[Senate Hearing 111-125]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
S. Hrg. 111-125
NOMINATION OF DENNIS C. BLAIR TO BE DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE
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HEARING
BEFORE THE
SELECT COMMITTEE ON INTELLIGENCE
OF THE
UNITED STATES SENATE
ONE HUNDRED ELEVENTH CONGRESS
FIRST SESSION
__________
JANUARY 22, 2009
__________
Printed for the use of the Select Committee on Intelligence
Available via the World Wide Web: http://www.access.gpo.gov/congress/
senate
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SELECT COMMITTEE ON INTELLIGENCE
[Established by S. Res. 400, 94th Cong., 2d Sess.]
DIANNE FEINSTEIN, California, Chairman
CHRISTOPHER S. BOND, Missouri, Vice Chairman
JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER IV, West ORRIN G. HATCH, Utah
Virginia OLYMPIA J. SNOWE, Maine
RON WYDEN, Oregon SAXBY CHAMBLISS, Georgia
EVAN BAYH, Indiana RICHARD BURR, North Carolina
BARBARA A. MIKULSKI, Maryland TOM COBURN, Oklahoma
RUSSELL D. FEINGOLD, Wisconsin JAMES E. RISCH, Idaho
BILL NELSON, Florida
SHELDON WHITEHOUSE, Rhode Island
HARRY REID, Nevada, Ex Officio
MITCH McCONNELL, Kentucky, Ex Officio
CARL LEVIN, Michigan, Ex Officio
JOHN McCAIN, Arizona, Ex Officio
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David Grannis, Staff Director
Louis B. Tucker, Minority Staff Director
Kathleen P. McGhee, Chief Clerk
CONTENTS
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JANUARY 22, 2009
OPENING STATEMENTS
Feinstein, Hon. Dianne, Chairman, a U.S. Senator from California. 1
Bond, Christopher S., Vice Chairman, a U.S. Senator from Missouri 3
Inouye, Hon. Daniel K., a U.S. Senator from Hawaii............... 10
Prepared statement........................................... 11
WITNESS
Blair, Dennis C., Director of National Intelligence-Designate.... 12
Prepared statement........................................... 13
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIALS
Prepared statement of Hon. Russ D. Feingold, a U.S. Senator from
Wisconsin...................................................... 27
Questionnaire for Completion by Presidential Nominees............ 52
January 12, 2009 Letter from Robert I. Cusick, Office of
Gevernment Ethics, enclosing a copy of the Public Financial
Disclosure Report of Dennis C. Blair........................... 79
January 21, 2009 Letter from Dennis C. Blair to the Honorable
Dianne Feinstein............................................... 94
February 4, 2009 Letter from Robert I. Cusick, Office of
Government Ethics to Senator Dianne Feinstein.................. 96
Responses to Questions for the Record............................ 103
NOMINATION OF DENNIS C. BLAIR TO BE DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE
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THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2009
U.S. Senate,
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence,
Washington, DC.
The Committee met, pursuant to notice, at 10:04 a.m., in
Room SH-216, Hart Senate Office Building, the Honorable Dianne
Feinstein (Chairman of the Committee) presiding.
Committee Members Present: Senators Feinstein, Rockefeller,
Wyden, Bayh, Feingold, Nelson of Florida, Whitehouse, Levin,
Bond, Hatch, Snowe, Chambliss, Coburn, and Risch.
OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. DIANNE FEINSTEIN, CHAIRMAN, A U.S.
SENATOR FROM CALIFORNIA
Chairman Feinstein. I am very pleased and honored to
convene this first public meeting of the Senate Select
Committee on Intelligence in the 111th Congress. I'd like to
introduce at least one new member who is here, Tom Coburn, the
distinguished Senator from Oklahoma. We're delighted to have
you join the Committee. And Senator Risch is also a new member
from Idaho and he will be coming shortly.
I'd like to proceed this way. I'd like to make an opening
statement. I will then turn to the Vice Chairman for any
remarks he might have. And the former Chairman of the
Committee, the distinguished Senator Rockefeller, has asked for
some time as well. After Admiral Blair gives his opening
statement, we'll use the early bird rule for five-minute
rounds. Of course, just prior to Admiral Blair making a
statement we'll introduce the Senator from Hawaii, Daniel
Inouye, who will introduce him.
I would like to just make a couple of comments about the
functioning of this Committee. Let me begin by saying that I
very much look forward to working with this Committee and with
Vice Chairman Bond. We're trying to get the Committee to
operate smoothly and with the whole staff, Democratic staff and
Republican staff, working together for the entire Committee.
It is my major goal to continue the trend of increasing
oversight of the intelligence community. As one means of doing
it, Admiral Blair and I discussed having monthly sessions where
he will come in with the Director of the CIA and other key
officials to share thoughts on what the intelligence community
is doing and how well it is doing.
I really want to acknowledge Senator Rockefeller, the
former chairman of this committee, who has served as both
Chairman actually and Vice Chairman over the past six years.
He's done a terrific job and I hope to do as well.
Finally, I welcome President Obama's nominee to be Director
of Intelligence, Admiral Dennis Blair. Admiral Blair is known
to many of us from his years of service as the CINCPAC, the
commander-in-chief of the United States Pacific Command. He
served in the national security field all of his adult life,
attending the Naval Academy and serving in the Navy from 1968
to 2002. He worked twice in the White House, first as a fellow
and then on the National Security Council staff. He worked for
two years at the CIA as the associate director for military
support. And he was named to be the director of the Joint Staff
in 1996.
Admiral Blair has been a consumer of intelligence through
his career, as well as the manager of naval and theater
intelligence assets. He's had interactions at the top levels
with intelligence agencies, including his two years spent on
the seventh floor of CIA headquarters down the hall from the
Director's office.
I called former Secretary of Defense Bill Perry and asked
him about Admiral Blair, and here's what he said. He said I
appointed him to the Joint Chiefs when he was a two-star, and
he was one of those who could think outside of the box. I think
that is a real compliment.
If confirmed, Admiral Blair will become the nation's third
Director of National Intelligence, following Ambassador John
Negroponte and Admiral Mike McConnell.
Now let me just stress this. As one who actually put
forward the first DNI legislation, the role of the DNI is to be
the leader of the 16 intelligence agencies that make up the
intelligence community.
The law creating the position, the Intelligence Reform and
Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 gives the DNI three principal
responsibilities. He is the head of the intelligence community.
He is the principal adviser to the President, the National
Security Council, and the Homeland Security Council for
intelligence matters related to national security, and he is in
charge of overseeing and directing the implementation of the
National Intelligence Program, which means he controls the
intelligence budget.
The position of the Director of National Intelligence was
created so there would be a single leader of the 16 agencies
that make up the community to see that the stovepipes that
characterize the pre-9/11 world are done away with. The intent
was to create an executive with budget and policy authority. He
would assure that the intelligence community provides the
President, the Congress, and other policymakers with accurate,
actionable intelligence.
That's a substantial challenge that Admiral Blair, if
confirmed, will face. There is a need for intelligence on what
is going on around the world, a world that has grown more
complicated due to the rise of asymmetric warfare and the
growth of a rigid fanaticism.
To make matters more difficult, the credibility of
intelligence analysis was severely damaged by the October 2002
National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction. This must never happen again, and it is my main
goal to see that all systems are in place to prevent it from
ever happening again.
