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Home  /  World  /  The US  /  Trump orders CIA to send unclassified employees list, sparking security fears

Trump orders CIA to send unclassified employees list, sparking security fears

by Siddhi Vinayak Misra
February 6, 2025
in The US, World
Reading Time: 2 mins read
Trump orders CIA to send unclassified employees list, sparks security fears

Order raises concerns over national security and intelligence exposure

U.S. President Donald Trump has directed the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to submit an unclassified email listing all employees who have been with the agency for two years or less. This move is part of Trump’s broader initiative to shrink the federal workforce.

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New recruits at risk

The list includes first names and the initials of last names of new hires, as they are still on probation and, therefore, easier to dismiss. Many of these recruits are young analysts and operators, primarily focused on China. Their identities are usually kept highly confidential due to persistent cyber-espionage efforts by Chinese hackers seeking to uncover U.S. intelligence personnel.

A former agency officer described the move as a “counterintelligence disaster,” warning that such exposure could severely compromise national security.

Potential foreign intelligence threat

Concerns have been raised that the list might be shared with a team of young software professionals recently hired by Elon Musk and his government efficiency team. If this information falls into the hands of foreign intelligence agencies from China, Russia, or other adversarial nations, it could become easier to identify and target CIA employees.

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U.S. Senator Mark Warner, Vice Chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, expressed his alarm over the issue. He posted on X:

“Exposing the identities of officials who do extremely sensitive work would put a direct target on their backs for China. A disastrous national security development.”

Data exposure risks

Several CIA employees have uncommon first names and initials, making them easier to identify when cross-referenced with publicly available data. Information from driver’s licenses, car registration systems, social media accounts, and university records—where the CIA frequently recruits—could be used to compile a more complete list of personnel.

Experts fear that such exposure could prematurely end the careers of young intelligence officers before they even begin.

CIA workforce reduction efforts

Earlier this week, the CIA became the first major national security agency to offer buyouts to employees as part of an effort to reduce the federal workforce. The agency described the decision as “part of a holistic strategy to infuse the Agency with renewed energy.”

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