Intelligence agencies resist plan to shift power

Greg Miller
LA Times
Saturday, May 31, 2008

WASHINGTON -- A Bush administration plan to issue new orders realigning the chain of command over U.S. spy services has triggered turf-related skirmishes across the intelligence community.

The changes could erode the CIA's standing as the nation's lead spy service abroad by requiring agency station chiefs in certain countries to cede authority to officials from other U.S. spy agencies, officials said.

The revisions would also give the nation's intelligence chief greater power over individual spy services that traditionally have been dominated by the Department of Defense, including the National Security Agency, officials said.

(Article continues below)

The proposals have met stiff resistance from the CIA and other agencies still settling into roles that were dramatically redefined by legislation four years ago.

The latest revisions are designed to bolster the authority of the director of national intelligence, a position created after the Sept. 11 attacks to compel better cooperation within the often fractious intelligence community.

Officials described the pending changes on condition of anonymity because they are not final. White House National Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe said a review process to update rules was in progress.

Some U.S. intelligence officials have warned that the changes could create confusion over who is in charge of running spy operations and managing the United States' relationships with foreign intelligence services.

"The DNI was created to give strategic guidance to the whole intelligence community, not micromanage the day-to-day activities of its members," said a U.S. intelligence official familiar with the negotiations over the changes. "You don't want to have an even weaker community than existed before."

Full article here.

Email This Page to:

Get your exclusive Prison Planet.tv membership today and enjoy a plethora of multimedia content as well as access to live video streaming of The Alex Jones Show - click here to subscribe.


 


PRISON PLANET.com     Copyright © 2002-2008 Alex Jones     All rights reserved.