Also, the legality and morality of intelligence operations
were thrown into doubt by warrantless wiretapping and the use
of coercive interrogation techniques. In my view, the President
is taking necessary action today in introducing Executive
Orders to close Guantanamo and end CIA coercive interrogation
practices. I also appreciate the steps the new Administration
has taken to discuss these matters with me and with the
Committee. Yesterday the President's Legal Counsel came before
the Committee and briefed us on these prospective Executive
Orders. So I hope it signals a new day in having an open and
cooperative relationship between these branches of government.
From my review of your record, Admiral Blair, I am hopeful
that you will be an effective leader for the intelligence
community in meeting these challenges. I trust you will be part
of an administration that will restore the partnership of the
executive and legislative branches, insuring the national
security and keeping our country safe and strong.
With that, I turn to Vice Chairman and then the former
Chairman for their remarks.
OPENING STATEMENT OF CHRISTOPHER S. BOND, VICE CHAIRMAN, A U.S.
SENATOR FROM MISSOURI
Vice Chairman Bond. Thank you very much, Madam Chairman. I
have the honor to be the first one to say that in the first
hearing of this Committee in the 111th Congress, and I
congratulate publicly on becoming the first woman in history to
chair the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. My
colleagues and I look forward to your leadership on the
Committee with, with the strong working relationship that you
and I have had over the years in the Senate I am confident that
we can and will work together on a vast array of issues of
intelligence for the benefit of the American people.
My staff director tells me and I have seen the staff
relations on the Committee have dramatically improved already.
There's been tremendous progress made in the day-to-day
operations of the Committee. I know that you are responsible
for directing these changes, so I thank you, Madam Chair, and I
think there will be a great benefit from our staff in this
Congress as we work together on a bipartisan basis, utilizing
all of the talents of all of the great staff people we have.
Madam Chair, I join with you in welcoming Senator Coburn
and Senator Risch, who have great reputations and will be
excellent members of the Committee.
Turning to today's hearing, Admiral Blair, I welcome you
before the Committee for the hearing on your nomination. I
extend a warm welcome to your wife Diane and we thank you,
Diane, for standing by your husband all the years in the
military and now for your willingness to support him in taking
on the important position in the service of his country.
Admiral, as you know, your nomination comes at an important
time in our nation's history. We face threats of many different
kinds, of terrorism and other state actions.
Unfortunately, it seems to me that some tend to forget the
direct assault on this country on September 11, over seven
years ago. The lessons we've learned from that day that those
responsible have avowed to inflict more harm and death upon us.
Those who forget are content maybe to go back to the older ways
of doing business. They argue terrorists should be tried as
ordinary criminals, not terrorists captured on the
battlefield--unlawful combatants.
They call for terrorists be given the same constitutional
protections as our citizens. Benefiting from a government that
has kept America free from from further attack over the past
seven years, they forget that our entire way of life is just a
few minutes away from annihilation if terrorists were to
succeed in obtaining a weapon of mass destruction or carry out
an unrecoverable attack on our nation's infrastructure.
In contrast to those who may forget, however, the fine men
and women of the intelligence community at large that you will
be leading, I have met with them continually throughout the six
years I served on this Committee. And they wake up every day
remembering the September 11 catastrophe. They understand their
mission well. Each day it's the same--to keep our nation and
citizens safe in the face of increasing threats by collecting,
analyzing and disseminating critical intelligence for
policymakers and commanders.
It's critical that the next DNI be committed to playing
offense against those who threaten our way of life. He must be
committed to this task, but he cannot afford to be a one trick
pony who only knows counterterrorism. But you must focus on the
myriad of other challenges we face in the 21st century.
Let me pause to say just a word about the man you are
succeeding. In many different positions Admiral Mike McConnell
has served this country honorably and with distinction. Three
years ago he returned to government service, answering the
President's call to lead the intelligence community. I think
this country and we owe Admiral McConnell a great debt of
gratitude.
Chief among them are his yeoman efforts working with this
Committee and the Congress on the passage of much, much needed
updates to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, first
with the Protect America Act of 2007 and later with the FISA
Act amendments of 2008. Amidst strong opposition and oftentimes
unfair criticism, he acted with great integrity and was thrown
headfirst into one of the most controversial debates we've had
in some time.
The updates of FISA have given our dedicated intelligence
community professionals the tools and authorities they need to
stay ahead of terrorists, and they did so, adding things that
this Committee on a bipartisan basis added to ensure and
protect the constitutional rights and the privacy rights of
American citizens.
Collecting information on a good day is an incredibly
difficult job. Fortunately, the new authorities, along with
significant improvements we made in the USA PATRIOT Act, have
made it a more manageable task.
Admiral, hope you have spoken with Admiral McConnell about
what lies ahead. He said you've had some good conversations.
I'm sure he will offer you unique perspectives and sound
advice. Only one other person has served in that role, and I
will speak for my colleagues when I say that Admiral
McConnell's experience, integrity and dedication to the
intelligence community were significant and we will miss him.
Although there have been many improvements under Admiral
McConnell's leadership as the DNI, we're still a long way from
full and complete reform of the intelligence community. When
Congress created the office of the Director of National
Intelligence in 2005, there was a strong sense that the
intelligence community lacked clear direction and cohesivenes.
IRTPA of 2004 tried to fix that by creating a DNI to lead the
community.
I voted against the legislation then, and I believe now
that the DNI was given a tremendous amount of responsibility
without the requisite authority to do the job. In my view, we
either should not have created the DNI and just looked to
strengthen the community relationship, or we should have given
or should now give the DNI the authority commensurate with the
responsibility we have landed upon him.
We need to get this balance right and get rid of turf
issues that keep popping up. To do this we need two things--
action by Congress and a commitment by you, if you are
confirmed as the next DNI, to direct the community. Let me
stress the word ``direct.'' Over the past year Admiral
McConnell started referring to himself as a coordinator rather
than a director, in recognition that he did not have the
statutory authority to which I refer.
That point is the utmost of the utmost importance, Admiral.
The House and Senate Committees, oversight committees, are
divided on this issue, but it's quite clear in comparing the
House and Senate intelligence authorization bills that never
became law, I might add, that the Senate generally favors a
director and the House favors a coordinator. We can't keep
looking in both directions, though, and your views on this
matter will be very important. And I'd like to know your
position on this before we leave here today.
Speaking of authorization bills, you may be aware this
Committee has not had an annual authorization bill signed into
law for the last four years. The Chair and I are dedicated to
breaking that record and getting this Committee back to
bipartisanship, passing authorizations, hopefully in the very
near future.
I realize there are some individuals who haven't minded the
absence of an intel bill, but I believe our inability to get a
bill signed has been a serious mistake. It made the people's
oversight through this Committee less relevant and it supports
the notion that congressional oversight is dysfunctional. This
is a charge leveled by many of the commissions and committees
that have looked at intelligence.
Authorization of the intelligence programs is important
because they foster a good working relationship between this
Committee and the community; ideas flow both ways, everyone
works together to make sure that the IC can fulfill its
ultimate mission of keeping this country safe.
