Is the U.S. Intelligence Community Effective? Former CIA Official (2008)
Before the
DNI was formally established, the head of the
Intelligence Community was the
Director of Central Intelligence (
DCI), who concurrently served as the
Director of the
Central Intelligence Agency (
CIA).
The
9/11 Commission recommended to establish the DNI position in their 9/11 Commission
Report not released until
July 22, 2004, as they had identified major intelligence failures that called into question how well the Intelligence Community was able to protect
U.S. interests against foreign terrorist attacks.
Senators
Dianne Feinstein,
Jay Rockefeller and
Bob Graham introduced S. 2645 on June 19,
2002 to create the
Director of National Intelligence position. Other, similar, legislation soon followed. After considerable debate on the scope of the DNI's powers and authorities, the
United States Congress passed the
Intelligence Reform and
Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 by votes of
336–75 in the
House of Representatives, and 89–2 in the
Senate.
President George W. Bush signed the bill into law on
December 17, 2004. Among other things, the law established the DNI position as the designated leader of the
United States Intelligence Community and prohibited the DNI from serving as the
CIA Director or the head of any other Intelligence Community element at the same time. In addition, the law required the CIA Director to "report" his agency's activities to the DNI.
Critics say compromises during the bill's crafting led to the establishment of a DNI whose powers are too weak to adequately lead, manage and improve the performance of the
US Intelligence Community.[6] In particular, the law left the
United States Department of Defense in charge of the
National Security Agency (
NSA), the
National Reconnaissance Office (
NRO), and the
National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (
NGA). (The limited DNI role in leading the
U.S. Intelligence Community is discussed on the Intelligence Community page.)
On
February 17,
2005, President George W. Bush named
U.S. Ambassador to
Iraq John Negroponte to the post, pending confirmation by the Senate. It was reported that
President Bush's first choice for Director of National Intelligence was former Director of Central Intelligence
Robert M. Gates, who was serving as president of
Texas A&M; University; however,
Gates declined the offer.[7] Negroponte was confirmed by a Senate vote of 98 to 2 in favor of his appointment on April 21, 2005, and was sworn in by President Bush on that day.
On
February 13,
2007,
John Michael McConnell became the 2nd Director of National Intelligence, after Negroponte was appointed
Deputy Secretary of State.
Donald M. Kerr was confirmed by the
U.S. Senate to be
Principal Deputy Director of
National Intelligence on October 4, 2007 and sworn in on October 9, 2007.
Kerr, from
Virginia, was most recently the Director of the National Reconnaissance Office, and previously the
Duty Director for
Science and
Technology at the U.S. CIA and earlier in his career the
Assistant Director of the
Justice Department's
FBI.
Declan McCullagh at
News.com wrote on August 24, 2007, that the DNI site was configured to repel all search engines to index any page at DNI.gov. This effectively made the DNI website invisible to all search engines and in turn, any search queries.[8]
Ross Feinstein, Spokesman for the DNI, said that the cloaking was removed as of
September 3, 2007. "We're not even sure how (the robots.txt file) got there" – but it was again somehow hidden the next day. Another blog entry by McCullagh on
September 7, states that the DNI site should now be open to search engines.[9] This explanation is plausible because some software used for web development has been known to cause servers to automatically generate and re-generate robots.txt, and this behavior can be difficult to turn off. Therefore if the web developers working for the DNI had tried to solve the issue by simply removing robots.txt, it would have looked like it worked at first, but then fail once the server had undergone a self-check for the robots.txt file.[10]
http://dni.gov/robots.txt has been configured to allow access to all directories for any agent.
In September, 2007, the
Office of the DNI released "Intelligence Community
100 Day &
500 Day
Plans for
Integration &
Collaboration". These plans include a series of initiatives designed to build the foundation for increased cooperation and reform of the U.S. Intelligence Community.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Director_of_National_Intelligence
Image by
Anton Nossik [
CC BY 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/
3.0)], via
Wikimedia Commons