China
is developing one of the greatest nuclear weapons forces in history while
Russia will exploit every opportunity to undermine the U.S. and its allies,
according to the annual threat assessment by the
Office of the Director of National Intelligence.
In a stark, declassified 31-page
document, the report released late Monday by the House Intelligence Committee says
Iran will continue to threaten American interests as it seeks to erode U.S.
influence in the Middle East. At the same time, North Korea is committed to
expanding its nuclear arsenal and ballistic missile development, according to
the assessment.
“In the coming year, the United States and its
allies will face an increasingly complex and interconnected global security
environment marked by the growing specter of great power competition and
conflict, while collective, transnational threats to all nations and actors
compete for our attention and finite resources,” according to the document.
The
nation’s top intelligence chiefs will present -- and expand upon -- the
assessment when they testify before the House committee on Tuesday. Speakers
will include Avril Haines, director of national intelligence; CIA chief William
Burns; General Paul Nakasone, head of the National Security Agency; and FBI
Director Christopher Wray.
The
annual assessment represents a consensus among the nation’s 17 intelligence
agencies of major threats confronting the U.S., and is used by lawmakers and
policy makers as a baseline to make critical decisions, advance legislation and
craft budgets.
The
assessment is dated, however, as it was written before Russia invaded Ukraine
last month and was based on information available as of Jan. 21. Lawmakers are
certain to press the intelligence chiefs for the most current assessments and
implications of Russia’s invasion during Tuesday’s hearing.
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