But it also gives the Committee in its oversight role an
opportunity to offer effective solutions when necessary. For
the past several years, I have sponsored a number of what I
like to call good government provisions that I hope will soon
become law, provisions that attempt to restore accountability
and sound fiscal management to the IC.
For example, we would give the DNI authority to conduct
accountability reviews of an IC element or personnel in
relation to a failure or deficiency within the community. Too
often we've seen poor judgment or serious mistakes go
uncorrected or, even worse, at times people who exercised poor
judgment have been promoted or otherwise rewarded, and I think
that's unacceptable. Giving the DNI the authority to step in
and conduct these reviews will encourage accountability and
good practices.
Admiral, I hope that when you're confirmed as the DNI you
will use this authority to send a message that poor performance
will not be tolerated, let alone rewarded. It's not a matter of
micromanaging the agencies or overlooking the shoulder of the
agencies' directors. It's about ensuring that there be a clear
standard of accountability throughout the community and
regaining the confidence in the community's analysis that has
certainly had its share of problems in the recent past. You'll
be responsible for this, and the Committee will hold you
responsible for it.
We require the DNI to conduct annual personnel level
assessments. We want to make sure we have enough fine men and
women to do the job, but growing the IC without a clear plan
could create an unnecessary bureaucracy and waste hard-earned
taxpayer dollars.
Third, I have sponsored a number of related provisions
designed to get a handle on an acquisition and budget process
that has grown out of control. At a time when the taxpayers of
this country are struggling to pay their bills, they do not
want to see their hard-earned tax dollars squandered on
programs that do not work. They want to see the intelligence
community spending the taxpayers money wisely.
I'm not suggesting the severe budget cuts that at the
conclusion of the Cold War gutted our intelligence capabilities
should be reenacted. Rather, the DNI must make sure that the
money is being spent in the right place to address the threats
we face now and expect in the future.
In this regard, Senator Mikulski and I have sponsored a
solution that this Committee has recommended to address our
nation's overhead architecture system that promises to save the
taxpayers, we believe, potentially billions of dollars. We can
talk more about that in another setting.
It is my hope, Admiral Blair, that all these provisions
will be signed into law soon and that this Committee will be on
track with its authorization process. If you're confirmed, when
you're confirmed, I look forward to working with you on these.
Additionally, the Committee will work with you and look to
you to get a handle on the agency's budget and personnel
levels. We expect you will find innovative ways to create
career paths and opportunities that are attractive to employees
so the IC can not only recruit but retain the best.
Additionally, the IC needs a strong leader who can stand on
equal footing with the Secretary of Defense and other Cabinet
officials. There may be occasions when the interests of the
Secretary of Defense are not compatible with the intelligence
community interests. I expect that, if necessary, you will be
assertive in these cases and not back down. The intelligence
community deserves no less from you.
I also expect you to exert the appropriate authority over
the CIA. When Congress created the DNI, we intended the
Director of CIA to be subordinate to the DNI. It's the DNI, not
the CIA Director, who is the leader of the IC. It follows,
then, that it is the DNI who should answer to and have access
to the President.
I understand in practice this may not always be easy. No
one likes to rock the boat point, quite simply. The CIA
Director nominee is fortunate to have a good relationship with
the President. That should not be a deterrent. I am confident
that years of command experience will help you navigate the
situation and be the leader that Congress intends.
Admiral, if you do not believe that you have authority to
direct the IC, as Congress intends, I expect and hope that you
will tell this Committee exactly what authorities you need to
do this job right.
Today I'm also interested in hearing your thoughts on the
CIA's interrogation and detention program, particularly in
light of past comments about the benefits of aggressively
arresting and interrogating terrorists and the President's
stated intention to close the detention facility at Guantanamo.
Obviously, closing that facility raises a host of problems, as
evidenced by the recent decision in the case of the 20th
hijacker.
For example, do we transfer detainees here to the United
States for trial? I don't know of any city or town around this
country that would be thrilled to have Khalid Shaykh Mohammed
or Abu Zubaydah living down the street. And under what evidence
rules should they be tried?
These are not ordinary bank robbers. They are terrorists
apprehended overseas, sometimes through intelligence means that
could not and must not be disclosed in court.
Another option that isn't much better is releasing them
overseas. The Pentagon's recent report found that 61 released
detainees from Guantanamo have returned to the battlefield to
attack and kill our soldiers and other innocent civilians.
Additionally, we read in the newspapers today that the
President will be issuing an Executive Order to implement the
Army field manual. This will apply to all agencies unless, of
course, the President issues another Executive Order on
enhanced techniques that certain agencies could use.
If confirmed as the DNI, you will be the intelligence
community's voice on these important matters, so I hope we can
have a vigorous and candid discussion today and that you will
share your ideas on possible solutions to these concerns.
I also have some concerns based on the testimony of the
Attorney General nominee last week and my conversation with him
in my office yesterday. He was asked whether he would honor the
certifications filed by the former Attorney General that would
allow dismissal of lawsuits against communication providers who
assisted with the President's terrorist surveillance program.
Regrettably, instead of a yes or no, and he said he would not
revoke it unless circumstances changed.
I find it troubling that he hasn't really explained what he
means by that and the circumstances have already occurred;
there is no change to be had.
Ensuring that the IC has the cooperation of third parties
is essential to intelligence collection. If the lawsuits are
not dismissed, we jeopardize future cooperation. Now the FISA
Act received 70 votes in the Senate, a strong majority in the
House, and the constitutionality of its predecessor, the
Protect America Act, was just reaffirmed by the FISA appellate
court, which is the Court of review, so the legislative and
judicial bodies have spoken on this matter.
I will be interested in hearing your thoughts on whether
these patriotic companies should be protected from frivolous
lawsuits and what your recommendation to the new Attorney
General would be.
Finally, I have some concerns raised by the Inspector
General's report finding that you violated conflict of interest
standards, and we will have questions about that in the
hearing.
At this point, I look forward to entering into a discussion
with you and this Committee. Madam Chair, the intelligence
community cannot afford to be without a strong commander. I
hope this Committee can act on the nomination quickly and get
it to the floor for a positive vote.
Admiral, I look forward to hearing your views on the
direction of the DNI and your efforts to keep our nation and
families safe from attack. You have a long and distinguished
service career for this nation. I congratulate you on your
nomination. I thank you for being willing to take on the
headache, and we look forward to hearing from you.
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you very much. Vice Chairman
Bond.
Senator Rockefeller.
Senator Rockefeller. Thank you, Madam Chair. I congratulate
you from the bottom of my heart for your ascendancy to the
Chair. It's a remarkable position. You yourself will be in a
position to make major changes in the attitudes, the
depoliticization and the availability of intelligence to our
Committee as a whole, things that we've been fighting for for a
long time against great odds. So I congratulate you on taking
the gavel and I thank you for giving me the opportunity to
speak.
I'm going to speak briefly, I might add. I welcome the
Admiral and my distinguished chairperson on many committees,
Senator Inouye from Hawaii.
Let me say a few words on why I think this is a very
promising time for our intelligence community and for our
national security.
We have an opportunity, Admiral Blair, to make a very sharp
turn towards new intelligence policies that I believe will
bolster our counterterrorism efforts and strengthen our
national security in general.
Intelligence must be accurate. It must be accurate. It must
be politically neutral. There must be no spin. And it must be
collected with methods that enjoy a bipartisan consensus and
both be legal and effective.
