6.1 |
We recommend that the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) bring
a mission focus to the management of Community resources for
high-priority intelligence issues by creating a group of "Mission
Managers" on the DNI staff, responsible for all aspects of the
intelligence process relating to those issues. |
|
Recommendations 6.1, 6.2, 7.1, 7.2, and 8.1 are treated jointly.
The objectives outlined in the Commission's report are reflected in the
Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) organizational
structure. In general, the DNI will employ existing structures whenever
possible to achieve strategic Intelligence Community (IC) objectives.
The DNI will rationalize, and perhaps modify, these structures but
existing organizational arrangements that function effectively will not
be abandoned. The designation of a mission manager would apply only to
a limited set of high priority issues. The Deputy Director of National
Intelligence (DDNI) for Collection and Analysis and an Associate Deputy
Director for the National Intelligence Priorities Framework (NIPF) will
collaborate with one other and consult with relevant agencies on target
development, prioritization, management of collection, and analytical
production. |
ODNI |
6.2 |
We recommend that the DNI create a management structure that
effectively coordinates Community target development. This new target
development process would be supported by an integrated, end-to-end
"collection enterprise." |
|
See Recommendation 6.1. |
ODNI |
6.3
|
We recommend that the new DNI overhaul the Community's information
management system to facilitate real and effective information sharing.
|
|
This issue should be addressed on a priority basis by the DNI.
Considerable work in this area is already underway with policy
direction from the joint National Security Council (NSC)-Homeland
Security Council (HSC) Policy Coordination Committee (PCC) on
Information Sharing. The DNI will name a Chief Information Officer
(CIO) for the IC to assist in coordinating and implementing new
policies and procedures applicable to the IC for increased information
sharing and information security, and also to evaluate and monitor
information technology development efforts.
|
ODNI
|
6.4
|
We recommend that the DNI use his human resources authorities to
establish a central human resources authority for the Intelligence
Community; create a uniform system for performance evaluations and
compensation; develop a more comprehensive and creative set of
performance incentives; direct a "joint" personnel rotation system; and
establish a National Intelligence University.
|
|
The DNI will devise implementation strategies to accommodate unique
mission needs and business processes while ensuring uniform standards.
The DNI will pursue creative performance incentives and a "joint"
personnel rotation system. In addition, a National Intelligence
University (NIU) system will be established. The ODNI Chief Human
Capital Officer will be responsible for establishing, coordinating and
implementing human resource (HR) plans and strategies for the IC. The
ODNI Senior Training and Education Officer will establish and manage
the NIU system.
|
ODNI
|
6.5
|
We recommend that the DNI take an active role in equipping the Intelligence Community to develop new technologies.
|
|
The DNI will take an active role in technology development. An
integrated Community Advanced Research and Development Plan will be
critical. This objective will be addressed by the National Intelligence
Science and Technology Committee (NISTC). Work is already underway in
closely related areas. The DNI will name an Assistant Director for
Science and Technology (ADNI/S&T) who will assume leadership of the
NISTC and direct this group to develop new initiatives for synergistic
systems across different types of intelligence collection (e.g.,
HUMINT, SIGINT).
|
ODNI
|
6.6
|
We recommend that the President establish a National Counter
Proliferation Center (NCPC) that is relatively small (i.e., fewer than
100 people) and that manages and coordinates analysis and collection on
nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons across the Intelligence
Community. Although government-wide "strategic operational planning" is
clearly required to confront proliferation threats, we advise that such
planning not be directed by the NCPC.
|
|
An NCPC will be established within the ODNI. The NCPC will exercise
strategic oversight of the IC's work as it relates to the threat posed
by weapons of mass destruction (WMD). The DNI will appoint a Director
who will report to the DNI and serve as his mission manager on WMD
issues. The DNI also will ensure that the NCPC establishes strategic
intelligence collection and analysis requirements related to WMD that
are consistent with U.S. policies.
|
ODNI
|
6.7
|
We recommend that the Executive Branch improve its mechanisms for
watching over the Intelligence Community in order to ensure that
intelligence reform does not falter. To this end, we suggest that the
Joint Intelligence Community Council (JICC) serve as a standing
intelligence community "customer council" and that a strengthened
President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (PFIAB) assume a more
vigorous role in keeping watch over the progress of reform in the
Community.
|
|
Executive Branch oversight will be critical to the success of IC
reform. The JICC and the PFIAB will play a role in overseeing the IC
reform effort. The JICC can provide the DNI with valuable feedback on
intelligence support to policy consumers and on significant issues that
arise in the course of implementing reforms. A PFIAB with a mandate to
monitor and evaluate IC reform efforts will provide valuable counsel to
the President and the DNI.
|
NSC and ODNI
|
6.8
|
We recommend that the President suggest that Congress take steps to improve its structure for intelligence oversight.
