Intelligence Czar Plan Reported
WASHINGTON — The White House has drafted executive orders designed to address calls for reform of the nation’s intelligence agencies, according to Bush administration and congressional officials familiar with the documents.
Among the proposals, a congressional official said Thursday, is one giving the director of central intelligence, who heads the CIA, the title of national intelligence director and granting that position greater authority over the 14 other spy agencies.
The administration has circulated the drafts to high-level officials at agencies that would be affected by the changes, with a request for feedback within days, suggesting that the White House is eager to announce changes soon -- possibly before the opening of the Republican National Convention on Monday.
Creation of a chief to oversee the intelligence community was among the recommendations of the independent commission that investigated the Sept. 11 attacks. The drafts now in circulation were crafted in response to the commission’s report, issued last month.
But the move to enhance the role of the CIA director may be at odds with the aim of the commission’s recommendations, which warned that any new intelligence chief should not also be responsible for leading the Central Intelligence Agency.
Some lawmakers are concerned that the administration is seeking to forestall the growing momentum on Capitol Hill for more sweeping change. “This is the way it works,” the congressional official said. “They do it by executive order and tell Congress they don’t have to act.”
It is not clear how much power the White House can grant a new intelligence czar by executive order, without legislation from Congress. The Sept. 11 commission has pushed for any new intelligence chief to have expansive power over the estimated $40-billion intelligence budget for all the agencies, and spending matters are largely controlled by Congress.
The White House approach also would be dramatically different from proposals on Capitol Hill, particularly a bill unveiled this week by the chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence that essentially would dismantle the CIA.
Other orders spelled out in the White House drafts would create a national counter-terrorism center -- another strong recommendation of the Sept. 11 commission -- and make changes designed to foster information-sharing and cooperation among various spy agencies, officials said.
Asked about the executive orders, White House spokesman Allen Abney said late Thursday that the administration had no comment. And a CIA spokesman declined to comment on whether the agency and its acting director, John E. McLaughlin, had been consulted on the drafts.
Administration officials have expressed concern about the effect of reforms, and the administration has had a muted response to aggressive proposals, such as the one offered by the Intelligence Committee chairman, Sen. Pat Roberts (R-Kan.), which would break up the CIA.
Times staff writer Peter Wallsten contributed to this report.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.