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Politics : Ask Michael Burke -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Knighty Tin who wrote (103928)4/22/2006 9:53:29 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 132070
 
no!
the hitler youth arte sitting in the white house-ng-



To: Knighty Tin who wrote (103928)4/22/2006 9:57:29 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 132070
 
Fix the Intelligence Mess

By David Ignatius
Friday, April 21, 2006; A23

For the U.S. intelligence community, the warning
lights are blinking red. A reorganization that was
supposed to bring greater coordination has instead
produced a layering of responsibilities and
bureaucratic confusion. A demoralized CIA that needed
professional management is chafing under a Republican
former congressman who has proved to be the most
political and ineffective director in the agency's
history.

Look at the organizational chart of the new Office of
the Director of National Intelligence and you wonder
if America has become a Third World country with a
rival intelligence agency for each patch of turf. At
last count, there were 16 different spy units under
the DNI's umbrella -- a number that puts even Syria to
shame. In theory, this flotilla of spy agencies is
being supervised by a deputy responsible for "customer
outcomes," whatever that means, and three other deputy
directors. The organization chart gives each of the
four a peppy two-word mission statement: "Want It,"
"Know It," "Get It" and "Build It."

I'd like to suggest a new mission for John Negroponte,
the man who sits atop this intelligence ziggurat: "Fix
It." One year on, the intelligence reorganization
isn't working. It has overanalyzed the little problems
without solving the big ones. It hasn't succeeded in
coordinating the various agencies, and it has allowed
the biggest problem of all -- the disarray at the CIA
-- to get even worse. I'm told that several foreign
intelligence services have recently observed a decline
in CIA performance, which should scare us all.

"The reorganization reshuffled rather than augmented
the nation's federal intelligence personnel," Richard
A. Posner, a federal appeals court judge who knows the
intelligence world well, argued in a speech in March
to a gathering of CIA lawyers. He said of the DNI
structure: "It has become a new bureaucracy layered on
top of the intelligence community, a new agency on top
of the fifteen or more previously existing agencies."
According to The Post's Walter Pincus, Negroponte's
budget is nearing $1 billion -- about five times what
was previously spent for intelligence-community
management. His staff is now 1,539 people, about twice
what was expected.

The intelligence mess is serious enough that it has
triggered a quiet investigation by the President's
Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, a secretive
blue-ribbon panel that advises the White House. The
group's new chairman is Stephen Friedman, a former
chairman of Goldman Sachs and former White House
economic adviser. Other luminaries on the 16-member
panel are former senator Charles Robb, former
representative Lee Hamilton and retired Adm. David E.
Jeremiah.

I'm told the intelligence board has summoned a series
of top current and former officials in recent weeks to
get a handle on the problems at the CIA and DNI. "They
are trying to get a sense of what is really going on
and how bad it is," says one intelligence insider.
Because many of the board members have run big
companies, they are said to be applying management
metrics to the crazy quilt of the reorganization.

The Bush administration, unfortunately, is a big part
of what's wrong. From the start, officials close to
Vice President Cheney viewed a moribund, risk-averse
CIA as an obstacle to their goals. Certainly the CIA
made mistakes, especially in its assessment of Iraqi
weapons of mass destruction, but that's not why it was
punished. It became a political whipping boy for the
right wing largely because it tried to tell the truth
on two key issues: alleged Iraqi efforts to acquire
uranium from Niger and alleged Iraqi operational links
with al-Qaeda. On both, CIA analysts repeatedly warned
the administration that the evidence didn't support
its conclusions, yet the vice president's office kept
coming back and telling them to take another look. The
CIA issued a secret paper in January 2003 saying that
there was no Iraqi authority, control or direction
over al-Qaeda. Yet the political pressure continued.

Negroponte defended his performance in a speech
yesterday at the National Press Club, and one can only
wish him well. He has a huge job: The CIA has lost a
generation of senior managers, burned off by Porter
Goss and his political aides in a senseless vendetta.
Dissatisfaction is growing in the middle ranks.
Operations officers are looking over their shoulders;
analysts are looking at the proliferating
bureaucracies and wondering where to try to make their
careers; and terrorism specialists are torn between
the CIA's Counterterrorist Center and the DNI's
National Counterterrorism Center. We don't have enough
good spies to afford this confusion.

You would have thought it was impossible to make our
intelligence problems even worse, but the Bush
administration has accomplished that. This is a
dangerous situation for the country, and it needs to
be fixed, now.

davidignatius@washpost.com