terrorism concerns.

A key message he鈥檚 is likely to deliver is a warning that the U.S., while making rapid progress against ISIL in Iraq and Syria, will not quickly vanquish the brutal terror group or others.

鈥淧ersonally [I] think we鈥檙e going to be in this counter-extremist business for a long time,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to be in a state of vigilance and suppression for these groups. If it鈥檚 not ISIS, it鈥檚 going to be something else.鈥

J.J. Green

JJ Green is 蜜桃视频app's National Security Correspondent. He reports daily on security, intelligence, foreign policy, terrorism and cyber developments, and provides regular on-air and online analysis. He is also the host of two podcasts: Target USA and Colors: A Dialogue on Race in America.

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