To ensure this, secret intelligence activities must be
subject to rigorous congressional oversight. We've discussed
that. I feel very strongly about that. All of us on this
Committee have. We have not come to terms with that in recent
years. We're beginning to, and I feel a new day coming with
your ascendancy.
We are the only independent reviewers of secret
intelligence activities that exists, and we are the only
outside check on activities that are not legal or are not
effective--the two Intelligence Committees, the House and the
Senate. That's all there is. We're the only ones that can do
this oversight. So we have to have the information.
Oversight should not be adversarial. It's silly when it is,
harmful when it is. It causes distractions from the realities
when it is. And it need not be that way. It is a necessary
partnership between the Executive Branch and the Congress.
I fought hard to remove politics from intelligence and to
restore Congress's vital oversight role since I joined the
Committee in 2001. And the Chair and I have done that, together
with others. I'm going to keep fighting for it now. I don't
want to get into who was at fault for this cycle that we were
caught in over the past several years, because that serves no
purpose. Instead, I want to look ahead to what is possible now.
I think there's a real chance that in this new year we can
have a new start. We can and should debate about how we go
about collecting and analyzing intelligence--for example, on
interrogation policies--but we can do so without the stain of
political considerations. We really can. It's hard with all the
media and everybody else trying to pick a fight here and there,
but we can do that and we need to do that in the nation's
interest, which is all we care about.
Between the Executive and Legislative branches we can and
we should engage and debate these policies, but we can do that
in partnership. We can do that by being in touch with each
other much more often than we are--informally as well as
formally--with the knowledge that more information exchanges
and deliberations give rise to better intelligence collection
and intelligence analysis.
In short, we can recognize that we're all on the same team.
It's not sort of been that way. It's against the national
interest if it isn't that way.
So, with this in mind, I congratulate Admiral Denny Blair
on his nomination to be our Director of National Intelligence.
We've had a chance to talk. I spent a lot of time looking back
over your history, learning about you, talking. We talked about
that. And I found it very, very constructive.
These conversations that we've had give me confidence that
you will follow in the footsteps of Mike McConnell as an
excellent leader of our intelligence community.
The Director of National Intelligence is one of the most
important and demanding jobs in Washington. I tend to say it's
one of the two or three most important jobs in the country.
That includes the presidency. I put it at that level. You are
responsible for protecting this nation under the leadership of
the President.
It requires somebody with tremendous leadership and
management skills. The next DNI will take this task at a time
when we are fighting two wars as well as a fight against a
global terrorism network, the reach of which we do not know
even now, not to mention the enormous long-term strategic
challenges.
Admiral Blair brings a wealth of valuable experience to the
job which I think will be apparent in the hearing today as we
ask questions. I congratulate you on your nomination. I
congratulate you on your capacity for leadership and
decisionmaking. That's one of the things we talked about.
When somebody has been commanding battleships and four-
stars and CINCPAC and all the rest of it, you come into a very
difficult position because you have been accustomed to making
policy and you will be, but you will be doing it under the
leadership of the President of the United States and in
combination working with us, something which Admirals generally
don't have to do, to work with Congressional committees.
But this is the way the Constitution and our forefathers
have fated our relationship, and I think it's a very good one
and one that I look forward to and one that you look forward
to. I know that because we've talked about it.
I ask you to work closely with us to ensure that our nation
always has accurate, reliable information, and that it's
collected in a way that makes this country proud, and is
analyzed without the taint of political influence. We cannot
have that any more. We cannot have that.
With that, Madam Chairman, I thank you again, congratulate
you again, and wish you well in what will be your very strong
leadership of this Committee.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you very much, Senator
Rockefeller.
And now we will go to the distinguished Senator from Hawaii
and the new Chairman of the Appropriations Committee, Senator
Daniel Inouye, for an introduction.
Welcome, Senator.
OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. DANIEL K. INOUYE, A U.S. SENATOR FROM
HAWAII
Senator Inouye. Madam Chair and distinguished Members of
the Committee, I'm deeply honored and pleased to present to you
for your consideration----
Chairman Feinstein. Senator, that microphone, if you could
pull it a little bit closer and up. These mics for some reason
are lower today.
Senator Inouye. I think it's tapped. [Laughter.]
Senator Inouye. I'm pleased and honored to appear before
you to present the President's nominee for Director of National
Intelligence, Admiral Dennis Blair.
I've known the Admiral for over ten years. I've come to
know him rather well through my work as Chairman of the Defense
Appropriations Subcommittee. As one who is deeply involved in
Asia-Pacific security issues, and through his service as the
Commander of Pacific Forces, he was in command of all forces in
the Pacific.
Well, through his experience I quickly learned that Admiral
Blair is a man of brilliance and extraordinary intelligence.
For example, very few Americans realize this but he is very
fluent in Russian, and there are not too many of us in the
Congress or in the Senate who can speak anything besides
English.
He is a creative thinker. He has a wealth of knowledge of
history, global affairs and national security. Having commanded
the United States forces in a region that stretches from the
west coast of the United States to the western part of India,
and from Antarctica to the North Pole, he knows how to manage
and integrate a diverse, widespread organization.
That skill I believe will serve him well as the nation's
third Director of National Intelligence, overseeing 16
different agencies and organizations that make up our
intelligence community. I have no doubt that in Admiral Blair's
heart and mind service to our country will always come first.
Admiral Blair has another quality that impresses me very
much. He's not afraid to stand up and speak out to his
commander if he believes a policy is misguided or if something
is being done wrong. That sort of candor and truth-telling many
believe is the reason why he was passed over for the
chairmanship of the Joint Chiefs by the outgoing
Administration. It's painful to bring this up, but I think we
should know. The new Administration I believe wants that sort
of frankness and critical thinking that Admiral Blair will
bring to this job.
Admiral Blair has earned our unhesitating support, and I'm
confident that a full and fair consideration of his record will
be most impressive to my colleagues.
I thank you very much, Madam Chair.
[The prepared statement of Senator Inouye follows:]
Statement of Hon. Daniel K. Inouye, a U.S. Senator from Hawaii
Madame Chair and Members of the Committee, thank you for the
opportunity to be here today to recommend a prompt and favorable
reporting to the Senate of the nomination of Admiral Blair as Director
of National Intelligence.
I have known Admiral Blair for more than 10 years. I have come to
know him through my work as Chairman of the Defense Appropriations
Subcommittee, as one deeply involved in Asia-Pacific security issues,
and through his service as the Commander of the United States Pacific
Command, which made him responsible for all U.S. forces in the Asia-
Pacific region.
Through that experience, I quickly learned that Admiral Blair is a
man of brilliance and intelligence. He speaks Russian fluently. He is a
creative thinker. He has a wealth of knowledge of history, global
affairs, and national security. He is insightful on a wide range of
issues--from how our nation's dependence on imported oil has influenced
our security strategy, to how certain parts of the world have been used
as a staging ground and transit for terrorism directed at the United
States, to military developments in Asia, and much, much more.
Having commanded U.S. forces in a region that stretches from the
west coast of the U.S. to the western border of India, and from
Antarctica to the North Pole, he knows how to manage and integrate a
diverse and widespread organization. That skill, I believe, will serve
him well as our nation's third Director of National Intelligence,
overseeing 16 different agencies and organizations that make up our
intelligence community.
