08 September 2004
Bush Seeks Intelligence Reform Legislation
President outlines initiatives to enhance
intelligence services
A fact sheet released by the White House September 8 outlines
actions taken by President Bush to strengthen and enhance U.S.
intelligence services.
The White House said President Bush also is seeking intelligence
reform legislation that is consistent with the recommendations
of the 9/11 Commission.
The text of the fact sheet follows:
(begin fact sheet)
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
September 8, 2004
FACT SHEET
LEADING THE WAY ON REFORMING AND STRENGTHENING OUR INTELLIGENCE
SERVICES
Today's Presidential Action
In a meeting with a bipartisan group of senior Congressional
leaders and committee chairs, President Bush conveyed a detailed
proposal for legislative action to create a National Intelligence
Director (NID) with the authority needed to get the job done.
The President intends to give the NID full budget authority
over the National Foreign Intelligence Program appropriation
and the management tools necessary to successfully oversee
the Intelligence Community, including ensuring the full integration
of foreign and domestic intelligence.
The President seeks intelligence reform legislation that is
consistent with the recommendations of the 9/11 Commission.
On August 2, the President endorsed many of the 9/11 Commission's
recommendations -- including the Commission's recommendation
of the creation of a National Intelligence Director (NID) and
National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC).
-- The Bush Administration was already implementing many of
the actions suggested by the Commission well before the report
was issued. The Administration is already implementing or otherwise
addressing 36 of the Commission's 41 recommendations.
-- Of the remaining five recommendations, two call for changes
to Congressional oversight of intelligence and homeland security.
The Administration endorses these recommendations. The Administration
is studying the remaining three recommendations.
The President also announced that the NID should be assisted
by a cabinet-level Joint Intelligence Community Council (JICC).
The JICC will help ensure the implementation of a joint, unified
national intelligence effort to protect national and homeland
security. The JICC will advise the National Intelligence Director
on setting requirements, financial management, establishing
uniform intelligence policies, and monitoring and evaluating
performance of the Intelligence Community.
Background on Today's Presidential Action
President Bush seeks legislation designed to:
-- Improve the integration of foreign and domestic intelligence;
-- Improve indication and timely warning of impending threats
to national security;
-- Improve analysis of threats;
-- Improve our ability to use intelligence to counter threats
to our national security;
-- Improve our ability to set goals and prioritize intelligence
requirements, both collection/acquisition and analysis; and
-- Improve the sharing of information in the fullest and most
prompt manner.
The President's reform plan is designed to establish an effective
National Intelligence Director and reorganize the Intelligence
Community. The President's plan outlines powers and responsibilities
for the NID that are consistent with the 9/11 Commission report.
Structure of the National Intelligence Director -- The NID
will:
-- Report to the President, be appointed by the President,
be confirmed by the Senate, serve at the pleasure of the President,
and testify before Congress;
-- Act as the principal advisor to the President, the National
Security Council, and the Homeland Security Council for intelligence
matters relating to the national security; and
-- While part of the Executive Branch, will not be located
in the Executive Office of the President or serve as a member
of the President's Cabinet.
General Powers of the National Intelligence Director -- The
NID will:
-- Serve as the head of the United States Intelligence Community;
-- Develop objectives and guidance for the Intelligence Community
to ensure timely and effective collection, processing, analysis,
and dissemination, including access by users to collected data
and analytic products generated by or within the Intelligence
Community, of national intelligence;
-- Determine and establish requirements and priorities for,
and manage and direct the tasking of, the collection of intelligence
by the Intelligence Community;
-- Resolve conflicts in collection requirements and the tasking
of national collection assets of the Intelligence Community;
and
-- Determine and establish intelligence analysis and production
priorities for the Intelligence Community.
Budget Authority of the National Intelligence Director --
The NID will:
-- As recommended by the 9/11 Commission, receive the funds
for the National Foreign Intelligence Program (NFIP) and allocate,
as apportioned by the Office of Management and Budget, those
funds to the Intelligence Community;
-- With respect to the NFIP budget, approve annual budgets
for the Intelligence Community and determine, develop, and
present -- with the advice of the heads of departments -- the
intelligence budget request for the approval of the President;
and
-- Have the authority to transfer or reprogram funds within
the NFIP and to review, and approve or disapprove, consistent
with the existing authorities of the Director of the Office
of Management and Budget, any proposal to transfer or reprogram
funds.
