Nomination and confirmation in January 2025 In July 2024,
Axios reported that Ratcliffe had been considered as
Donald Trump's
director of the Central Intelligence Agency in his
second term.
Punchbowl News reported previously that Trump had been heavily considering nominating Ratcliffe for the position. On November 12, Trump named Ratcliffe as his nominee for director of the
Central Intelligence Agency. He appeared before the
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence on January 15. In his opening statement, Ratcliffe stated that he would lead the Central Intelligence Agency to be non-partisan, aggressive, and less risk-averse.
Democrats objected to Ratcliffe's nomination and sought to delay it. The
Senate voted to confirm Ratcliffe in a 74–25 vote; twenty Democrats joined
Republicans in confirming him.
Intelligence disclosures and mass firings After being confirmed as the director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Ratcliffe told
Breitbart News that he favored the
COVID-19 lab leak theory. Hours later, the agency released an assessment affirming the theory. Ratcliffe was involved in negotiating the prisoner exchange between the Russian entrepreneur
Alexander Vinnik and the American schoolteacher
Marc Fogel, as well as
Russo-Ukrainian peace negotiations. After Trump
ordered the declassification of files relating to the
assassination of president
John F. Kennedy, Ratcliffe informed officials in the
Trump administration that some documents were unrelated to Kennedy. In February 2025, Ratcliffe extended the
federal deferred resignation program to the Central Intelligence Agency, encouraging older employees who joined following the
September 11 attacks to retire in favor of younger workers. The program conflicted with Ratcliffe's intent for the agency to shift its efforts towards countering
China. Ratcliffe's efforts to fire officers intensified in March after a federal judge ruled that he had the authority to dismiss employees at will. That month,
Elon Musk met with Ratcliffe to discuss "government efficiency" efforts at the Central Intelligence Agency. In May,
The Washington Post reported that the agency intended to cut over one thousand positions within Trump's term. The firings affected diversity efforts at the Central Intelligence Agency that had been established in an attempt to reach more robust conclusions and improve covert operations. In March 2025, Ratcliffe testified before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence on a
Signal group chat for discussing
imminent strikes in
Yemen that month. The chat's contents were leaked by
The Atlantics editor-in-chief
Jeffrey Goldberg, who was accidentally added as a member. Ratcliffe, who participated in the group chat, told the committee that his use of Signal was "lawful". He appeared before the
House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence the following day, continuing to state that he had not committed wrongdoing. In response to a lawsuit filed by the watchdog organization
American Oversight seeking to preserve the contents of the group chat, the Central Intelligence Agency said in a court filing that Ratcliffe's messages could not be retrieved because they had been deleted from his phone; although the group chat's settings had been changed to automatically remove messages, prior chats from Ratcliffe would have needed to be manually deleted.
Foreign operations and election counterinvestigation from
Mar-a-Lago After taking office, Ratcliffe ordered a review of the Central Intelligence Agency's assessment of
Russian interference in the 2016 elections. In July 2025, the agency determined that
John O. Brennan had hastened the investigation, but did not dispute its conclusion. After the Central Intelligence Agency's review, Ratcliffe posted on social media that Brennan and
James Comey, the former
director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, had negatively affected the quality of the assessment. According to
The New York Times, Ratcliffe referred Brennan to the
Federal Bureau of Investigation for criminal prosecution over statements he made to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence; Brennan's testimony, then over seven years old, appeared to exceed the
statute of limitations for possible charges. In August, the bureau raided the home of
John Bolton, the former
national security advisor, using limited intelligence that Ratcliffe provided to its director,
Kash Patel. As early as February 2025, Ratcliffe was involved in discussions over
Iran's
nuclear program. Following Israeli prime minister
Benjamin Netanyahu's visit to the United States that month, Trump directed Ratcliffe to meet with Netanyahu and
Mossad director
David Barnea in
Israel. Ratcliffe discussed possible covert actions against Iran with Netanyahu and Israeli intelligence officials in May. At
Camp David, Ratcliffe briefed Trump that an
Israeli attack on Iran was imminent in June. That month, he told Trump in a
White House classified meeting that Iran was close to obtaining a nuclear weapon. After the United States
struck Iranian nuclear sites, Ratcliffe said that the strikes had "severely damaged" Iran's nuclear program. After Trump ordered the freeze of
U.S. military aid to
Ukraine in March 2025, Ratcliffe convinced Trump to allow the agency to continue sharing intelligence, due to the potential threats to CIA officers in the country. Ratcliffe maintained the number of CIA personnel in Ukraine and doubled the funding for the agency's programs there. In June 2025 the CIA and the military began working to increase the effectiveness of
Ukrainian drone strikes inside Russia, assisting them in identifying and targeting bottlenecks in Russia's defense industry. Ratcliffe frequently spoke to Trump about the drone campaign and the U.S. role in it. The CIA was also authorized to assist with
the Ukrainian drone strikes on Russian
"shadow fleet" vessels. In September 2025,
The New York Times reported that Ratcliffe had supported secretary of state
Marco Rubio's campaign to oust Venezuelan president
Nicolás Maduro. Ratcliffe was involved in authorizing covert action in Venezuela. After U.S. forces
raided the country and seized Maduro, Ratcliffe met with acting president
Delcy Rodríguez in
Caracas, a move believed to bolster Venezuela's government rather than
its opposition. Ratcliffe was involved in
military planning in preparation for
a war with Iran, particularly presenting tactics alongside
Dan Caine, the
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. In testimony before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Ratcliffe did not say whether Iran would be capable of launching long-range missiles within six months but said that Iran had been a "constant threat" and posed an "immediate threat". ==Political positions==