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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ish who wrote (278603)7/21/2002 9:11:25 PM
From: bonnuss_in_austin  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
time.com

Hi, 'Ish.' Not only do you appear a fool ....

... but an 'extremely' belligerent one.

-g-

bia

____________________________

The NSA Draws Fire
A scathing House report charges the agency is badly mismanaged
BY DOUGLAS WALLER

Saturday, Jul. 20, 2002
The FBI and the CIA have come under plenty of fire for their failure to prevent
9/11. Now, it seems, it?s the turn of the National Security Agency (NSA).
The agency, whose job is to protect U.S. government information and ferret
out foreign secrets, has already drawn criticism for being slow to analyze two
cryptic messages it intercepted last Sept. 10, warning that something big was
going to happen the next day. Now a scathing report issued by the House
Intelligence Committee has concluded that the agency is badly mismanaged —
congressional sources tell TIME — which resulted in its failing "to provide
tactical and strategic warning" of Sept. 11.

The intelligence panel's Subcommittee on Terrorism and Homeland Security,
which released an unclassified summary of its report last week, found that the
NSA is "unable to identify" how it spends the money it gets from Congress
each year "to any level of detail." A number of its projects duplicate one
another, the report said. And while the NSA had listened in on "large volumes
of phone calls from the part of the world [where] al-Qaeda was located," says
Representative Saxby Chambliss, who chairs the terrorism subcommittee, "the
problem was, they didn't focus on al-Qaeda," so that those messages could be
identified and processed quickly.

Another problem is that the cash-strapped agency, which spent billions on
cold war?era satellites, hired no new employees for "an extended period of
time" before Sept. 11. That was a big mistake, the subcommittee believes,
because the NSA was already chronically short of computer scientists,
engineers and foreign-language experts. The NSA even established incentive
programs to entice more employees to take early retirement. What's worse,
the agency's overworked linguists and analysts were allowed to continue
taking advantage of the early-retirement program — even after Sept. 11.