I have no doubt that in Admiral Blair's heart and mind, service to
our country will always come first.
Admiral Blair also has another quality that impresses me very much.
He is not afraid to stand up and speak out to his commander if he
believes a policy is misguided or if something is being done wrong.
That sort of candor and truth-telling, many believe, is the reason why
he was passed over for the chairmanship of the Joint Chiefs by the
outgoing Administration. The new administration, I believe, wants that
sort of frankness and critical thinking that Admiral Blair will bring
to his job.
Admiral Blair has earned my unhesitating support, and I am
confident that a full and fair consideration of his record will impress
my colleagues.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you very much, Senator Inouye.
And now, Admiral, we will turn to you.
STATEMENT OF ADMIRAL DENNIS C. BLAIR, U.S. NAVY, RETIRED,
DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE-DESIGNATE
Admiral Blair. Thank you very much, Madam Chairman, Mr.
Vice Chairman, Members of the Committee.
It is an honor to appear before you today and, if
confirmed, I will seek your counsel and your advice and seek it
frequently.
Nothing is more important to national security and the
making and the conduct of good security policies than timely,
accurate, objective and relevant intelligence. President Obama
has made it clear to me and made it clear to the American
people that he expects independent analysis. He wants the
facts, he wants all points of view. And, if confirmed, I will
strive to meet his expectations.
The United States right now is engaged in three campaigns
with immediate threats to American lives and interests--the
global struggle against anti-American terrorists who have
global reach, the campaign in Iraq, the campaign in
Afghanistan. And these three campaigns right now absorb the
bulk of our intelligence resources. We have to provide
intelligence at all levels to prosecute those campaigns
successfully.
But there are many additional near-term issues that are of
concern to us. They include North Korea, Iran, peace and
progress in South Asia, and of course the Israeli-Palestinian
violence which flared up recently. The intelligence community
also needs to address long-term challenges--the growing power
and influence of China, India and other developing countries,
as well as both threats and opportunities that come with
failing states.
But threats to America's national security go well beyond
the nation state-based threats of the past. In addition to
anti-American terrorists with global reach, there are weapons
proliferators, drug traffickers, cyber attackers, all of whom
don't recognize borders and pose threats to us. We also cannot
lose sight of the new issues that may pose grave dangers, such
as global warming, energy supplies, food prices, pandemic
diseases.
I also believe it's important to identify opportunities as
well as threats, and this is an extremely important dimension
to the work of intelligence agencies. For example, the United
States must hunt down those fanatic Muslim terrorists who are
seeking to do us harm. At the same time, the intelligence
community also needs to support policymakers who are trying to
engage and work with influential Muslim leaders who believe and
who are working for a progressive and peaceful future for their
religion and for their nations.
The 2004 Intelligence Reform and Terrorist Prevention Act
spells out the responsibilities of the DNI, as I have been
reminded. If confirmed, I will work to carry out the intent of
that legislation. The DNI must keep the intelligence community
on the cutting edge of innovation. Developing a high quality
work force is also the DNI's responsibility. We should give
intelligence professionals the right missions, clear away
obstacles that keep them from doing the job, and then have the
privilege and the pleasure of watching them produce amazing
results.
All officers of the intelligence community, especially the
most senior officers, must conduct themselves in a manner that
earns and retains the public's trust. I strongly believe in
transparency and accountability in the missions whose work must
necessarily take place largely out of public view.
Before closing these brief remarks, let me make a few
points and make them clearly. I do not and I will not support
any surveillance activities that circumvent established
processes for their lawful authorization. I believe in the
importance of review and regulation. I believe in the
importance of independent monitoring, including that of this
Committee and the Congress, to prevent abuses and to protect
the privacy and civil liberties of Americans.
Torture is not moral, not legal, not effective. The U.S.
government will have a clear and consistent standard for
treatment of detainees. The Guantanamo detention center will be
closed. It's become a damaging symbol.
Madam Chairman, Mr. Vice Chairman, members of the
Committee, if confirmed I will work closely with you and with
the Congress. The leadership of the intelligence community must
earn the support and trust of this Committee if it is to earn
the support and trust of the American people.
When now-President Obama first called me about this job, I
wasn't expecting it. But in those weeks since I've had a chance
to talk with you. I've had a chance to think about the job. I
have had a chance to learn about the job. And it seems to me
that much of my background, experience and ambitions point me
towards that job, and I would very much like it and I would
like to be confirmed for that job. I think we have extremely
important work to do together, and I hope that I can be
confirmed in order to undertake that work.
Thank you very much.
[The prepared statement of Admiral Blair follows:]
Statement of Dennis C. Blair
Madam Chairman, Mr. Vice Chairman, Members of the Committee: It is
a distinct honor and privilege to appear before you today. I am also
honored that President Obama has placed his trust and confidence in me,
deciding to nominate me to the position of Director of National
Intelligence.
I want to express deep appreciation and thanks to Chairman
Feinstein, and to Vice Chairman Bond, for holding today's hearing, and
I look forward to your questions. In addition, let me say from the
outset, if confirmed, I look forward very much to working with you on
the many important issues before the Intelligence Community, and before
the Nation. This Committee has a wealth of experience and wisdom. If
confirmed, I will seek your counsel and advice--and seek it
frequently--in addressing the many challenges ahead.
importance of intelligence
Nothing is more important to national security and the making and
conduct of good policy than timely, accurate, and relevant
intelligence.
Nothing is more critical to accurate and relevant intelligence than
independent analysis.
The President has made clear to me, and to the American people,
that he wants to hear the facts, he expects independent analysis, and
he wants to hear all points of view.
As John Adams famously said, ``Facts are stubborn things.'' The
best national security decisions take account of the facts on the
ground. Sometimes those facts are unpleasant; sometimes they are
inconvenient; often they are ambiguous. Whatever they are, they must be
presented accurately and fully. Beyond the facts on the ground,
interpretations of their significance differ. There is an obligation to
bring those differing views forward. There is an obligation to speak
truth to power. If confirmed, I will fulfill that obligation
personally, and I will instill respect for that obligation in those who
work for me.
threats and opportunities
Let me describe some of the key challenges the intelligence
services face in supporting policymakers as well as troops, diplomats,
and law enforcement officials in the field.
The Intelligence Community is charged with the task of assessing
threats and providing timely warning. This Committee holds an annual
worldwide threat assessment hearing. If I am confirmed, it will be my
privilege to appear before you on that topic.
The United States is engaged in three campaigns in which there are
immediate threats to American lives, properties and interests. First is
the campaign against anti-American terrorists with global reach who
seek to harm us or our allies, partners and friends. These groups
include al-Qaeda and other extremist organizations as well as the
groups they inspire but do not control. The second campaign is in Iraq
and the third in Afghanistan, where the United States has deployed
troops, diplomats, and nation builders. Providing intelligence support
for these three campaigns consumes the largest share of Intelligence
Community resources.
The day-to-day demands for tactical intelligence for these
missions, geographically concentrated in Southwest Asia, cannot be
allowed to crowd out the mission of building a deeper understanding of
the complicated interlocking dynamics of the entire region, from
Kashmir to Istanbul. We will need that understanding as we forge a
strategy for the region.
