02/23/2026 / By Willow Tohi

In an unprecedented move to restore analytic integrity, the Central Intelligence Agency has publicly retracted or revised 19 intelligence reports produced between 2015 and 2023. The agency announced Friday that these products, spanning the Obama, Trump and Biden administrations, fell short of impartiality standards and represented an improper insertion of political and social agendas into intelligence work. This historic step underscores a years-long reckoning within the U.S. intelligence and law enforcement community over the alleged weaponization of federal power against domestic political opponents and ideological groups.
The CIA’s action represents one of the most significant public admissions of institutional bias within a U.S. intelligence agency. Of the 19 identified reports, 17 were permanently deleted and two were revised and re-released. The retracted analyses covered a wide range of topics well outside the CIA’s traditional national security remit, including assessments on white women’s role in extremist radicalization, LGBT activism in the Middle East and global contraceptive shortfalls.
A senior CIA official stated the reports “did not meet CIA’s tradecraft standards” and that under prior administrations, “there was an inappropriate insertion of DEI issues and other distractions.” The agency publicly released redacted versions of three representative reports to illustrate the flaws. One, from October 2021, relied on a partisan website hosted on Medium. Another, from July 2020, repeatedly cited pro-abortion advocacy groups. A third, from January 2015, used a Daily Beast article to critique the Egyptian government’s stance on homosexuality.
The CIA’s announcement is the latest in a series of actions rolling back what critics call the politicization of federal agencies during the Obama and Biden years. It follows the rescission of an October 2021 memo by then-Attorney General Merrick Garland that directed the FBI to address alleged “threats” against school board members, which whistleblowers revealed led to the use of counterterrorism tools against protesting parents.
Similarly, the FBI was forced in 2023 to withdraw an intelligence memo from its Richmond field office that inappropriately linked “radical-traditionalist Catholic” ideology to violent extremism. That memo heavily cited the Southern Poverty Law Center, a partisan advocacy group. A subsequent investigation by Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA) found the memo was distributed to over 1,000 FBI employees, contradicting then-Director Christopher Wray’s testimony that it was an isolated product.
Friday’s retractions build upon a damning “lessons learned” review the CIA published in July 2025, which scrutinized the Intelligence Community Assessment (ICA) on Russian election activities in 2016. That review concluded that including the unverified, Democrat-funded Steele Dossier in the assessment “ran counter to fundamental tradecraft principles.” It revealed that senior CIA managers strongly opposed its inclusion but were overruled by then-Director John Brennan, who “showed a preference for narrative consistency over analytical soundness.”
CIA Director John Ratcliffe, appointed by President Donald Trump, stated last summer that the 2016 ICA was conducted through “an atypical & corrupt process.” Federal prosecutors investigating the weaponization of intelligence have since sought evidence from the Senate related to Brennan’s testimony, signaling an ongoing scrutiny of the origins of the Trump-Russia collusion narrative.
The cumulative effect of these corrective actions paints a picture of intelligence and law enforcement agencies that, for nearly a decade, repeatedly strayed into domestic political and ideological debates. Key consequences include:
The CIA’s latest move is framed by its leadership as a definitive break from this past. “There is absolutely no room for bias in our work,” Director Ratcliffe said, “and when we identify instances where analytic rigor has been compromised, we have a responsibility to correct the record.”
The retraction of 19 intelligence reports is a stark administrative acknowledgment that the lines between intelligence analysis and political advocacy became dangerously blurred. While Democratic critics like Senator Mark Warner warn that such corrections risk appearing politically motivated themselves, the agency’s leadership insists this is a necessary purge to reaffirm a core principle: intelligence must inform policy, not be subservient to it. As the U.S. intelligence community moves forward, the challenge will be to ensure that the commitment to impartiality withstands future political transitions, restoring its crucial role as a provider of facts, not a player in politics.
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Tagged Under:
awakening, bias, big government, conspiracy, corruption, deception, FBI corruption, intelligence, media fact watch, national security, outrage, progress, propaganda, real investigations, Suppressed, Tyranny, weaponized intelligence
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