The Senate begins this week its
consideration of a far-reaching proposal to reform the nation's
Intelligence Community along the lines suggested by the 9/11
Commission. The House is considering parallel legislation. A clear
mandate for enhancing information sharing must be in the final bill
that is sent to the President.
While the various proposals differ
in many ways (and raise many questions), they uniformly agree that
a National Intelligence Director (NID) should be created. They all rightly call for making the NID the
principal intelligence advisor to the President, with
responsibility for oversight of the Intelligence Community, an
assemblage of 15 federal intelligence agencies and departments. The
final bill should give the NID authority to set policies across the
community, review budget allocations and senior personnel
appointments, and set priorities to direct efforts to national
intelligence needs.
Additionally, the
legislation should give the NID the responsibility and authority to
establish key capabilities that will allow the Intelligence
Community to operate more efficiently and effectively. In
particular, the NID should
have the mission of establishing an overarching information
technology architecture and specific policies to ensure effective
sharing of information at all levels in the intelligence community.
This is consistent with the 9/11 Commission's
recommendations.
The Senate Bill (S.2774)
incorporates an information-sharing provision (section 206). That
is a step in the right direction. The legislation, however,
mandates a specific information network, which is not a good idea.
The NID should not be hamstrung with a legislative solution but
should be allowed to fashion the best program to obtain the best
results from government information systems . The law, however,
should require specific safeguards to protect privacy and civil
liberties:
-
Strong privacy protection
mechanisms, such as immutable audits; encryption; and automated,
continuous screening for abuse and misuse; and
-
External oversight of the
information-sharing process to protect civil liberties, by review
and/or policy guidance from a Privacy and Civil Liberties Board; an
Advisory Board for Information Sharing; a new Inspector General;
and the Comptroller General.
We have many concerns with
proposed intelligence reforms (see, for example, Avoiding
a Rush to Failure by
Edwin Meese, III, and James Jay Carafano), but enhanced information sharing is not
one of them. It would be absurd to create a NID to coordinate
intelligence activities but to deny the NID the essential tools to
accomplish that mission. A revised section 206 of the Senate Bill
would provide the right mandate for accomplishing this critical
task.
Paul Rosenzweig is Senior Legal
Research Fellow in the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies, and
James Jay Carafano, Ph.D., is Senior Research Fellow in Defense and
Homeland Security in the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute
for International Studies, at The Heritage Foundation.