Additional near-term issues of concern are many. They include North
Korea's nuclear weapons and missile programs; Iran's nuclear
capabilities and intentions, as well as its missile program; the
security of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal; and peace and stability in
South Asia. They include Israeli-Palestinian violence, with its
possibilities for escalation and implications for regional stability.
Many important threats to American national security go well beyond
the traditional nation-state-based threats of the past. The
intelligence services need to have open minds, change traditional ways
of thinking and be bold and creative in identifying possible threats to
the nation. It is the responsibility of the intelligence services to
penetrate and understand these new transnational threats just as
thoroughly as we did the Soviet Union in the days of the Cold War.
In addition to anti-American terrorists with global reach, our
adversaries include organizations--some nation states, some private and
some criminal--that proliferate weapons of mass destruction and the
means to deliver them.
They include organizations trafficking in drugs.
They include those using the global communications system to learn
our secrets and proprietary information to compete with us or attack
us.
There are additional trends that affect American security, and may
pose grave dangers--global warming, energy supplies, food prices, and
pandemic diseases, among others.
Today's threats to American interests are more diffuse, more fast-
paced, and seem more urgent than ever because of the trends of
globalization--worldwide transportation, worldwide information systems,
the spread of scientific and technical knowledge, an interlocking
global economy, and the ubiquitous and incessant news cycle. The
intelligence agencies must look beneath the breathless headlines to
understand the facts and their significance for American interests.
The Intelligence Community also needs to address the longer-term
geopolitical challenges. How the United States adjusts to and manages
the growing power and influence of China, India, and key countries in
the developing world is a major long-term challenge for policymakers.
The Industrial Revolution caused a centuries-long shift in power to the
West; globalization is now shifting the balance again. The Global
Trends 2025 report is one example of the Intelligence Community's
contribution to this discussion.
Failing states pose another set of challenges. Countries without
effective governments, with internal economic disparities, and with
domestic religious, ethnic, or tribal tensions can slip into anarchy,
with tragic consequences for their own citizens, and with potential
dangers to other countries. Somalia is one example, among many.
The Intelligence Community has global responsibilities. We need to
understand better the interplay of trends, threats, and opportunities
in Latin America and Africa, so that our leaders can forge wise
policies and take effective actions as the importance of these regions
increases.
Identifying opportunities as well as threats is an extremely
important balance for intelligence agencies to strike.
While the United States must hunt down those terrorists
who are seeking to do us harm, the Intelligence Community also needs to
support policymakers who are looking for opportunities to engage and
work with Arab and Muslim leaders who are striving for a progressive
and peaceful future for their religion and their countries;
While the United States must understand China's military
buildup--its extent, its technological sophistication and its
vulnerabilities--in order to offset it, the Intelligence Community also
needs to support policymakers who are looking for opportunities to work
with Chinese leaders who believe that Asia is big enough for both of us
and can be an Asia in which both countries can benefit as well as
contribute to the common good;
While the United States needs to understand Russia's
military plans and ambitions in what it calls its ``near abroad,'' the
Intelligence Community also needs to help policymakers understand the
dynamics of European security issues including the actions of our
allies and friends, in order to craft policies that will support
American objectives.
While the United States must identify weak places in
worldwide medical surveillance systems and prepare for pandemics, the
Intelligence Community can also find opportunities to work with
governments and other organizations on behalf of our common interest in
strengthening the world's early warning, defensive and recovery
systems;
While policymakers need to understand anti-American
leaders, policies and actions in Iran, the Intelligence Community can
also help policymakers identify and understand other leaders and
political forces, so that it is possible to work toward a future in
both our interests;
While traditional friends of the United States disagree
with individual American policies on specific countries and issues, the
Intelligence Community can also help policymakers identify the many
government leaders and influential private leaders--in Europe, in Asia
and elsewhere--who share American ambitions for the future and are
willing to work together for the common good.
Identifying these opportunities for American policy and statecraft
is as important as predicting hostile threats.
There is a final cluster of subjects on which intelligence agencies
must provide good advice to policymakers and officials taking action:
Science and technology developments--where is innovation
taking place around the world, and how can it help or hurt American
interests?
Economics and finance--how is power being redistributed,
and what are the developments that will make a difference to the United
States?
For these areas, and also for many of the others outlined here, the
analysts and information in our intelligence agencies are not the sole,
and often not the best, resources. Private organizations--businesses as
well as consultants--think tanks, NGOs, universities, national labs,
federally funded research and development centers, other government
analysts, and similar international and foreign centers have a great
deal to offer.
It is the responsibility of the Director of National Intelligence
to take advantage of outside information sources--databases and
experts--and to add the insights gained from secret intelligence to
present policymakers the clearest possible picture of the nature of
these trends, and the potential effects that alternative American
policies can have on them.
the role and responsibilities of the dni
The office of the DNI is not yet four years old. Ambassador
Negroponte and Admiral McConnell have made important progress during
that period of time. A wider range of analysis, and more points of
view, are now brought to the attention of policymakers. Information
sharing on terrorism-related information has improved. Joint Duty in
the Intelligence Community, essential for building a unified workforce,
is starting to take hold. Security clearances take less time. These are
important contributions, and they should be recognized. At the same
time, the Committee knows that much work lies ahead. For my part, I
want to acknowledge the contributions that those who lead the
Intelligence Community already have made.
The 2004 Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act spells
out the role and responsibilities of the DNI. The Act specifies many
important improvements in the organization and functioning of the
country's intelligence services. My approach is a straightforward one.
If confirmed, I will work to fulfill the intent of this legislation.
The DNI is the principal adviser to the President, to the National
Security Council, and the Homeland Security Council for intelligence
matters related to the national security. His responsibility is to
provide timely, accurate and relevant intelligence.
Leading the Intelligence Community, the DNI needs to satisfy the
strategic intelligence requirements of policymakers as well as the
tactical requirements of military units, diplomats, and front-line
officers of the Department of Homeland Security and state and local law
officials. The DNI needs to lead the integration of intelligence
sources--human, signals, geospatial, measurement and signature, and
open source. Such integration mutually empowers, and maximizes, the
contribution of each intelligence source. The DNI needs to ensure that
the whole of the national intelligence enterprise is always more than
the sum of its parts. I believe the hardworking, smart, and dedicated
officials of the intelligence agencies, along with the resources the
Congress has provided, are adequate to provide the right kind and
amount of intelligence support to all who need it from the President
down to the soldier in the field.
The DNI should place the emphasis on managing others, not doing
their work himself. The DNI should hold agencies accountable for doing
their jobs, but should not replicate activities that individual
agencies perform well. The DNI should concentrate on activities that no
single agency can perform by itself, and use his authority to encourage
and enforce combined action that brings together the strengths of all
the intelligence services to accomplish the common missions.
The DNI must keep the Intelligence Community at the cutting edge of
innovation. The business of intelligence has been radically
transformed, and continues to be driven, by the information revolution.
In a generation's time, the Intelligence Community has gone from an
organization hunting secrets, to an organization interpreting the vast
ocean of information available every day--even as it still hunts
secrets. How the Community collects, analyzes and provides added value
to policymakers and operators is profoundly affected by this changing
and dynamic information environment.