|
|
Absent changes by Congress, IC reform efforts will be handicapped and
experience difficulty in reaching the desired outcomes. Action to
improve the means by which Congress oversees the IC is deemed critical
and the Administration will express that view to the leadership in both
chambers.
|
Congress
|
6.9
|
The Intelligence Community should improve its internal processes for
self-examination, including increasing the use of formal "lessons
learned" studies.
|
|
Increased self-examination is a worthy objective. Under the leadership
of the DDNI for Analysis, the IC will study existing "lessons learned"
programs and processes within the IC with the aim of improving the
effectiveness of such efforts. In addition, to maximize the impact and
exposure of such lessons, increased exchange within the IC will be
promoted, lessons will be incorporated into education and training
curricula, and outside experts will be tapped. Consistent with the
Commission's recommended approach, such self-examination efforts will
focus on developing "best practices."
|
ODNI
|
7.1
|
The DNI should create a new management structure within the office of
the DNI that manages collection as an "integrated collection
enterprise." Such an integrated approach should include coordinated
target development, collection management, data management, strategic
planning and investment, and the development of new collection
techniques.
|
|
See Recommendation 6.1.
|
ODNI
|
7.2
|
Target Development Boards, which would be chaired by the Mission
Managers, should develop collection requirements and strategies and
evaluate collectors' responsiveness to these needs.
|
|
See Recommendation 6.1.
|
ODNI
|
7.3
|
The CIA's authority to manage and coordinate overseas human
intelligence operations across the Intelligence Community should be
strengthened through the creation of a Human Intelligence Directorate
outside the Directorate of Operations.
|
|
The CIA will restructure its senior management to meet the objectives
outlined in the report and improve its overseas human intelligence
(HUMINT) operational capabilities. The CIA also will strengthen its
management of covert action. (Further detail provided in the Classified
Annex.)
|
CIA
|
7.4
|
The CIA should develop and manage a range of new overt and covert human
intelligence capabilities. In particular, a "Human Intelligence
Innovation Center," independent of CIA's Directorate of Operations,
should be established to facilitate the development of new and
innovative mechanisms for collecting human intelligence.
|
|
See recommendation 7.3. (Further detail provided in the Classified Annex.)
|
CIA
|
7.5
|
The CIA should take the lead in systematizing and standardizing the
Intelligence Community's asset validation procedures, and integrating
them with all information gathering activities across the human
intelligence spectrum.
|
|
The CIA's asset validation procedures will serve as the model for the
HUMINT collection community. The CIA and Defense Intelligence Agency's
Defense HUMINT Service (DIA/DHS) will take the lead in developing an
implementation strategy relevant to clandestine and overt sources,
respectively. (Further detail provided in the Classified Annex.)
|
CIA/DIA
|
7.6
|
The Intelligence Community should train more human intelligence
operators and collectors, and its training programs should be modified
to support the full spectrum of human intelligence collection methods.
|
|
Expanding the cadre of human intelligence collectors is a vital need
for the IC. The DDNI for Collection, in coordination with relevant
departments and agencies, will review existing plans and applicable
standards and, as required, develop and implement new programs to
achieve a larger force of better trained and more operationally
effective collectors. The CIA and FBI already are implementing plans to
expand and improve HUMINT collection capabilities based on Presidential
Directives issued in November 2004.
|
ODNI, CIA, and DIA
|
7.7
|
The President should seek to have the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act (FISA) amended to extend the duration of electronic surveillance
and "pen registers" in cases involving agents of foreign powers who are
not U.S. persons.
|
|
Extending the duration of FISA orders for non-U.S. person agents of
foreign powers will result in a substantial savings of resources and
permit the Department of Justice (DOJ) to focus more time and attention
on other FISA matters where U.S. persons are involved. DOJ has already
proposed legislation that would extend the duration not only for
electronic surveillance and pen register orders, but also physical
search orders in cases involving agents of foreign powers who are not
U.S. persons. This proposed legislation has been shared with
appropriate Committees of the House and Senate.
|
DOJ and Congress
|
7.8
|
The DNI should appoint an authority responsible for managing and
overseeing innovative technologies, including the use of technologies
often classified as "MASINT."
|
|
The ADNI/S&T, with support from the Undersecretary of Defense for
Intelligence (USD(I)), should assume the recommended oversight and
management role. Such oversight should encompass shaping research and
development programs to reflect DNI priorities, leveraging efforts in
the Department of Defense (DOD) and other departments and
organizations, rejuvenating the S&T workforce, ensuring the use of
best R&D practices across the IC, and determining the appropriate
level of investment for different technologies. Consistent with the
Commission's view, the ADNI/S&T's oversight should not single out
for special treatment any particular technology, including Measurement
and Signature Intelligence (MASINT) systems, and its oversight should
not extend to direct, hands-on acquisition, tasking, or operation of
intelligence technologies, including MASINT.
|
ODNI
|
7.9
|
The DNI should create an Open Source Directorate in the CIA to use the
internet and modern information processing tools to greatly enhance the
availability of open source information to analysts, collectors, and
users of intelligence.
