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Tulshi Gabbard says she fired 100+ intel officers for ‘really horrific’ chat messages

Newsman: The director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard,  said she has fired more than 100 U.S. intelligence officers from various agencies – and revoked their security clearances – for having what she said were improper and sexually explicit conversations in internal government chat rooms.

Gabbard announced the firings in a Tuesday night appearance on Fox News but did not say what the employees discussed in what appeared to be private employee support groups, or why it constituted grounds for dismissal. She said the employees were using the chatrooms inappropriately to talk about “really, really horrific behavior.”

“There were over 100 people from across the intelligence community that contributed to and participated in this – what is really just an egregious violation of trust, basic rules and standards around professionalism,” Gabbard said. “I put out a directive today that they all will be terminated and their security clearances will be revoked.”

The chat rooms were run by the ultra-secret National Security Agency (NSA) through its multi-agency Intelink platform to allow the nation’s spies and intel analysts to internally discuss a broad array of topics, including those involving diversity, equity and inclusion issues − and gender-affirming surgeries, according to a report Monday by conservative activist and journalist Christopher Rufo in City Journal.

In his article, Rufo quoted an unidentified NSA press official saying, “All NSA employees sign agreements stating that publishing non-mission related material on Intelink is a usage violation and will result in disciplinary action.”

Tulshi Gabbard thanked Rufo “for putting it all out online.” A day earlier, he published a report about “the NSA’s Secret Sex Chats,” with purported chat logs showing participants engaging in “wide-ranging discussions of sex, kink, polyamory, and castration.”

“One popular chat topic” was gender-affirming surgery, Rufo reported, using outdated terminology. Rufo included chat logs with purported conversations among employees in which they detailed their sex lives after transitioning, as well as “hair removal, estrogen injections, and the experience of sexual pleasure post-castration.”

He said some of the conversations were held within LGBTQ+ employee resource groups and meetings with titles such as “Privilege,” “Ally Awareness,” “Pride,” and “Transgender Community Inclusion.”

In an official post on @X, the National Security Agency said it was aware of posts “that appear to show inappropriate discussions by IC personnel.”

The agency did not elaborate on specifics but  it said, “Potential misuse of these platforms by a small group of individuals does not represent the community. Investigations to address this misuse of government systems are ongoing.”

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence, or ODNI, which oversees the nation’s 18 intelligence agencies, has sent a memo directing them to identify all employees who participated in the NSA’s “obscene, pornographic, and sexually explicit” chatrooms by Friday, according to DNI spokesperson Alexa Henning.

Gabbard described the firings as the first step in a Trump administration campaign to “clean house, root out that rot and corruption and weaponization and politicization, so we can start to rebuild that trust in these institutions.”

She said the ODNI and other intelligence agencies were receiving tips about those issues from “people (who) are stepping forward because they are all on board with the mission to clean house and refocus on our core mission of serving the American people.”

In an unrelated matter, both the ODNI and the CIA have moved to fire an undisclosed number of employees as part of the Trump administration’s efforts to rid the government of DEI initiatives. Some of these workers sued on the grounds that their dismissals violated federal workforce laws against discrimination.

“None of these officers’ activities was or is illegal, and at no time have the agencies employing Plaintiffs contended that they individually engaged in any misconduct, nor are they accused of poor performance,” the officers said in their complaint against Gabbard and CIA Director John Ratcliffe.

A federal judge in Washington, D.C. paused the firings of 11 CIA officers on Feb. 18 until he could review the matter. A ruling in that case could come as early as Thursday. 

Immediately upon taking office last month, President Donald Trump also signed an executive order revoking the security clearances of 50 former intelligence officials.

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