ACCESSION NUMBER:00000 FILE ID:96041102.POL DATE:04/11/96 TITLE:11-04-96 FACT SHEET: OVERVIEW OF U.S. INTELLIGENCE ACTIVITIES TEXT: (Intelligence responsibilities span various agencies) (700) (The following fact sheet provides an overview of some of the entities involved in U.S. intelligence.) CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY. The CIA collects information abroad and has "executive agency" responsibility for human source collection, including foreign counterintelligence. It produces intelligence through participation in the national intelligence estimate (NIE) process, through preparation of special research projects, and through generation of current intelligence products. It is the only agency within the community authorized to conduct covert activities, although the president could direct other agencies to be involved. And, although its operations are conducted almost entirely outside the United States, it can be involved in counterintelligence activities at home in support of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, as well as in certain limited domestic activities that support overseas collection operations. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE. The DOD collects and produces foreign military and military-related intelligence. Its attaches and other military officers abroad are an important source of information feeding into the overall collection effort. DOD agencies normally considered members of the intelligence community include: Defense intelligence Agency -- DIA, whose director is headquartered in the Pentagon, produces military and military-related intelligence for the Defense Department. It also provides military input for national intelligence products (such as the NIEs) and supervises the work of all military attaches abroad. National Security Agency (NSA) -- The community's signal intelligence operating arm and the largest member of the community, NSA also has a wealth of computer-assisted analytical expertise and a huge data base with which to support the national intelligence effort. It controls numerous "listening posts" at strategic locations throughout the world that can eavesdrop on (and break codes in) virtually any electronic communication. National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) -- Although the reconnaissance collectors are under the DOD, they serve requirements generated by the entire national security establishment. These assets include satellites in strategic reconnaissance programs -- the so-called national technical means of collection -- such as those capable of verifying compliance with treaties on arms control or nonproliferation, or providing timely battlefield intelligence during hostilities like the Persian Gulf war. Central Imagery Office (CIO) -- This office is charged with interpreting imagery collected by the NRO vehicles and other collectors and furnishing these to the intelligence community as a whole. Intelligence and counterintelligence elements of the armed forces -- Each of the services has intelligence and counterintelligence capabilities at both strategic and tactical levels. FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION. Although primarily a domestic investigative and law enforcement agency, the FBI has extensive domestic counterintelligence and security responsibilities. Additionally, it may, at the request of the DCI, become involved in counterintelligence activities conducted outside the United States. DRUG ENFORCEMENT ADMINISTRATION. The DEA, also under the supervision of the attorney general, collects and produces intelligence on foreign and domestic aspects of narcotics trafficking. It may also participate with the State Department in overt collection of general foreign political, economic, and agricultural information relating to its narcotics mission. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY. The DOT overtly collects and produces intelligence related to U.S. foreign economic policy, and it also is responsible for the Secret Service. The role of the DOT in intelligence is growing in importance in a world of "geoeconomics," where the economic instruments of power are gaining in importance. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY. The DOE participates with the State Department in overt collection of information on foreign energy matters, particularly nuclear energy, and it also produces such intelligence as the secretary of energy may need to discharge the duties of the office. DEPARTMENT OF STATE. Diplomatic reporting is, of course, a valuable information-gathering resource. Representatives of the State Department stationed overseas report to Washington on developments relevant to U.S. foreign policy, including information about foreign political, sociological, economic, and scientific trends or events. For the rest of the community as well as for the secretary of state, the department, through its Intelligence and Research bureau, generates intelligence products pertinent to U.S. foreign policy. The secretary of state works closely with the DCI, and the State Department with the CIA, in a continuing endeavor to ensure that intelligence activities are both useful to and cognizant of American foreign policy. NNNN