The Republicans have quietly killed Trump’s ‘anti-weaponisation’ fund. A pet project of the former president, aimed at punishing US intelligence agencies. Now it’s gone. No fanfare, no statement. Just a line in a budget markup.
UK national security advisers are breathing a sigh of relief. They saw the fund as a dangerous precedent, a weaponisation of intelligence oversight for political score-settling. One Whitehall source put it bluntly: ‘This was a Trumpian hostage note to his own intelligence community. Its death is good news for the Five Eyes alliance.’
The fund was designed to allow the Trump-aligned director of national intelligence to cut off funding for any intelligence activity deemed politically motivated. A power grab, critics said. A necessary check, Trump claimed.
But the House Intelligence Committee, now under GOP control, stripped it out. Quietly. Without debate. A move that speaks volumes about the shifting currents inside the Republican Party. Trump’s grip on the Hill is loosening. Not gone, but weakened.
What does this mean for UK-US intelligence sharing? In the short term, nothing. The relationship is too deep, too institutional. But in the long term, it removes a potential flashpoint. A source of friction that could have poisoned the well.
One well-placed diplomat said: ‘We have seen a welcome U-turn. The previous administration’s distrust of its own agencies was corrosive. This move signals a return to normalcy.’
But let’s not get carried away. This is one battle won, not the war. The broader fight over the intelligence community’s independence continues. Trump’s loyalists still occupy key posts. The next election could shift the pendulum back.
Still, for now, the news is good. A small victory for the transatlantic intelligence alliance. A sign that the GOP is not entirely Trump’s party anymore. Or at least, not on this issue.
The White House has not commented. They don’t need to. The action itself is the statement. And UK officials are quietly pleased. They will take it.









