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Governmental Affairs Committee Hearing
on the President’s Proposal for a Terrorism Threat Integration
Center
Ranking Member Joe Lieberman
February 14, 2003
Madam Chairman, thank you for holding this
hearing on one of the more important offensives in the war
against terrorism, the consolidation of information regarding
terrorist threats received daily from an array of sources
available to our government. The intelligence disconnects
that, in part, led to the September 11th terrorist attacks
are an embarrassment that should never have happened in the
first place, and we must never allow them to happen again.
I appreciate your leadership, Madam Chairman, in calling this
hearing - the first, I believe, on the President’s State
of the Union proposal to overcome some of our intelligence
failures. This is a matter for which urgency is required.
I also want to join you in welcoming our
witnesses - Senator Rudman, Governor Gilmore, Mr. Smith and
Mr. Steinberg - who are no strangers to this Committee - and
thank them for once again taking the time to share their expertise
and inform us. I am disappointed that we will not hear from
an Administration representative today. And I hope we will
hear more details on the President’s proposed Terrorism
Threat Integration Center very soon. There is no time to spare
on this matter.
We are now in the midst of a code orange, high terror alert.
That combined with warnings from the Directors of the FBI
and CIA that another terrorist attack could occur within our
borders as early as "this week"—along with
official suggestions that citizens create safe rooms in their
homes and stock supplies of food and water—has understandably
created widespread anxiety throughout the nation. We must
take this moment to allay fear and instead galvanize our government
and motivate all Americans to help make our country safe again.
Creation of an effective intelligence analysis center is a
vital step in that direction.
The disastrous disconnects among our intelligence agencies
- the culture of rivalry rather than cooperation, turf battles
rather than team work - that have plagued the intelligence
community have been well-documented. For some time now, many
of us have been advocating for a central location in our government
where all the intelligence collected by the various agencies
that make up the intelligence community, as well as open-source
information, and information collected by state and local
law enforcement, can be brought together and analyzed, synthesized,
and shared.
The idea is to "connect the intelligence
dots," to create a full picture, so that we can understand
what our adversaries are up to before their plans are carried
out. Last year, as part of the homeland security bill, this
Committee approved the creation of such an office. We were
aided in our work by the support of Senator Specter, as well
as the co-chairs of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Senators
Richard Shelby and Bob Graham. In fact, after investigating
the September 11th attacks, the Senate and House Intelligence
Committees called on Congress and the Administration to use
the authority Congress provided in the Homeland Security Act
to establish an all-sources intelligence division within the
Homeland Security Department.
Here are the exacts word from the Intelligence Committee’s
December 12, 2002, bipartisan report - and I quote: "Congress
and the Administration should ensure the full development
within the Department of Homeland Security of an effective
all-source terrorism information fusion center that will dramatically
improve the focus and quality of counter terrorism analysis
and facilitate the timely dissemination of relevant intelligence
information, both within and beyond the boundaries of the
Intelligence Community." End of quote.
The Committee went on to lay out several
criteria for this analysis center. Among other things, it
said the center should have timely access to all counter-terrorism
information, including raw data, as needed; that it should
have the authority to task the intelligence community to gather
specific information; that it should integrate the information
to identify the nature and scope of the threat; and that it
should maintain effective channels of communication with federal
agencies outside the intelligence community, as well as with
state and local authorities.
I and others, including senators on this
Committee, had proposed something very similar six months
earlier. The Administration opposed this approach, arguing
that the Department of Homeland Security’s role should
be limited to analyzing intelligence primarily to protect
critical infrastructure. The final Homeland Security legislation
created a division within the Department that would be a central
location for all threat information while also protecting
the critical infrastructure.
Now, the Administration has wisely proposed the threat integration
center we have fought for all along. The good news is that
we now have consensus on the need to create an all-sources
intelligence analysis center - although the President would
have it report to the Director of Central Intelligence rather
than the Secretary of Homeland Security.
But we have not been provided sufficient
detail and have a growing list of questions. The Administration,
for example, needs to tell us how this proposal differs substantially
from what is already contained within the Homeland Security
Act, and why it has chosen not to implement the law, as written.
It needs to tell us how the so-called T-TIC - as an entity
reporting to the Director of Central Intelligence - will overcome
the institutional rivalries to information sharing that has
already hindered the Counter terrorist Center at the CIA,
and other agencies in the intelligence community - from becoming
truly all-source intelligence analysis centers.
It must answer questions about the center’s
role, if any, in the collection of domestic intelligence,
and about the wisdom of expanding the role of the Director
of Central Intelligence in domestic intelligence.
The Administration needs to let the Congress know why the
center’s director should not be confirmed by the Senate.
I am also interested in understanding what the center’s
role will be with respect to disseminating intelligence analysis
to other federal agencies and to state and local law enforcement,
and how it proposes to collect information from them. There
are many questions about the proposed budget, the number of
analysts it will have, and the Administration’s time
table for getting the center up and running.
Again, madam chairman, thank you for holding
this hearing, and for moving expeditiously to examine what
is one of the most important issues we face in shoring up
our homeland defenses. Thank you.
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