Documents From
Congress' Joint Inquiry into 9/11
Fifth
Statement of Eleanor Hill
03 Oct 2002

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Joint
Inquiry Staff Statement
Proposals for Reform within the Intelligence Community Eleanor
Hill, Director, Joint Inquiry Staff
Mr. Chairman and members of the Joint Inquiry Committee, good morning. In prior hearings, we have discussed specific factual issues and systemic problems that relate to the U.S. Government's performance regarding the events of September 11th. These have included analytical, information sharing, budgetary, and cultural issues. Today's hearing moves beyond the factual record that has been established to look toward the future and the need for reform within the Intelligence Community. Specifically, today's testimony will focus on how the Community could and should be changed to strengthen and improve the ability of the U.S. government to counter terrorist threats. In 1947, Congress passed the National Security Act. This Act established the statutory framework for the United States Intelligence Community, including the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the Director of Central Intelligence (DCI). The Act also created a semi-unified military command structure under a Secretary of Defense, and a National Security Council to advise the President. Since then, many new organizations have been created and their missions defined in a variety of laws, executive orders, regulations and policies. During this fifty-five year period, numerous independent commissions, experts, and legislative initiatives have examined the growth and evolving mission of the Intelligence Community. Many proposals have been made to address perceived shortcomings in the Intelligence Community's structure, management, role, and mission. These have ranged from a fundamental restructuring of the Intelligence Community to tinkering with its component parts. The earliest studies of the Intelligence Community addressed questions of efficiency and effectiveness. They included the first and second Hoover Commissions to review the Organization of the Executive Branch of the Government in 1949 and 1995; the 1949 Dulles-Jackson-Correa Report of the Intelligence Survey Group that was established to evaluate the CIA and its relationship with other agencies; and the 1975 Commission on the Organization of the Government for the Conduct of Foreign Policy, known as the Murphy Commission. The reviews and investigations of the 1970s and 1980 -- the most prominent of which were the Rockefeller Commission on CIA activities within the United States, the Senate and House Investigating Committees led by Senator Frank Church and Congressman Otis Pike, and the Iran-Contra Committees -- dealt with issues of legality and propriety. They also addressed, in varying degrees, the fundamental operating principles of the Intelligence Community. With the end of the Cold War, both the executive and legislative branches chartered numerous additional studies to examine a variety of issues, including:
Intelligence Community capabilities, management, and structure; Since
the end of the Cold War in the early 1990's, the pace of reviews and studies
1995-1996: Commission on the Roles and Capabilities of the U.S. Intelligence
Community (Aspin-Brown Commission) These
reviews varied in the areas they examined and emphasized different issues
Development of a strong national security strategy; For
today's hearing, we have asked the witnesses to discuss these and other
issues As a prelude to this morning's testimony, I would like to provide a very brief overview of a few of the previous reports on these topics and describe several common issues and themes that are of particular relevance to this Joint Inquiry. The 1995-1996 Commission on the Roles and Capabilities of the U.S. Intelligence Community, commonly referred to as the Aspin-Brown Commission, included the following among its key findings:
Intelligence agencies must be integrated more closely with the law enforcement
community; In
1996, the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence conducted a
The Intelligence Community would benefit greatly from a more corporate
approach to its basic functions, e.g., stronger central management, reinforced
core competencies in collection, analysis, and operations, and a consolidated
infrastructure; General William Odom, one of our witnesses today, authored a report in 1997 entitled: "Modernizing Intelligence: Structure and Change for the 21st Century." The report included the following observation:
The report also included the following key recommendations:
Strengthen the role of the National Intelligence Council (NIC) in providing
unique national-level analysis, and overseeing analysis and production
throughout the Intelligence Community; In
2000, the National Commission on Terrorism, led by Ambassador Paul
The FBI, which is responsible for investigating terrorism in the United
States, suffered from bureaucratic and cultural obstacles to obtaining
terrorism information; Among the Commission's key recommendations were the following:
The Attorney General should ensure that the FBI is exercising fully its
authority for investigating suspected terrorist groups or individuals,
including authority for electronic surveillance; Earlier
this week, former Virginia Governor James Gilmore testified in detail
Increase and accelerate the sharing of terrorism-related intelligence
and threat assessments with state and local governments; Finally,
in July of this year, the Subcommittee on Terrorism and Homeland
Ensure HUMINT collection remains a central core competency; Conclusion Those are but a few of the many findings and recommendations that resulted from many months of study and focused deliberation on the performance of the Intelligence Community. While there has been a plethora of recommendations for reform over the years, many of the most far-reaching proposals have not been acted on to any significant degree, particularly in the area of organization and structure. The tragedy of September 11th may, at long last, serve as the catalyst for action to implement meaningful and sustained reform within the Intelligence Community. We are hopeful that this Joint Inquiry will make a substantial and constructive contribution toward that end. |
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