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Reforming National Intelligence
Fritz Ermarth
The resignation of DCI Tenet should intensify the quest
for radical reforms of our national intelligence
community (IC). In that quest, the President,
Congressional leaders and other authorities should
embrace five extremely important propositions:
1.
Radical reforms and improvements in the performance of
the national IC are needed and available.
During
the 1990s, an accumulation of pathologies and neglected
opportunities allowed large gaps to emerge between
overall IC performance and the requirements of the
global situation and activist policies for facing them,
especially on terrorism, proliferation, key regions and
countries. This was the fault of many things, from
aging institutions to a country and an administration
that long did not perceive real national security
threats. 9/11, the Iraq WMD fiasco,
Iran,
Korea and other crises have jolted our perceptions; but
other pathologies remain.
2. The
needed improvements will come, not from one sweeping
structural change, but from many reforms and initiatives
on many fronts.
In the
1950s, we faced a comparable gap between intelligence
performance and the requirements of one big challenge:
sizing and tracking the Soviet military. We closed that
gap with (to oversimplify a lot) one big fix:
satellites. This time around, we're going to have to
fix many things at once. Some of them are "hard" or
quantifiable, such as assuring budgets and personnel
rosters robust enough to cover the great multiplicity of
equally competing priorities. Some are "softer" or more
cultural, but extremely important, such as reducing the
tyranny of current intelligence (including the CIA’s
fetish about the PDB) in favor of much more deep
analysis; enhancing the role of science and scientists
in all aspects of IC affairs; making Congressional
oversight more muscular, but less costly. The need for
better HUMINT has become a banality. Meeting it will
require innovations in operations and technology, not
just more of the old familiar. Better analysis requires
jacking up professional standards of critical thinking,
but also new information technologies to enable analysts
to find dots (especially in open sources), to connect
them and to connect with each other.
3. The
federated structure or "constitution" of our national
intelligence community is sound and must be respected.
This federated
structure is now unwisely maligned. It is in fact
better suited to the diversity of the 21st Century
situation than it was to the Cold War. Creating a
"czar" (or Director of National Intelligence) and giving
him or her control over the NSA, NRO and NGA, not to
mention the departmental intelligence components, is
unnecessary and would spill so much bureaucratic blood
on the floor as to be counterproductive. Our
intelligence federation has 1) a senior, cabinet-level
intelligence leader who reports directly to the
President in the DCI; 2) the CIA which the DCI runs
directly and which has a hand in almost every
intelligence task, including support to the military;
3) in the IC, a family of intelligence agencies which
support both the IC as a whole and the special needs of
the departments in which they are lodged. This system
is flexible and adaptable if appreciated properly. The
DCI has adequate power to reform and run the IC if he
has the support of the President, a good relationship
with the Secretaries of Defense and State (which he'd
need no matter what his formal powers), a critical grasp
of the IC's problems and a vision for reform. The one
big structural innovation that warrants serious
consideration is the creation of a new domestic
intelligence/counterintelligence service. But building
this within the FBI and Justice is probably easier,
better and safer.
4.
The next DCI should be a seasoned executive leader with
a capacity for vision and an ability to change the
behavior of entrenched organizations and clans.
He
doesn't have to know more about official intelligence
than most literate citizens; he can learn all that. But
he must understand the dynamics of the information age
and could come from the IT, telecom, financial or
military sector. He or she must absolutely NOT be a
politician. Our politicians are, sadly for our public
life, attuned to a world dominated by slogans and
illusions have no place in intelligence.
5.
Finally, while many good ideas will come from the
outside, a great many can and will come from the inside.
Many
serving intelligence professionals, including very
senior ones, are not in denial about the failures of the
past and the need for major reforms. They must and can
be a big part of the solution if liberated by visionary
leadership.
A
growing informal movement of insiders and outsiders is
already working on a concrete agenda for intelligence
reform, largely in tune with the principles above. Soon
we shall be ready for prime time.
Fritz
W. Ermarth served 25 years at the CIA and was Chairman
of the National Intelligence Council, 1988-1993. He is
currently Director of National Security Programs at The
Nixon
Center. |