|
|
It is critical to enhance the availability of open source information
to analysts, collectors, and users of intelligence. Sponsorship of a
Community-wide open source program -- including both foreign and
domestic open source information -- should reside in the ODNI. The DDNI
for Collection will create an Assistant Deputy Director for Open
Sources position to manage this effort and serve as an advocate for
open source collection.
|
ODNI
|
7.10
|
Efforts should be taken to significantly reduce damaging losses in
collection capability that result from authorized disclosures of
classified information related to protection of sources and methods.
|
|
Efforts to minimize damage to fragile sources and collection methods
from authorized disclosures are appropriate. In the case of diplomatic
demarches and other policy uses of intelligence information, the IC
should track more closely the cumulative impact of disclosures to a
state or states over time and carefully balance the risk to
intelligence sources and methods against the expected policy gains when
disclosures are considered.
|
ODNI
|
7.11
|
The DNI should ensure that all Inspectors General in the Intelligence
Community are prepared to conduct leak investigations for their
agencies; this responsibility can be coordinated by a Community-wide
Inspector General in the Office of the DNI, if such an office is
established.
|
|
The IC should increase its efforts to reduce losses to sources and
methods from unauthorized disclosures. Leaks investigations, however,
should be conducted by security and/or counterintelligence offices
rather than by IG offices. An interagency IG group and security
personnel have discussed the best mechanisms for reducing harmful
disclosures and means by which the DNI could prepare the IC to conduct
prompt and thorough leak investigations. In addition, mechanisms
ultimately adopted must entail close coordination with law enforcement
agencies. ODNI will continue to address this issue in coordination with
relevant departments and agencies.
|
ODNI
|
8.1
|
Mission Managers should be the DNI's designees for ensuring that the
analytic community adequately addresses key intelligence needs on high
priority topics.
|
|
See Recommendation 6.1.
|
ODNI
|
8.2
|
The DNI should create a small cadre of all-source analysts -- perhaps
50 -- who would be experts in finding and using unclassified, open
source information.
|
|
See Recommendation 7.9.
|
ODNI
|
8.3
|
The DNI should establish a program office within the CIA's Open Source
Directorate to acquire, or develop when necessary, information
technologies to permit prioritization and exploitation of large volumes
of data without the need for prior human translation or transcription.
|
|
See Recommendation 7.9.
|
ODNI
|
8.4
|
The Intelligence Community should expand its contacts with those
outside the realm of intelligence by creating at least one
not-for-profit "sponsored research institute."
|
|
By relying on existing contracts and other arrangements between IC
elements and research institutes, organizations, and companies, the IC
believes it can meet the objective of this recommendation. Examples of
such activity include greater outreach on strategic issues, drawing on
outside expertise for studies or alternative analysis, and the
appropriate exchange of information through the NIC. The IC will
explore opportunities for such outreach.
|
ODNI
|
8.5
|
The Community should develop and integrate into regular use new tools
that can assist analysts in filtering and correlating the vast
quantities of information that threaten to overwhelm the analytic
process. Moreover, data from all sources of information should be
processed and correlated Community-wide before being conveyed to
analysts.
|
|
The IC must make greater progress on developing filtering and
correlating tools to help make better connections between isolated
pieces of data. Much work in this area is already underway at the
National Security Agency (NSA) and elsewhere. The NISTC should explore
the degree to which increased investments of this kind are warranted,
whether directed at individual agencies or across the Community.
|
ODNI
|
8.6
|
A new long-term research and analysis unit, under the mantle of the
National Intelligence Council (NIC), should be created to wall off
all-source analysts from the press of daily demands and serve as the
lead organization for interagency projects involving in-depth analysis.
|
|
The objective of this recommendation is sound, and the DNI and NIC will
explore and propose a series of alternative approaches for reaching
that goal that might include establishing such a long-term research and
analysis capability in IC production centers. Any plan ultimately will
be executed by the DDNI for Analysis working jointly with relevant
departments and agencies.
|
ODNI/NIC
|
8.7
|
The DNI should encourage diverse and independent analysis throughout
the Intelligence Community by encouraging alternative hypothesis
generation as part of the analytic process and by forming offices
dedicated to independent analysis.
|
|
Analysts and analytical units should receive the requisite training,
methodological rigor, and procedural guidance to ensure such
alternative and independent analysis is brought to bear at all stages
of the analytic process. In addition, best practices in how to conduct
such analysis should be tapped from within the IC, from elsewhere in
the U.S. Government, and from research institutes and think tanks.
|
ODNI
|
8.8
|
The Intelligence Community must develop a Community program for
training analysts, and both analysts and managers must prioritize this
career-long training.
|
|
While certain training standards are agency specific, others lend
themselves to Community-wide standardization. Managers should assign a
high priority to long-term, continuous training as an essential element
in career development. The DNI will assign a senior training officer
under the DDNI for Management to address systematically the training
issues identified in the report. Review and implementation of any new
training measures will be undertaken in coordination with relevant
departments and agencies.
