The U.S. Secret Service is investigating how a man entered the home of President Biden’s national security adviser in the middle of the night roughly two weeks ago without being detected by agents guarding his house, according to three government officials. Not sure who or from which nationality this intruder, but this “breach” just same minute after the news that the Central Intelligence Agency’s semipublic campaign to convince Russians disaffected by the Ukraine war to spy for Washington has borne fruit, CIA officials said this week, as the spy agency released a new video aimed directly at Russian government officials.
Pretty incredible, bizarre, staggering account here. The national security adviser is at his home at night, a drunk person trespasses into his home at 3AM, he confronts him & asks him to leave, & then alerts the Secret Service who were outside but "unaware" anything was going on.
The unknown man walked into Jake Sullivan’s home at about 3 a.m. one day in late April and Sullivan confronted the individual, instructing him to leave, two of the people briefed on the incident said. There were no signs of forced entry at the home, according to one of the people.
Sullivan has a round-the-clock Secret Service detail. But agents stationed outside the house were unaware that an intruder had gotten inside the home, located in the West End neighborhood of Washington, until the man had already left and Sullivan came outside to alert the agents, the two people said.
The intruder appeared to be intoxicated and confused about where he was, according to people briefed on the incident. There is no evidence the person knew Sullivan or sought to harm him, they said.
In a statement, the Secret Service said it has launched an investigation into the incident and how the intruder accessed Sullivan’s home undetected. The agency said that it considered the security breach a matter of significant concern.
“While the protectee was unharmed, we are taking this matter seriously and have opened a comprehensive mission assurance investigation to review all facets of what occurred,” Secret Service spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said in the statement, in response to an inquiry from The Washington Post. “Any deviation from our protective protocols is unacceptable and if discovered, personnel will be held accountable.”
(Promoting to more engage in Substack) Seamless to listen to your favorite podcasts on Substack. You can buy a better headset to listen to a podcast here (GST DE352306207). Listeners on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Overcast, or Pocket Casts simultaneously. podcasting can transform more of a conversation. Invite listeners to weigh in on episodes directly with you and with each other through discussion threads. At Substack, the process is to build with writers. Podcasts are an amazing feature of the Substack. I wish it had a feature to read the words we have written down without us having to do the speaking.
Guglielmi said the Secret Service has deployed additional security precautions for Sullivan and around his home, pending the completion of the investigation.
The White House declined to comment.
Normally, anyone intruding on the property of a person protected by the Secret Service would be detained for questioning, then most likely arrested and charged with trespassing. But people familiar with the incident said the person who entered Sullivan’s home departed the scene before Secret Service agents were alerted to his presence.
Although Sullivan was unhurt, the incident has sparked alarm among the very small group of White House and national security officials made aware of the episode, especially because the Secret Service in 2021 added a heightened level of security for the national security adviser, a senior aide to the president who coordinates diplomatic and military affairs.
Previously, national security advisers were provided Secret Service protection only when they traveled outside the Washington area, according to a senior national security official and a former Secret Service executive. That changed after the FBI uncovered a 2021 Iranian plot to assassinate John Bolton, the then-retired national security adviser who had served under President Donald Trump, the current official explained.
Following that discovery, the Secret Service decided to extend full-time protective details to Sullivan, Bolton and Robert C. O’Brien, Bolton’s successor. That means agents are now stationed outside Sullivan’s Washington home full-time when he is in town.
The Justice Department charged an Iranian military official in the Bolton plot in August 2022. Before resigning his post in 2019, Bolton had been the primary architect of a campaign of escalating sanctions and threats of retaliation over Iran’s support of terrorist activity.
The incident at Sullivan’s home comes after last October’s attack on the husband of then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) at the couple’s San Francisco home. An intruder broke in during the early-morning hours, shouting, “Where is Nancy?” and assaulted Paul Pelosi with a hammer. The then-speaker, who is protected by the U.S. Capitol Police and not the Secret Service, was not at home at the time.
