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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Draft legislation would give intelligence chief broad powers


Three former CIA directors, from left to right, James Woolsey, William Webster, and Stansfield Turner, testify to the Senate Intelligence Committee on Capitol Hill on Monday. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Jesse J. Holland Associated Press

WASHINGTON – Draft Senate Intelligence Committee legislation would create a national intelligence director with authority over spending, hiring and firing, powers the White House has not explicitly endorsed but three former spymasters said Monday would be crucial to coordinating multiple agencies.

“The intelligence community does not need a feckless czar, with fine surroundings and little authority,” said William Webster, who has headed both the CIA and the FBI.

The power of the purse will help the new director make the nation’s 15 intelligence agencies cooperate, as well as listen to what he or she has to say, ex-CIA Director James Woolsey told the Governmental Affairs and Intelligence committees. “Whoever has the gold makes the rules,” he said.

Webster, Woolsey and Stansfield Turner were reacting to the Sept. 11 commission’s suggestion that Congress create an intelligence director of near-Cabinet rank to coordinate all the intelligence agencies. Turner led the CIA 1977-81, Webster 1987-91 and Woolsey 1993-95.

Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Pat Roberts, R-Kan., said his committee will forward a draft bill by Wednesday to the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, which will write the final legislation crafting the national intelligence director, which lawmakers are calling NID.

Roberts said he expects his committee’s draft bill to be close to the Sept. 11 commission’s suggestion of a powerful director. Congressional aides said the draft has a National Counterterrorism Center and a national intelligence director with the power to hire and fire intelligence community personnel, as well as set budgets for the community’s 15 component agencies.

“Control of the money, after all, is tantamount to power,” said Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn.

The draft bill also would create general counsel and inspector general offices to oversee the entire intelligence community and a chief information officer to standardize communications among the agencies, the aides said.

Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry has endorsed the commission’s proposals for a powerful national intelligence director. President Bush also supports creating the new position but has not endorsed the commission’s call to let the director control all intelligence budgets and choose who leads the CIA, FBI, Defense Intelligence Agency and other intelligence agencies.