|
ODNI
|
8.9
|
The Intelligence Community must develop a Community program for
training managers, both when they first assume managerial positions and
through their careers.
|
|
More Community focus on managerial training would be beneficial and
will be implemented, but such training should apply across all
disciplines, not only in the analytical field.
|
ODNI
|
8.10
|
Finished intelligence should include careful sourcing for all analytic
assessments and conclusions, and these materials should -- whenever
possible in light of legitimate security concerns -- be made easily
available to intelligence customers.
|
|
This recommendation overlaps significantly with 8.11. Most IC analytic
components already have established procedures governing "sourcing" of
intelligence products. Citations and supporting documents should
generally be available to IC counterparts and customers. Existing data
management tools should include this capability, which also should be
integrated into the design of future IT systems. The DNI's CIO will
address these and related information management issues identified in
the report.
|
ODNI
|
8.11
|
The analytic community should create and store sourced copies of all
analytic pieces to allow readers to locate and review the intelligence
upon which analysis is based, and to allow for easy identification of
analysis that is based on intelligence reports that are later modified.
|
|
Analysts should have access to IT systems with the capability to
identify products based on reports that are later modified or
retracted. See also response to 8.10 above.
|
ODNI
|
8.12
|
The DNI should develop and implement strategies for improving the
Intelligence Community's science and technology and weapons analysis
capabilities.
|
|
The ADNI/S&T and DDNI for Analysis, working with relevant
departments and agencies, will implement measures to improve these
critical analytical capabilities.
|
ODNI
|
8.13
|
The DNI should explore ways to make finished intelligence available to
customers in a way that enables them -- to the extent they desire -- to
more easily find pieces of interest, link to related materials, and
communicate with analysts.
|
|
Customer access to intelligence products and analysts should be
improved, and the DNI will implement measures to do so. The DDNI for
Customer Outcomes will regularly assess both customer requirements and
satisfaction levels.
|
ODNI
|
8.14
|
The President's Daily Brief (PDB) should be restructured. The DNI
should oversee the process and ensure a fair representation of
divergent views. Reporting on terrorism intelligence should be combined
and coordinated by the DNI to eliminate redundancies and material that
does not merit Presidential action.
|
|
Efforts to determine what the President needs to know, eliminate
duplicative or less significant material, and ensure divergent views
are reflected are already underway under the guidance of the ODNI.
Oversight of the PDB process will be handled by the DNI, supported by
the DDNI for Analysis.
|
ODNI
|
8.15
|
The Intelligence Community should expand the use of non-monetary
incentives that remind analysts of the importance of their work and the
value of their contributions to national security.
|
|
The IC will improve efforts to identify high performers and to
appropriately recognize and reward them on a non-monetary basis. Under
the direction of the DDNI for Analysis and the Chief Human Capital
Officer, the DNI will inventory existing non-monetary recognition and
reward programs, whether employed by the IC, the U.S. Government, or
the private sector, and then work with individual agencies to establish
an effective Community-wide program.
|
ODNI
|
8.16
|
Examinations of finished intelligence should be routine and ongoing,
and the lessons learned from the "post-mortems" should be incorporated
into the intelligence education and training program.
|
|
The IC will emphasize evaluating the quality of analytic products,
deriving lessons from their strengths and weaknesses, integrating such
lessons into formal and informal training, and establishing an
oversight process to ensure analytic integrity. To fulfill these
objectives, the ODNI will establish an analytic integrity program.
|
ODNI
|
9.1
|
The confused lines of authority over information sharing created by the
intelligence reform act should be resolved. In particular: (1) The
Information Sharing Environment should be expanded to encompass all
intelligence information, not just terrorism intelligence; (2) The
Director of the National Counterterrorism Center should report to the
DNI on all matters relating to information sharing; and (3) The
overlapping authorities of the DNI and the Program Manager should be
reconciled and coordinated -- a result most likely to be achieved by
requiring the Program Manager to report to the DNI.
|
|
Several efforts are underway to clarify legal authorities and to
coordinate information sharing responsibilities. Among other steps, the
President has directed the DNI to exercise authority, direction, and
control over the Program Manager for U.S. Government-wide terrorism
information sharing who is responsible for planning for and overseeing
the Information Sharing Environment (ISE). In addition, the ISE Program
Manager is required under the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism
Prevention Act (IRTPA) to work in accordance with the authorities
granted to the DNI, the Secretary of Homeland Security, and the
Attorney General in the development of the ISE.
|
ODNI and PM
|
9.2
|
The DNI should give responsibility for information sharing, information
technology, and information security within the Intelligence Community
to an office reporting directly to the DNI or to the Principal Deputy
DNI.
