Sipher has written about and analyzed the
Steele dossier. In September 2017,
Just Security referenced Sipher: Sipher wrote that "Many of my former CIA colleagues have taken the [dossier] reports seriously since they were first published." Sipher was one of three former CIA officers who objected to
CIA Director Mike Pompeo's comments enjoining former agency officers to remain quiet after Trump's remarks at Helsinki. They also mentioned threats "from within": "We believe we have a responsibility to call out when our leadership is not doing enough to keep America safe." They also said they would speak "out against threats to national security even if they come from within". After Trump's comments at the
2018 Helsinki Summit, Sipher spoke about Trump's difficult relationship with the U.S. intelligence community, and how his comments "probably set it back quite a bit". When asked about the intelligence community's feeling that Trump didn't have its back, he replied: Sipher considers Trump a Russian agent in a limited sense. In an article that describes the terms of art used by intelligence professionals, he starts by saying Trump is not an "agent" in the traditional sense, and later says he is "an agent of a foreign power". He explains: In December 2019, Sipher commented on phone records released by the House Intelligence Committee during the
Trump impeachment inquiry, stating that Trump and Giuliani had "given the Russians ammunition they can use in an overt fashion, a covert fashion or in the twisting of information." Regarding Russian intelligence capabilities, he said: "I guarantee the Russians have the actual information". ==References==