Intelligence Community Management Responsibilities of the
NID -- The NID will:
-- Ensure the fullest and most prompt sharing of and access
to information practicable, with special emphasis on detecting,
preventing, preempting, and disrupting terrorist threats and
attacks against the United States, its people, property and
interests;
-- Establish standards, policies, and programs within the
Intelligence Community;
-- Supervise the National Counterterrorism Center and oversee
all new national centers, including potentially a future National
Center to Counter Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) Proliferation;
-- Ensure that appropriate agencies and departments have access
to and receive all-source intelligence support needed to carry
out their own missions as well as to perform independent, alternative
analysis;
-- Establish within the Director's office a National Intelligence
Council to produce national intelligence estimates and evaluate
Intelligence Community-wide collection and production of intelligence;
-- Provide guidance and issue tasking to the Intelligence
Community; and
-- Assume the functions of the current Director of Central
Intelligence (DCI) as head of the Intelligence Community, to
include the coordination of the activities of the Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA), Department of Defense (DoD) intelligence agencies,
the Federal Bureau of Investigation's (FBI) intelligence and
counterterrorism activities, and relevant parts of the Department
of Homeland Security (DHS).
Personnel Authorities of the National Intelligence Director
-- The NID will:
-- Have a role in the appointment of any individual to a position
that heads an organization or element within the Intelligence
Community. If the appointment is made by an agency head, the
agency head must receive the concurrence of the National Intelligence
Director. If the appointment to such position is made by the
President, any recommendation to the President to nominate
or appoint an individual to that position shall be accompanied
by the recommendation of the National Intelligence Director.
-- Under the President's plan, the Intelligence Community
structure would:
-- Be led by the National Intelligence Director, who will
have authority over the budget and collection objectives and
will coordinate the foreign and domestic activities of the
Intelligence Community;
-- Keep the national intelligence agencies -- National Security
Agency (NSA), National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA),
and National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) -- under the Department
of Defense, thereby avoiding the disruption of the war effort
that a more far reaching restructuring could create; and
-- Ensure that departmental intelligence support is retained
and that direct command authority for operations occurs through
the appropriate chain of command for departmental intelligence
entities.
-- President Bush has led the way on intelligence reform and
has already undertaken a number of major reforms to improve
intelligence collection, analysis, and sharing to obtain the
best information on the terrorist threat to the Nation -- including:
-- Implementing, by Executive Order, many of the 9/11 Commission's
recommendations for intelligence reform. The President, on
August 27, signed executive orders giving the Director of Central
Intelligence many of the strengthened management powers over
the Intelligence Community that will eventually belong to the
NID. He also established a National Counterterrorism Center
(NCTC) to serve as a central knowledge bank on known and suspected
terrorists and international terror groups, as well as their
goals, strategies, capabilities, and networks of contacts.
The NCTC will also plan U.S. government-wide counterterrorism
activities. The President also ordered that additional actions
be taken to continue to improve the sharing of terrorism information
among agencies and to improve our information technology architecture.
-- Reforming the FBI: The President is transforming the FBI
into an agency focused on preventing terrorist attacks through
intelligence collection and other key efforts, while improving
its ability to perform its traditional role as a world-class
law enforcement agency.
-- Creating the Department of Homeland Security (DHS): The
President has led the most extensive reorganization of the
Federal government in 50 years by creating DHS. DHS brought
together 22 entities and over 180,000 employees with critical
homeland security missions and provided the Nation with a single
Federal department with the primary mission to protect the
homeland against terrorist threats. DHS launched the Homeland
Security Information Network (HSIN), a real-time collaboration
system to report incidents, crimes, and potential terrorist
acts to federal, state, and local officials and the DHS Homeland
Security Operations Center. The HSIN is now linked to all 50
states and more than 50 major urban areas.
-- Establishing the Terrorist Threat Integration Center (TTIC),
integrating and analyzing terrorism threat-related information
collected domestically and abroad, ensuring that intelligence
and law enforcement entities are working together. Elements
of the CIA, DoD, the Department of Justice, DHS, and the FBI
work to close the "seams" in our intelligence analysis. The
TTIC will be absorbed by the newly established National Counterterrorism
Center.
-- Creating the Terrorist Screening Center to consolidate
terrorist watchlists and provide 24/7 operational support for
Federal and other government law enforcement personnel across
the country and around the world. The Center ensures that government
investigators, screeners, and agents are working off the same
unified, comprehensive set of anti-terrorist information --
and that they have access to information and expertise that
will allow them to act quickly when a suspected terrorist is
screened or stopped.
-- Creating U.S. Northern Command to provide for integrated
homeland defense and coordinated DoD support to Federal, state,
and local civilian governments.
-- Proposing and signing into law the USA PATRIOT Act, which
strengthens law enforcement's abilities to prevent, investigate,
and prosecute acts of terror, facilitating Federal government
efforts to thwart potential terrorist activity throughout the
United States. President Bush continues to call on Congress
to take action to ensure that these vital law enforcement tools
do not expire.
-- Creating a White House Homeland Security Council, led by
a Homeland Security Advisor who reports directly to the President,
to coordinate homeland security policy across multiple departments
and agencies -- modeled on the National Security Council.
(end fact sheet) |