|
|
There is an inherent conflict between increased access to information
and the protection of sources and methods. The DNI will consider
designating a single office responsible for IC information sharing,
information technology, and information security practices and
policies. The ODNI's CIO will perform these functions. The CIO also
will support the ISE Program Manager and ensure common standards and
guidelines are developed and implemented for intelligence and
information sharing inside and outside the IC.
|
ODNI
|
9.3
|
In designing an Information Sharing Environment, the DNI should, to the
extent possible, learn from and build on the capabilities of existing
Intelligence Community networks. These lessons include: (1) The
limitations of "need to know" in a networked environment; (2) The
importance of developing mechanisms that can protect sources and
methods in new ways; (3) Biometrics and other user authentication
(identification) methods, along with user activity auditing tools, can
promote accountability and enhance counterintelligence capabilities;
(4) System-wide encryption of data can greatly reduce the risks of
network penetration by outsiders; and (5) Where sensitive information
is restricted to a limited group of users, the Information Sharing
Environment should ensure that others searching for such information
are aware of its existence and provided with a point of contact who can
decide quickly whether to grant access.
|
|
In building the Information Sharing Environment (ISE), it is essential
to learn from and build upon the capabilities of existing IC networks.
However, lessons also need to be learned from other enterprises and
networks across the entire U.S. Government. Properly balancing
legitimate security and counterintelligence concerns with information
access will be all the more important given that the ISE will involve
not only IC members but also others outside the Community, including
non-Federal entities. The ISE Program Manager will work closely with
chief information officers and mission-focused components of ISE
participants across the U.S. Government to ensure mission needs drive
ISE design, issues are appropriately addressed, lessons are learned,
technical capabilities are capitalized upon, and existing systems and
networks are leveraged.
|
ODNI and PM
|
9.4
|
Primary institutional responsibility within the Intelligence Community
for establishing clear and consistent "U.S. persons" rules should be
shifted from individual collection agencies to the Director of National
Intelligence. These rules would continue to be subject to the Attorney
General's review and approval. To the extent possible, the same rules
should apply across the Intelligence Community.
|
|
A review of current "U.S. person" rules to identify unnecessary
inconsistencies between the rules applied by different agencies
(inconsistencies not justified by differing authorities, operational
responsibilities, or technologies used by those agencies) would be
beneficial. ODNI, in conjunction with DOJ, should coordinate such a
review through an interagency working group. Although the drafting of
U.S. person rules should be closely coordinated with the DNI and DOJ,
the shifting of drafting responsibility away from individual collection
agencies requires further consideration and should be examined further.
|
ODNI and DOJ
|
9.5
|
DNI should set uniform information management policies, practices, and procedures for all members of the Intelligence Community.
|
|
Standardization across the IC of data and meta-data formats, firewalls,
network gateways and other aspects of a modern networked environment is
necessary. Notably, much of the conceptualization on this score
occurred last fall pursuant to Executive Order 13356. Common standards
that would enable the transfer of information in a consistent,
identifiable manner have been identified, and common security and
handling markings have been specified. In addition, advanced policy
discussion has occurred to ensure that disseminated terrorism
information is free of originator and compartmental controls to the
maximum extent possible consistent with national security requirements.
The DNI will build upon work already done in this area.
|
ODNI and PM
|
9.6
|
All users of the Information Sharing Environment should be registered
in a directory that identifies skills, clearances, and assigned
responsibilities of each individual (using aliases rather than true
names where necessary). The environment should enable users to make a
"call for assistance" that assembles a virtual community of specialists
to address a particular task, and all data should be catalogued within
the Information Sharing Environment in a way that enables the
underlying network to compare user privileges with data sensitivity.
|
|
Establishment of a comprehensive online directory of analysts and
technical experts (or its functional equivalent) that would be
available to users of the ISE is favored in concept, but its specific
design and implementation must take into account many complex security
and counterintelligence considerations. The ISE Program Manager, in
coordination with the interagency process, is defining the specific
mission-oriented purpose of such a service.
|
ODNI and PM
|
9.7
|
The DNI should propose standards to simplify and modernize the
information classification system with particular attention to
implementation in a network-centric Information Sharing Environment.
|
|
The issue of simplifying the classification system will be addressed by
the relevant IC collection and security elements. Data management
systems all remain in step with prevailing classification guidelines.
|
ODNI
|
9.8
|
We recommend several parallel efforts to keep the Information Sharing
Environment on track: (1) Collection of metrics. The chief information
management officer should introduce performance metrics for the
Information Sharing Environment and automate their collection. These
metrics should include the number and origination of postings to the
shared environment, data on how often and by whom each item was
accessed, and statistics on the use of collaborative tools and
communications channels, among others. Such performance data can help
to define milestones and to determine rewards and penalties. (2)
Self-enforcing milestones. Milestones should include specific and
quantifiable performance criteria for the sharing environment, as well
as rewards and penalties for succeeding or failing to meet them. The
DNI should empower the chief information management officer to use the
DNI's budget, mission-assignment, and personnel authorities to penalize
poor agency performance. (3) Incentives. The DNI should ensure that
collectors and analysts receive
honors or monetary prizes for intelligence
products that receive widespread use or
acclaim. Users should post comments or rate
the value of individual reports or analytic
products, and periodic user surveys can serve
as peer review mechanisms. (4) Training.
