Trump’s intel agencies back his claims on peace deals, Europe

Politico News

The intelligence community’s latest threat assessment reinforces Trump administration narratives on immigration and global peace deals, while also laying out a stark picture of growing threats to the American homeland.

The 2026 Annual Threats Assessment, compiled by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, concluded that while China still poses a major threat to the homeland, it is unlikely to invade Taiwan next year. The report also notes that there are growing risks that multiple nations could target the U.S. mainland with missile strikes, and finds that Iran is likely to seek “revenge” against the U.S. for the killing of its leaders.

Here are five takeaways from the annual report.

The report lines up with Trump administration global stances

The report — traditionally an apolitical document meant to lay out threats as the intelligence community assesses them — now incorporates several Trump administration political priorities.

For example, it highlights peace negotiations led by President Donald Trump that have “deescalated the most recent nuclear tensions” between India and Pakistan, while noting the ceasefire negotiated last year. The report also highlights the peace deal last year between Azerbaijan and Armenia, saying that this created the opportunity for “lasting peace between the nations.”

Past annual reports almost never mention presidents by name. But the 2026 edition praises Trump several times for specific policies, including Trump’s “sealing” of the U.S.-Mexico border, which it said strengthened border security.

The report’s language mirrors the administration’s National Security Strategy on its assessment of Europe’s future. The strategy argued that Europe is facing “civilizational erasure” due to large migration to the continent, and new regulatory authorities that the European Union has rolled out. This year’s intel assessment takes a similar tone, concluding that immigrants to EU nations have not assimilated, and that this has led to “some immigrant youth” becoming radicalized.

“Much of Europe faces challenges or capacity limitations that inhibit robust security cooperation in the near term,” the report reads. “Several EU members face mounting levels of national debt, coupled with anemic growth. In addition, many countries across the continent are contending with the effects of large-scale migration, to include Islamist radicalization.”

China isn’t going for Taiwan (yet)

The intelligence community has assessed that Chinese leader Xi Jinping does not have a timeline to achieve unification with Taiwan or “currently plans” to execute an invasion of the island in 2027, when the Pentagon believes the Chinese military will be ready to mount an attack.