Congressional Record: July 31, 2003 (Senate) Page S10621-S10687 STATEMENTS ON INTRODUCED BILLS AND JOINT RESOLUTIONS [...] By Mr. GRAHAM of Florida (for himself, Mrs. Feinstein, and Mr. Rockefeller): S. 1520. A bill to amend the National Security Act of 1947 to reorganize and improve the leadership of the intelligence community of the United States, to provide for the enhancement of the counterterrorism activities of the United States Government, and for other purposes; to the Select Committee on Intelligence. Mr. ROCKEFELLER. Mr. President, I am pleased to be an original cosponsor of the "9-11 Memorial Intelligence Reform Act" which Senator Bob Graham is introducing today to implement the recommendations of the Joint September 11 Inquiry of the Senate and House Intelligence Committees. I expect that this important legislation will be referred to the Select Committee on Intelligence, on which I serve as vice chairman. I am committed to working with the Chairman and our colleagues to ensure that the matters addressed in the bill receive the full consideration and action that our national security requires. I expect that other committees, such as the Committee on the Judiciary, will have an interest in some matters covered by the bill, and I look forward to working with them. The 9-11 Memorial Intelligence Reform Act covers matters ranging from the basic structure of the U.S. intelligence community to improvements in the sharing and analysis of intelligence information, reforms in domestic counterterrorism, and other issues identified in the course of the Joint Inquiry. For some matters, notably on reforming the leadership structure of the intelligence community, the bill proposes specific reforms. For various other matters, the bill calls for executive branch reports that can be the basis for subsequent congressional action. There are two principal aspects of our work ahead. The first is to systematically and thoroughly examine the steps that the President, the intelligence community, and other departments and agencies have taken to correct deficiencies in U.S. intelligence and counterterrorism. The Joint Inquiry's recommendations were first announced last December. In the months ahead, we should call on the agencies of the intelligence community, and other components of the executive branch, to report on their concrete measures, both since September 11 and since our recommendations were made public, to correct deficiencies. We should then assess those reports and Administration testimony in committee hearings. Our second task is to consider reform proposals, including those in Senator Graham's bill. In that regard, I should make clear that the answers proposed in the bill are not the last word on any of those subjects. They are, instead, a beginning point for the Senate's consideration of measures to correct the problems identified by the Joint 9-11 Inquiry. As we address these important tasks, it will be essential that the Congress and the American public have the benefit of the best ideas available. We will welcome proposals by the administration, by other Members of Congress, from the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, and concerned citizens. Important ideas should not be bottled up anywhere. They should be put on the public table. In that regard, I urge the President to release the intelligence reform recommendations that former National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft has made to the administration. In public testimony before our Joint Inquiry in September 2002, General Scowcroft testified, in response to a question that I asked him, that in May 2001--before September 11, the President had established a process to review the intelligence community. General Scowcroft testified that he chaired the external panel of that review, but that he could not get into much detail because his report was still classified. It is time, I believe, finally to declassify that report to the extent possible. The Congress and the American public should have the benefit of that distinguished public servant's insights about intelligence community reform. ______