The DNI should promote the training of all users in the Information
Sharing Environment, with extended training for analysts, managers, and
other users of the environment.
|
|
Measures will be taken to heighten prospects of ISE success. Such
measures, which are likely to consist of metrics, training, milestones,
and incentive programs, have been generally identified as beneficial by
other interagency and commercial forums focused on information sharing.
The ISE Program Manager, in coordination with appropriate departments
and agencies, will consider how to best approach these efforts, as some
of the specific proposals (e.g., creation of a Chief Information
Management Officer) may not be appropriate while others (e.g.,
self-enforcing milestones) may unfairly penalize smaller IC and non-IC
entities with small CIO management staffs.
|
ODNI & PM
|
10.1
|
To ensure that the FBI's intelligence elements are responsive to the
Director of National Intelligence, and to capitalize on the FBI's
progress, we recommend the creation of a new National Security Service
within the FBI under a single Executive Assistant Director. This
service would include the Bureau's Counterterrorism and
Counterintelligence Divisions and the Directorate of Intelligence. The
service would be subject to the coordination and budget authorities of
the DNI as well as to the same Attorney General authorities that apply
to other Bureau divisions.
|
|
The President has issued a Directive to the Attorney General to implement this recommendation.
|
DOJ
|
10.2
|
The DNI should ensure that there are effective mechanisms for
preventing conflicts and encouraging coordination among intelligence
agencies in the United States.
|
|
The DNI has approved a draft Memorandum of Understanding developed by
the CIA and FBI to promote effective coordination and cooperation
between these agencies in intelligence activities. In the interest of
protecting civil liberties, intelligence activities must be undertaken
in accordance with the Attorney General Guidelines for FBI national
security investigations and foreign intelligence collection. In
consultation with relevant departments and agencies, the DNI will
expand these mechanisms to ensure similarly effective coordination of
all IC intelligence activities in the U.S. and abroad.
|
ODNI
|
10.3
|
The Department of Justice's primary national security elements -- the
Office of Intelligence Policy and Review, and the Counterterrorism and
Counterespionage sections -- should be placed under a new Assistant
Attorney General for National Security.
|
|
The President has issued a Directive to the Attorney General to
implement this recommendation. Legislation will be required to create a
new Assistant Attorney General position.
|
DOJ and Congress
|
10.4
|
Secretary of Homeland Security should rescind Treasury Order 113-01 as it applies to Department of Homeland Security elements.
|
|
The Secretary of Homeland Security issued a new DHS policy to govern
the review and approval of IC requests for assistance, support, or
services, which go beyond the routine exchange of information. That
policy rescinded Treasury Order 113-01 as it applies to the former
Treasury law enforcement components that are now housed at DHS. The
objective of the new directive is to streamline cooperation with the IC
regarding requests for DHS law enforcement assistance, support and
services from the IC while providing Departmental oversight over the
long-term commitment of resources to support IC operations and the
exercise of non-routine assistance by DHS law enforcement components.
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DHS
|
11.1
|
The National Counterintelligence Executive should become the DNI's
Mission Manager for counterintelligence, providing strategic direction
for the whole range of counterintelligence activities across the
government.
|
|
Dramatic change, beginning with centralizing counterintelligence (CI)
leadership, is essential to effective execution of CI resources and
activities across the Government. The National Counterintelligence
Executive (NCIX) is already assigned many of the authorities and
responsibilities consistent with the strategic management of the
Nation's counterintelligence assets.
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ODNI/NCIX
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11.2
|
The National Counterintelligence Executive should work closely with
agencies responsible for protecting U.S. information infrastructure in
order to enhance the United States' technical counterintelligence
capabilities.
|
|
The NCIX will devote particular attention to working with agencies that
already devote substantial resources to protecting information
infrastructure. The NCIX will develop an action plan for interagency
review to ensure all applicable resources are brought to bear on CI
issues. (Further detail provided in the Classified Annex.)
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ODNI/NCIX
|
11.3
|
The CIA should create a new capability dedicated to mounting offensive counterintelligence activities abroad.
|
|
The CIA has already begun implementing a strategic operational plan,
spearheaded by the Counterintelligence Center (CIC), to further build
this capability. (Further detail provided in the Classified Annex.)
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CIA
|
11.4
|
The Department of Defense's Counterintelligence Field Activity should
have operational and investigative authority to coordinate and conduct
counterintelligence activities throughout the Defense Department.
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Further
Study
|
The DOD Counterintelligence Field Activity's (CIFA's) management,
strategic planning and coordination authorities will be expanded to
include mission tasking over DOD CI elements, but a determination
regarding the granting of investigative or additional operational
authorities to CIFA at this time must be deferred, pending further
review.