Developing a high-quality workforce for the future is the DNI's
responsibility. Any organization is only as good as its people. I have
been deeply impressed over many years with the many smart, dedicated
and brave professionals in the Intelligence Community workforce. It is
the DNI's responsibility to give them the right missions, to clear away
obstacles in their path, and then it is the DNI's privilege and
pleasure to watch them produce amazing results. It has been an honor to
work with them, and, if I am confirmed, it will be an honor to lead
them.
the role of intelligence in a democracy
All officers of the Intelligence Community, and especially its most
senior officer, must conduct themselves in a manner that earns and
retains the public trust. The American people are uncomfortable with
government activities that do not take place in the open, subject to
public scrutiny and review.
Unlike many other parts of the government, the activities of
intelligence officers must often be secret to be effective. Therefore,
there is a special obligation for the leadership of the Intelligence
Community to communicate frequently and candidly with the oversight
committees, and as much as possible with the American people. There is
a need for transparency and accountability in a mission where most work
necessarily remains hidden from public view.
The first part of building trust is building relationships. I want
to establish a relationship of candor and trust with each Member of
this Committee and, if confirmed, work to sustain and enhance that
trust. Equally important, I will work to rebuild a relationship of
trust with the American people.
The second part of building trust is to carry out the mission of
the Intelligence Community in a manner consistent with our Nation's
values, consistent with our Constitution and consistent with the rule
of law. The intelligence agencies of the United States must respect the
privacy and civil liberties of the American people, and they must
adhere to the rule of law.
lawful surveillance, lawful detention and interrogation
In a dangerous world, government agencies need authority to collect
intelligence on terrorists before they strike, in order to protect the
American people. But in a free society, that authority cannot be
unlimited. It must be exercised pursuant to law.
I do not and will not support any surveillance activities that
circumvent established processes for their lawful authorization. I
believe in the importance of review and regulation of the use of those
surveillance authorities. I believe in the importance of independent
monitoring, including by the Congress, to prevent abuses and protect
civil liberties.
I believe strongly that torture is not moral, legal, or effective.
Any program of detention and interrogation must comply with the Geneva
Conventions, the Conventions on Torture, and the Constitution. There
must be clear standards for humane treatment that apply to all agencies
of U.S. Government, including the Intelligence Community.
I believe the U.S. Government must have clear and consistent
standards for treatment of detainees. Those standards must comply with
the Detainee Treatment Act, the Convention Against Torture, and Common
Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions. All who are responsible for
treatment of detainees must receive training on those standards, and
training must be reinforced regularly. It is not enough to set a
standard and announce it. Regular reinforcement and oversight is
necessary to make sure the standards are being applied correctly.
I agree with the President that the detention center at Guantanamo
has become a damaging symbol to the world and that it must be closed.
It is a rallying cry for terrorist recruitment and harmful to our
national security, so closing it is important for our national
security. The guiding principles for closing the center should be
protecting our national security, respecting the Geneva Conventions and
the rule of law, and respecting the existing institutions of justice in
this country. I also believe we should revitalize efforts to transfer
detainees to their countries of origin or other countries whenever that
would be consistent with these principles. Closing this center and
satisfying these principles will take time, and is the work of many
departments and agencies.
conclusion
Madam Chairman, Vice Chairman, and Members of the Committee: If
confirmed, I will work closely with this Committee and with the
Congress. The leadership of the Intelligence Community must earn and
sustain the confidence and support of this Committee if it is to win
the confidence and support of the American people. A close dialogue and
relationship with the Congress is what our Constitution and laws
require, and what is practical and necessary. Your wisdom, sustained
interest, and sustained engagement enhance our Nation's intelligence
capabilities.
I look forward to your questions.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you very much. We will now
proceed to activate the time clocks and go to five-minute
rounds. My understanding is there is going to be a vote,
probably within the half hour, and we will try to keep the
hearing going. I will go vote immediately and you will preside,
if you will, Mr. Vice Chairman, and then the reverse will take
place.
I'd like to just read the early bird list quickly. After
myself and the Vice Chairman, it is Senators Coburn, Wyden,
Levin, Rockefeller, Chambliss, Feingold, Risch, Whitehouse,
Hatch, Bayh, Snowe. That will be the order.
I'd like to say that, Senator Inouye, I know you have a
busy day, with much coming up next week, so if you'd like to be
excused--we'd love to have you here, but if you would like to
be excused, that would be just fine.
Senator Inouye. Thank you very much.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you very much.
I'd like to announce that written questions and answers
that the Admiral has responded to will appear on the web site
of the Committee. So for those that would like to read the
written questions and his answers to them, they are available.
Admiral Blair, before we begin the individual questions,
there are questions that we traditionally ask, and a yes or no
answer will suffice. I'll go quickly.
Do you agree to appear before the Committee here or in
other venues, when invited?
Admiral Blair. Yes.
Chairman Feinstein. Do you agree to send officials from the
Office of the Director of National Intelligence and elsewhere
in the intelligence community to appear before the Committee
and designated staff, when requested?
Admiral Blair. Yes.
Chairman Feinstein. Do you agree to provide documents or
any other materials requested by the Committee in order for it
to carry out its oversight and legislative responsibilities?
Admiral Blair. Yes.
Chairman Feinstein. Will you ensure that the Office of the
Director of National Intelligence and elsewhere in the
intelligence community provide such material to the Committee,
when requested?
Admiral Blair. Yes.
Chairman Feinstein. And a new question that I hope will
become part of the tradition. Do you agree to inform and fully
brief to the fullest extent possible all members of the
Committee of intelligence activities and covert actions rather
than only the Chairman and Vice Chairman?
Admiral Blair. Yes.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you very much.
I would like to take on something that's going to come up.
Both Senator Rockefeller and I have read the Inspector
General's report concerning--and I have talked with you
informally, and I think we should put it on the record. When
you were president of the Institute for Defense Analyses, you
were involved in two reports on the F-22 program of the United
States Air Force.
On November 30, 2006, the IG for the Department of Defense
concluded that a report found that Admiral Blair violated IDA's
conflict of interest standards because he failed to disqualify
himself from all matters related to IDA's work concerning the
F-22 program. However, they also found that you did not in any
way utilize any action. And, of course, you were on the board
at the time of two corporations, EDO and Tyco Limited, and
serving as a member of the board of directors.
The IG found that your failure to disqualify yourself had
no impact on IDA's consideration of the F-22.
Now you provided responses in your prehearing questions on
this matter, but please explain for the record and for the
Committee why you did not recuse yourself, how you view that
decision in retrospect, and how you would intend to handle
potential future conflicts in the future.
Admiral Blair. Madam Chairman, it was a mistake not to have
recused myself from those two studies when I was president of
IDA. I thought a great deal about the incident since, and the
greatest damage was the damage to my own reputation for
integrity caused by that decision and, of course, the
reputation of the Institute for Defense Analyses that was done.
I should have recused myself, and I didn't.
As you pointed out, as the Inspector General report said, I
did not in fact try to influence the study, nor did I do so.
There were not good procedures for the president of IDA to
review and recuse himself when appropriate. I instituted those
procedures before I left.
I think the lesson of it is that you can be absolutely sure
that, if confirmed, I will not take any action that can
remotely cause that kind of a situation to happen again. I will
comply fully, in consultation with my counsel, with all
regulations to ensure that any decisions that I make as DNI
will be completely free of any suspicion that there is untoward
influence.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you very much.
