Yes, in July 2025, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) under Director Tulsi Gabbard, along with the Department of Justice and CIA, declassified a series of documents related to the 2016 Russia investigation—often referred to by critics as the "Russia hoax." These materials, including memos, emails, timelines, and whistleblower testimony, allege that the Obama administration manipulated intelligence processes to fabricate or amplify claims of Russian election interference aimed at helping Donald Trump, thereby undermining his victory and presidency. The declassifications stem from ongoing reviews tied to Special Counsel John Durham's earlier probe and President Trump's executive orders for transparency.
Key Allegations from the Declassified Documents
The documents paint a picture of coordinated actions within the Obama White House and intelligence community (IC) to shape public and congressional perceptions of Russian meddling. Specific evidence includes:
Obama's Direct Tasking of the Intelligence Assessment: On December 9, 2016, during a National Security Council Principals Committee meeting chaired by Susan Rice, President Obama directed the IC—via DNI James Clapper—to produce a comprehensive, classified assessment on Russian interference in the 2016 election, with an unclassified version to follow by early January 2017. Emails from that day confirm the "POTUS tasking," involving key figures like CIA Director John Brennan, FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, and Attorney General Loretta Lynch. The timeline was expedited at Obama's request to ensure delivery before his administration ended, with briefings planned for both Obama and President-elect Trump on January 3–6, 2017.
Suppression of Contradictory Intelligence: A draft Presidential Daily Brief (PDB) from December 8, 2016, concluded that Russia lacked the intent or capability to alter vote counts and "did not impact" the election through cyber hacks. However, FBI Director James Comey allegedly suppressed this to align with the collusion narrative. The next day, Obama's ordered assessment reversed this, incorporating unverified elements from the Clinton campaign-funded Steele Dossier—despite Clapper privately deeming it "untrustworthy." A September 2019 email revealed the dossier's unexpected inclusion in briefings to Trump, raising concerns about deception.
Media Leaks and Narrative Shaping: On December 9, 2016—the same day as Obama's tasking—IC officials leaked false claims to the Washington Post that Russia used "cyber means" to influence the election outcome. Further leaks on December 14 claimed "high confidence" in Putin's personal involvement in a "U.S. Election Hack." These contradicted earlier IC findings from September 2016 showing only low-confidence attribution and no evidence of vote manipulation.
Whistleblower Testimony on Pressure and Deception: A former Deputy National Intelligence Officer at the National Intelligence Council testified to being sidelined and pressured in late 2016 to accept judgments in the assessment, including Russia's alleged preference for Trump, despite lacking supporting evidence. The whistleblower was removed from email distributions after questioning contradictions and later learned the Steele Dossier influenced the 2017 ICA, contradicting official denials. They raised concerns with the IC Inspector General but faced dismissal, and their 2022 outreach to Durham yielded no follow-up.
These revelations, per ODNI and CIA statements, demonstrate a "coordinated plan" between the Clinton campaign and Obama administration to interfere in the election and destroy Trump's presidency, including possible domestic surveillance and politicization of intelligence. Senator Chuck Grassley highlighted the documents as shedding light on the "fake Trump-Russia narrative" pushed for Clinton's gain. Director Gabbard issued a criminal referral to the Justice Department, leading to a strike force investigation, though Obama has denied wrongdoing.
Counterpoints and Context
Skeptics, including Democrats like Rep. Jim Himes and Sen. Mark Warner, dismiss the declassifications as "politically motivated nonsense" and an attempt to rewrite history, noting they do not contradict the 2017 ICA's core conclusion that Putin ordered an influence campaign to harm Hillary Clinton and boost Trump via disinformation and hacks (not vote tampering). A CIA review under former Director John Ratcliffe found the assessment "defensible," and Obama officials never claimed widespread vote hacking—focusing instead on psychological operations. The documents primarily implicate mid-level officials like Brennan and Clapper in execution, with Obama's role limited to high-level tasking rather than proven personal fabrication.
In summary, while the documents provide previously undisclosed details suggesting Obama administration orchestration of the Russia narrative, they do not offer irrefutable proof of a personal "hoax" by Obama himself, and interpretations remain sharply divided along partisan lines. Further developments from the Justice Department's probe could clarify this.