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DOD
|
11.5
|
The FBI should create a National Security Service that includes the
Bureau's Counterintelligence Division, Counterterrorism Division, and
the Directorate of Intelligence. A single Executive Assistant Director
would lead the Service subject to the coordination and budget
authorities of the DNI.
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|
See Recommendation 10.1.
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DOJ
|
13.1
|
The DNI should create a Community-wide National Biodefense Initiative
to include a Biological Science Advisory Group, a government service
program for biologists and health professionals, a post-doctoral
fellowship program in biodefense and intelligence, and a scholarship
program for graduate students in biological weapons-relevant fields.
|
|
The IC's biological weapons analysis will benefit from greater outreach
to academia and the private sector. The Departments of Health and Human
Services, Commerce, and Homeland Security have developed an
implementation plan for improving coordination between the
intelligence, defense, and biological and medical science communities,
and for formalizing a mechanism by which the IC can obtain consistent
and contemporary advice from expert scientists actively engaged in
these disciplines.
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ODNI, HHS, and DHS
|
13.2
|
The DNI should use the Joint Intelligence Community Council to form a
Biological Weapons Working Group. This Working Group would serve as the
principal coordination venue for the Intelligence Community and
biodefense agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security's
National Biodefense and Countermeasures Center, NIH, CDC, the
Department of Agriculture, and USAMRIID.
|
|
Ties between the IC and experts and scientists within the U.S.
Government, such as at CDC, NIH, and USDA will be fostered,
particularly at the working level, building on the work already being
done through the Homeland Security Biodefense Policy Coordination
Committee, which has encouraged communications between agencies.
Implementation of this recommendation will be undertaken in the context
of the creation of the NCPC.
|
ODNI
|
13.3
|
The DNI should create a deputy within the National Counter
Proliferation Center that is specifically responsible for biological
weapons; this deputy would be responsible to the Proliferation Mission
Manager to ensure the implementation of a comprehensive biological
weapons targeting strategy and direct new collection initiatives.
|
|
There is merit in designating a focal point within the NCPC to develop,
manage, and direct a comprehensive targeting and collection strategy on
biological warfare. This recommendation will be implemented in
connection with the establishment of the NCPC.
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ODNI
|
13.4
|
The National Security Council should form a Joint Interagency Task
Force to develop a counter-biological weapons plan within 90 days that
draws upon all elements of national power, including law enforcement
and the regulatory capabilities of the Departments of Homeland
Security, Health and Human Services, Commerce, and State.
|
|
A government-wide counter-biological weapons plan is essential, and the
National Policy for Biodefense signed last year already provides such a
plan. Notably, the policy delineates 59 distinct tasks identified
through a comprehensive end-to-end review of biodefense efforts across
the U.S. Government. To ensure interagency implementation of the
actions and identify any missing policy elements, the National Security
Proliferation Strategy PCC and the Homeland Security Biodefense PCC
will continue to convene on a monthly basis.
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NSC
|
13.5
|
The State Department should aggressively support foreign
criminalization of biological weapons development and the establishment
of biosafety and biosecurity regulations under the framework of United
Nations Security Council Resolution 1540. U.S. law enforcement and
intelligence agencies should jointly sponsor biological weapons
information sharing events with foreign police forces.
|
|
Developing close relationships with foreign governments on biological
weapons issues is imperative if the U.S. is to monitor and contain
biological threats. The U.S. will pursue more focused and aggressive
engagement with foreign governments, building on ongoing efforts
associated with the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) Experts Group.
The Department of State has developed a plan to expand bilateral and
multilateral efforts, and will regularly inform the National Security
Proliferation Strategy PCC and the Homeland Security Biodefense PCC on
the progress being made to address the objective of this recommendation.
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DOS
|
13.6
|
The United States should remain actively engaged in designing and
implementing both international and regulatory inspection regimes. It
should consider extending its existing biosecurity and biosafety
regulations to foreign institutions with commercial ties to the United
States, using the possibility of increased liability, reduced patent
protection, or more burdensome and costly inspections to encourage
compliance with appropriate safeguards.
|
|
The Departments of State and Health and Human Services have developed
an implementation plan for ensuring that research funded by the U.S.
Government in foreign laboratories, including research funded through
bio-redirection efforts in countries of the former Soviet Union,
complies with internationally-accepted biosafety and pathogen security
standards or, if such standards do not exist, with relevant U.S.
standards. The United States also will assist States in drafting
national legislation and regulations on biosafety and pathogen
security.
|
DOS and HHS
|
13.7
|
The President should establish a Counterproliferation Joint Interagency
Task Force to conduct counterproliferation interdiction operations; to
detect, monitor, and handoff suspected proliferation targets; and to
coordinate interagency and partner nations' counterproliferation
activities.
|
|
There is a need to ensure national-level coordination of U.S.