Capitol Police cameras at the Pelosi home captured the break-in in real time, but it was not immediately seen in the Washington command center, The Post reported last year.
Sullivan lives with his wife, Margaret (Maggie) Goodlander, a former counselor to Attorney General Merrick Garland who now serves in the Justice Department’s antitrust division.
He has served as Biden’s national security adviser since the start of his presidency, coming to the White House after holding a senior role in the Biden campaign. In the Obama administration, Sullivan advised Biden, who was then vice president, on national security issues and also worked as a top aide to then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, ultimately joining her 2016 presidential campaign.
As Biden’s top national security aide, Sullivan has played an integral role in all of the president’s foreign policy decisions and activities, from the withdrawal of U.S. troops in Afghanistan to the creation of a global coalition in support of Ukraine. Sullivan currently facing dilemma, that the $48 billion Ukraine aid package approved in December has about $6 billion left, meaning U.S. funding for weapons and supplies could dry up by midsummer. Now lawmakers are wondering what's the next plan.
Europe has both the financial capacity and the political interest to play the leading part in the rebirth of Ukraine.
Rebuilding Ukraine will require help, expertise and guidance – and a lot of time and money. Yet the costs are within what Ukraine’s allies and multilateral organizations can afford. Could Europe afford to dedicate 0.1% of its annual GDP to finance Ukraine's reconstruction? You bet it could. Olaf Scholz doesn’t do pomp. Nor does he do charm. A man who screws up his eyes when he tries to smile, the German chancellor welcomed Ukraine’s president to Berlin on Sunday (May 14th) with characteristic stiffness.
Yet of all Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s meetings with fellow European leaders over the past few days – from Rome to Paris to Chequers today for more hardware and more embraces with Rishi Sunak – his day in Germany may be remembered as the most important. The announcement on the eve of his visit of a doubling of military aid to Ukraine to a total of more than €5bn finally brings Germany in from the cold. The consequences may take months to be seen on the battlefield, but in geo-strategic terms they are immediate.
Zelenskiy knows that he has perhaps only six to eight months for his counteroffensive to make sufficient inroads to force Russia out of the areas it seized in 2022 and, better still, out of lands it annexed in 2014. Doing this would also demonstrate to the west the effectiveness of the support given so far. He knows that if he cannot finish the job this year, he will have to continue into next year in even more difficult circumstances.
He sees the Chinese, the French and others showboating diplomacy not necessarily on Ukraine’s terms. At the same time he is aware that public opinion in several countries is wavering.
Most of all, he sees the lumbering figure of Donald Trump coming into view. Even the prospect of a return to the White House of a man who cannot say which side he supports provides succour to Vladimir Putin and the forces on the far right and far left in Europe who put the vague notion of “peace” ahead of international law, self-determination and human rights.
Back to Sullivan.
He has traveled on nearly every foreign trip with the president and is expected to leave Wednesday with Biden as the president heads to Japan, Papua New Guinea and Australia. But in the short-press conference before Debt Ceiling meeting in Oval Office (1.37 pm EDT, May 16th), Biden has officially cut short his trip and will return to the U.S. on Sunday after the G7 in Japan. He will not go to Papua New Guinea or Australia, per administration official, because of ongoing debt ceiling talks (1.37 pm EDT).
On Debt Ceiling / budget talks, Biden with Speaker McCarthy, Hakeem Jeffries, McConnell, Schumer, also Congress aides Dan Meyer, Michael Lynch, Sharon Soderstrom, Gideon Bragin; and admin’s Jeff Zients, Shalanda Young, Steve Ricchetti, Bruce Reed, Louisa Terrell, Grisella Martinez.
The Secret Service has faced challenges over the past decade in keeping up with the rapidly expanding roster of people it is assigned to protect, in part because its annual budget has not kept pace with that added responsibility.
Before the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the service provided protection for 18 people, including the president and vice president. That number began to swell as the nation focused more on terrorist threats, and by the start of the Biden administration the service was providing protective details to 27 people, including the president’s grandchildren.