Wray went further than that. He told Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., that he does not discuss the investigation into possible Russian involvement with the 2016 Trump campaign with the president, but could not reassure her that Trump isn't receiving such info from congressional allies. When asked about Trump's accusations that the FBI is biased, Wray said he tells FBI employees "not to get too caught up on what I consider the noise on TV and on social media." That "noise" would include the statements of the president of the United States.
Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., thought he'd trapped Wray into admitting that the Steele dossier was discredited by asking if Wray agreed with James Comey's earlier statement that it was "salacious and unverified." Cotton seemed taken aback when Wray said that was "something we can discuss more in a closed setting," which naturally left the impression that there was something to discuss.
Every one of these intelligence officers stood by the January 2017 assessment that the Russian government had interfered in the 2016 election and reaffirmed that that they are going to try to do it again. Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats said:
There should be no doubt that Russia perceives its past efforts as successful and views the 2018 U.S. midterm elections as a potential target for Russian influence operations. We need to inform the American public that this is real. We are not going to allow some Russian to tell us how we’re going to vote. There needs to be a national cry for that.
This prompted Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, to point out the obvious and uncomfortable fact that there's one big impediment to doing that:
I understand the president's sensitivity about whether his campaign was in connections with the Russians, and that's a separate question. . . . My problem is I talk to people in Maine who say the whole thing is a witch hunt and a hoax because "the president told me." We cannot confront this threat, which [requires] whole of government response, when the leader of the government continues to deny that it exists.
King asked the intelligence chiefs to try to get the president to stop doing that. They all examined their fingernails.
But that wasn't the most dramatic moment. That came when Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., asked a simple question that sent shockwaves through the hearing room. He asked the assembled intelligence leaders if the president had ever urged them to address the threat of further Russian interference.
He has not. When pressed, Rogers said, “I can’t say I’ve been specifically directed to blunt or actually stop" future Russian attacks. Pompeo tried to defend Trump, but the best he could come up with was to say the CIA takes “all kinds of steps to disrupt what the Russians are trying to do.” Wray said he had not been specifically tasked to combat Russian interference by the president. Coats said the same. When asked if the president has ordered an inter-agency strategy, he replied, "We essentially are relying on the investigations that are underway."
We knew that Trump didn't like to hear about Russia in his intelligence briefings and that he had not convened even a single meeting about the possible threat to future elections. His efforts to impede the investigations and his administration's ongoing refusal to enforce congressionally mandated sanctions against Russian interests are obvious and well documented. Now we know that he has never even bothered to task his government with stopping Russian interference going forward.
When it comes to Russia, the president sees no evil, hears no evil and speaks no evil. If one didn't know better, one might just start to suspect that this was about something bigger than Trump's bruised ego after all.