FBI director Kash Patel has been accused of prioritising social activities, including jet skiing and football matches, over official meetings with international intelligence partners, according to a report in The New York Times.A senior FBI executive told the NYT that the Indian-origin director showed a lack of interest in office‑based meetings while attending a secret Five Eyes Conference in May. This meeting is a gathering of the top intelligence agencies from the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.
The executive claimed Patel’s staff said that Kash was unhappy with traditional meetings and would rather participate in social events instead. “Before the conference, his staff says he’s unhappy because he doesn’t like meetings in office settings. What he wants is social events,” the source told NYT. “He wants Premier soccer games. He wants to go jet skiing. He’d like a helicopter tour,” the source said.The source said that they were in disbelief seeing Patel’s leisure goals: “Is he really going to ask the MI5 director to go jet skiing instead of meeting? The schedule is set, and every Five Eyes partner is doing this. They can’t just say that he’s not participating and instead he wants to go to a Premier soccer game. This is a job, guys.”Patel is known to be a fan of Premier League football and has been seen publicly supporting Liverpool FC, including wearing a club tie at a Senate hearing and celebrating its title win on social media.Furthermore, it was reported that Patel chose to focus on planning social media posts as an immediate response after the assassination of MAGA activist Charlie Kirk last September, according to the senior executive. The White House and the FBI have rejected the report. Last year, Patel was seen tangled in many other controversies, including demanding unnecessary upgrades for his office car, private jet rides to see his girlfriend and singer Alexis Wilkin’s concerts, and deploying SWAT teams to accompany a drunk friend home. Kash has rejected all such accusations and says the mainstream media uses false narratives to defame his name and position.