Government interdiction activities. The NCPC will be the IC strategic
focal point for ensuring intelligence participation in proliferation
interdiction, and will work closely with agencies to expand efforts to
provide direct, day-to-day intelligence support to interdiction
operations and related activities. (Further detail provided in the
Classified Annex.)
|
ODNI
|
13.8
|
The DNI should designate the National Counter Proliferation Center as
the Intelligence Community's leader for interdiction-related issues and
direct the Center to support the all-source intelligence needs of the
Counterproliferation Joint Interagency Task Force, the National
Security Council, and other customers.
|
Further
Study
|
The National Counter Proliferation Center will serve as the strategic
focal point for the IC to ensure intelligence participation in
proliferation interdiction. Implementation of the specific aspects of
this recommendation will be the subject of further discussion in the
context of the establishment of the NCPC.
|
ODNI
|
13.9
|
The President should establish, probably through a National Security
Presidential Directive, a real-time, interagency decision-making
process for counterproliferation interdiction operations, borrowing
from Presidential Directive 27, the interagency decision-making process
that supports counternarcotics interdictions.
|
|
Timely and effective decision-making on interdiction cases is vital.
The Administration has an established interagency process that allows
for real-time decision-making in interdiction cases. We will continue
to refine the policies overseeing decision-making in such cases and, as
necessary, modify interagency procedures to improve our ability to
rapidly respond to WMD interdiction opportunities. (Further detail
provided in the Classified Annex.)
|
NSC
|
13.10
|
The State Department should enter into additional bilateral
ship-boarding agreements that also help to meet the tagging, tracking,
and locating requirements of the Intelligence Community and its users.
|
|
It is important to enhance U.S. capabilities to locate and track
vessels at sea, including through legally binding standards for
automated maritime location reporting. Notably, initiatives undertaken
pursuant to NSPD-41 will effectively support this objective. The U.S.
Government will undertake efforts within the International Maritime
Organization to establish internationally-binding standards for
location reporting in the context of the Safety of Life at Sea
Convention.
|
DOS
|
13.11
|
The DNI should ensure that Customs and Border Protection has the most
up-to-date terrorism and proliferation intelligence. In turn, Customs
and Border Protection should ensure that the National Counterterrorism
Center and NCPC have real-time access to its databases.
|
|
Better sharing of information between the IC, Customs and Border
Protection, and the Department of Defense is a positive and necessary
goal. An implementation plan has been prepared that addresses technical
aspects of this requirement, as well as related legal, information
privacy, and civil liberties concerns.
|
ODNI and DHS
|
13.12
|
The DNI and Secretary of Homeland Security should undertake a research
and development program to develop better sensors capable of detecting
nuclear-related materials. The effort should be part of a larger border
defense initiative to foster greater intelligence support to law
enforcement at our nation's borders.
|
|
The DNI, DHS, and DOE will work closely together on S&T programs
that materially improve U.S. defenses against hostile nuclear materials
that might cross our borders. This cooperation should occur at both the
system level -- to incorporate new and existing sensors into an
integrated attack, sensing and warning infrastructure -- and at a
component level to include innovative sensors, signal processing
systems, software, and other key emerging technologies. The IC will
also provide actionable intelligence on adversary nuclear capabilities
and intentions to DHS and DOE to enhance the effectiveness of those
agencies' counter-nuclear efforts. Specific types of sensors may be
developed at DHS, IC, DOE, or DOD facilities that are best suited to
fill particular missions.
|
ODNI, DHS, DOE, CIA, and DOD
|
13.15
|
The President should expand the scope of Executive Order 13224 beyond
terrorism to enable the Department of the Treasury to block the assets
of persons and entities who provide financial support to proliferation.
|
|
Expanded Treasury Department authorities to allow the freezing of
assets of WMD proliferators and their supporters represent an important
new tool against proliferation networks. For that reason, the President
has signed an Executive Order that responds to this recommendation.
|
Treasury
|
13.16
|
The President should seek to have Congress amend Section 311 of the USA
PATRIOT Act in order to give the Department of the Treasury the
authority to designate foreign business entities involved in
proliferation as "primary money laundering concerns."
|
|
The new Executive Order referenced in the Administration's response to
recommendation 13.15 addresses this recommendation. The Order allows
the U.S. Government to deny to foreign business entities designated
under the Order access to U.S. financial and commercial systems.
|
Treasury
|
|
The Director of National Intelligence should hold accountable the
organizations that contributed to the flawed assessments of Iraq's WMD
programs.
|
Further
Study
|
The DNI is reviewing the need for reforms to IC methodologies and
practices. That review will take into account the conclusions and
recommendations reached by ongoing investigations by components of the
IC. The DNI will address any identified deficiencies, including those
that may have contributed to the assessment of Iraq's WMD capabilities,
through actions that may include greater DNI oversight and changes in
organizational roles and responsibilities.
|
ODNI
|