[FPSPACE] Eliminating CIA, reorganizing NRO, NSA, NGIA
Saunders B.Kramer Sr.
sbetk5 at earthlink.net
Mon Aug 23 12:42:30 EDT 2004
Wow!! That reported 'intelligence shake-up' is more than radical. I bet
it never flies. The real need is for vastly improved 'immediate
exchange of intelligence' among all agencies as it is collected
followed up with analysis on a continuing basis.
Saunders Kramer
On Aug 22, 2004, at 9:43 PM, DwayneDay wrote:
> Republicans in the Senate Intelligence Committee are proposing a
> sweeping reorganization of the intelligence community.
>
> Frankly, I don't understand what they're trying to do it. It looks
> pretty radical. And I'm not sure that is a good thing...
>
> ****************
>
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A23719-2004Aug22.html
>
> Senate Panel Urges Broad Intelligence Shake-Up
>
>
> By Michael J. Sniffen
> The Associated Press
> Sunday, August 22, 2004; 8:30 PM
>
> WASHINGTON - Senate Intelligence Committee Republicans proposed
> removing the nation's largest intelligence gathering operations from
> the CIA and the Pentagon and putting them directly under a new
> national intelligence director.
>
> Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., the committee chairman, unveiled on Sunday
> the most sweeping intelligence reorganization proposal offered by
> anyone since the Sept. ll commission called for major changes. In an
> appearance on CBS' "Face the Nation," Roberts acknowledged that full
> details had yet to be shared with either the White House or with
> Senate Democrats.
>
> "We didn't pay attention to turf or agencies or boxes" but rather to
> "what are the national security threats that face this country today,"
> Roberts said of the proposals supported by eight GOP members of the
> intelligence committee. "I'm trying to build a consensus around
> something that's very different and very bold."
>
> But he immediately ran into some resistance from a Democrat on his own
> committee. Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., said that before appearing with
> Roberts on the CBS show neither he nor the committee's ranking
> Democrat, Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia, had seen the full
> proposal.
>
> "I think it would be better to start on a bipartisan basis," Levin
> said. "I think it's a mistake to begin with a partisan bill no matter
> what is in it."
>
> Rand Beers, national security adviser to Democratic presidential
> candidate John Kerry, welcomed Roberts' proposal and described it as
> very similar to Kerry's proposals. But he added that bipartisan
> support would be needed as well as leadership from President Bush.
>
> "Bush still appears to be dragging his feet and resisting any real
> changes," Beers said.
>
> The White House was a bit more noncommittal. "We look forward to
> reviewing the details of Sen. Roberts' proposal," said White House
> spokesman Brian Besanceney. "We have taken nothing off the table."
>
> The commission that investigated the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks
> called for a powerful national intelligence director who could force
> the nation's many agencies to cooperate.
>
> Up to now the debate has focused on how much power to give that
> official rather than on retooling agencies. Most Democrats have
> supported the commission's proposal that the new director have
> authority over hiring and spending by the intelligence agencies.
> President Bush has endorsed creating the position but has not reached
> a final decision on what powers the office should have.
>
> Roberts said his aides had spoken with White House officials and would
> share the details of his proposal with them on Monday.
>
> Roberts' plan would put the CIA's three main directorates -
> Operations, which runs intelligence collection and covert actions;
> Intelligence, which analyzes intelligence reports; and Science and
> Technology - into three new, separate and renamed agencies, each
> reporting to a separate assistant national intelligence director. It
> also would remove three of the largest intelligence agencies from the
> Pentagon.
>
> Although the measure would essentially dismantle the CIA, Roberts said
> in a paper he released: "We are not abolishing the CIA. We are
> reordering and renaming its three major elements."
>
> "No one agency, no matter how distinguished its history, is more
> important than U.S. national security," the paper said.
>
> A congressional aide, speaking on condition of anonymity, said there
> would be no CIA director, and the agency's parts would have new names
> under a new management structure.
>
> Despite Roberts' assertion that he wouldn't abolish the CIA, some
> intelligence officials think that sounds exactly like what he is
> trying to do.
>
> Some intelligence officials think Roberts' proposal is "unworkable and
> could hamper the nation's intelligence efforts at a critical time,"
> said one, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the
> sensitivity of the debate. This official added that rather than
> eliminating barriers between agencies and bringing functions together,
> "it smashes them apart."
>
> Last week, acting CIA Director John McLaughlin, a career agency
> employee, urged Congress to move carefully and argued that there had
> been dramatic improvement since Sept. 11 in the sharing of information
> by various intelligence agencies.
>
> Equally drastic changes were proposed at the Pentagon.
>
> The nation's largest spy agency, the National Security Agency, which
> intercepts electronic signals around the world, and the National
> Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, which analyzes satellite pictures,
> would be removed from the Pentagon and put under direct control of an
> assistant national intelligence director for collection.
>
> The Defense Intelligence Agency's human intelligence collection
> activity would become a separate agency, like the former CIA
> directorate of operations.
>
> Both would report to the same assistant national intelligence director
> for collection. This official also would have direct line control over
> the FBI's counterintelligence and counterterrorism units, although
> they would continue to operate within the FBI administratively and
> would still be subject to attorney general guidelines.
>
> The Pentagon's huge National Reconnaissance Office, which operates spy
> satellites, would work under an assistant national intelligence
> director for Research, Development and Acquisition. That same
> assistant would also run the CIA's former directorate of science and
> technology as an independent agency called the Office of Technical
> Support.
>
> In a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing last week, Defense
> Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld advised moving cautiously in
> restructuring the intelligence community.
>
> "If we move unwisely and get it wrong, the penalty would be great,"
> Rumsfeld said. "We would not want to place new barriers or filters
> between military combatant commanders and those agencies when they
> perform as combat-support agencies."
>
> Perhaps mindful of that warning, Roberts' plan would create a separate
> assistant national intelligence director for military support and a
> four-star director of military intelligence who would run Defense
> Department tactical intelligence units and report directly to the
> defense secretary.
>
>
>
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