Quickly, in response to the prehearing questions, you
stressed the role of DNI as integrating the activities across
the intelligence community and making the agencies work better
together. Of course that's fine. But, as the Vice Chairman
stated and I think virtually all of us agree, the DNI needs to
be a very strong leader--someone who will take action to force
agencies to achieve their missions, step in when things aren't
going well, and really be an agent for change. In what ways are
you prepared to go beyond integration and coordination to get
the results that are necessary?
Admiral Blair. I think the goal is quite clear, Madam
Chairman. The intelligence community needs to be greater than
the sum of its parts, not less than the sum of its parts. I
think that a large part of what's required to do that is to get
the rewards and the penalties lined up with the mission of the
organization, all the way down the line from the very heads of
the organization down to individual reports writers, analysts
and other officers.
And if we can build those structural procedures that
incentivize people taking initiative, working across the
agencies, and penalize those who retreat into their stovepipes
and make behavior which may make sense from their small
perspective but hurts the agency, we will go a long way to
doing that.
That can only take you to a certain extent, and there are
times, as your question implies, that the Director of National
Intelligence simply has to step in and say this is the way it's
going to be because this is the right thing for the community.
I'm extremely encouraged because of the team that is now in
place among the different agencies. Not only has Mr. Panetta
been nominated to be Director of the Central Intelligence
Agency, a key job--and he's got the savvy and he's a pro and
we've talked about these issues and we see them the same way. I
think you will find that when you talk to him next week. We
have General Alexander at the National Security Agency, General
Ron Burgess going to the Defense Intelligence Agency, Admiral
Bob Murrett running the National Geospatial-Intelligence
Agency.
I've worked with many of these officers in the past. They
are team players. They understand that we all have to work
together in order to do the nation's business.
So I think the combination of this team attitude at the
top, getting the incentives down through the structure, and
then making the tough calls that benefit the nation, not to the
benefit of an individual agency, are the keys to having the
best intelligence for the President and everyone.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you, Admiral. My time is up.
The Vice Chairman.
Vice Chairman Bond. Thank you, Madam Chair.
As the Chair and I have said, we want to work on a
bipartisan basis, and I believe you made a commitment to work
with both Republican and Democratic Members of this Committee
and their staffs. I believe that's correct, is it not, sir?
Admiral Blair. Yes, sir.
Vice Chairman Bond. In addition, there's another matter
that's very important to me and to the Chair and to Senator
Mikulski. We're also members of the Senate Appropriations
Defense Subcommittee. There have been occasions when we have
been briefed on a matter but our intelligence committee is shut
out.
The excuse is always the same. It's a Title 10 issue, not a
Title 50 issue. Now I understand there may be different
operational requirements between defense and intelligence, but
in areas where there is considerable overlap we need greater
access to information on both sides of the fence. Our staff,
with appropriate clearances and expertise in these matters, sit
on this Committee, not on SAC/D.
The Committee has almost 50 staff members with expertise in
almost every area of intelligence. The SAC/D has very, very
few, often consumed with other matters as they juggle a
portfolio more than ten times the size of ours. Thus we have
broader Committee staff.
I recently delivered a message to one 4-star general. If we
kept getting stonewalled by DOD in matters where we can be
briefed but our staffs will not because of the Committee
jurisdiction, then I personally will not vote for
appropriations for the program. And I will share my views with
the Chair and Senator Mikulski.
If you're confirmed as the DNI, will you work with the
Secretary of Defense to ensure that the intelligence committees
are fully briefed on matters that pertain to this committee's
oversight, to include areas that straddle Title 50 and Title
10?
Admiral Blair. Senator, I happen to have some familiarity
with that issue, although it's somewhat dated. When I was
Associate Director of Central Intelligence for Military
Support, I stood on that seam between the armed forces and
intelligence community, with the job of making that seam work
for the country and not having issues fall between it so we
were badly served in many areas.
My experience from that time is I really think we need a
Title 60. I think we need to get rid of this artificial
division in this global campaign against terrorists, when the
tools that are available in the Department of Defense and the
intelligence agencies are both applicable and both need to be
put together to get the job done. I find that operational
effectiveness is in fact distorted by the way the authorities,
which were written for different era, come down.
So I think very much we need to fix that problem. But I
think that in the meantime, given what we have, we should not
use different titles as a shell game to try to keep information
from the Congress, who has the oversight responsibility and the
funding responsibility for these programs.
And I can undertake to you that I will make sure that we
don't use a different title to hide something, so that people
who have knowledge and responsibility and oversight
responsibility to carry out are not kept in the dark.
Vice Chairman Bond. I sincerely thank you, heartily
congratulate you, and I will explain to you in a different
situation what we're talking about.
You said that you believe that surveillance must only be
done with lawful authorization. Do you believe that the
President has the authority under Article II of the
Constitution to conduct an authorized intelligence collection?
Admiral Blair. That the President has the authority?
Vice Chairman Bond. That the President has authority in
Article II.
Admiral Blair. Yes, sir.
Vice Chairman Bond. So he can authorize collection. Here's
the question. It's a basic question that has been resolved by
the FISA court and others. There is disagreement on it, but I
used to be a lawyer and I studied constitutional law. When the
President has constitutional authority, Congress cannot
eliminate it. And there are some people who think they can.
I believe that it is an essential part of his ability to
conduct foreign policy and we'd be happy to talk to you about
it more.
Madam Chair, my time has expired. I will pass to the next.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you very much. Senator Coburn,
you are next. Senator Coburn is not here. Senator Wyden, you're
next.
Senator Wyden. Thank you, Madam Chairman.
Admiral Blair, I very much enjoyed our meeting, and I want
to get into a question you and I discussed in my office.
There's this great debate about the role of the DNI and is it
big enough and its authority. To me it's not whether it's a big
office or a small office. It's whether there's an accountable
office, because whenever there's a concern people come to the
table and we have six people essentially looking at each other
and you don't get a sense that there is adequate
accountability.
So I want to ask you this question and I'd like you to
start with a yes or no answer before you get into the context.
Do you believe that the position of Director of National
Intelligence currently comes with the authority and the
resources so that you can be held accountable?
Admiral Blair. I think it's an incomplete authority,
Senator Wyden.
Senator Wyden. So I will interpret that as a ``no,''
because if you had sufficient authority you would say yes.
Why, in your view, is it an incomplete authority, an
insufficient authority to be held with respect to the Director
being held accountable?
Admiral Blair. Senator, it says right in the first
paragraph of the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention
Act that the Director of National Intelligence is the leader of
the intelligence community. So when you're looking for one
throat to choke, this is the one you should come to, and I
accept that responsibility. I'm the leader, I'm responsible for
what goes on there.
But, as you know, the intelligence business is inherently
enmeshed with many other departments of government--defense
primarily, but also many others--and intelligence, of course,
is a support function for policy; it is not a policymaker.
So the reason I talk about the incomplete authority is
because this new law that was established in 2004 is a work in
progress. I'm only the third director. And as we work through
unprecedented situations I think we will find areas in which we
have to do some clarifying. But as a general principle I
certainly accept responsibility for intelligence and I will
act, if confirmed, in that manner.
Senator Wyden. I appreciate you stepping up, but the point
is the authority, in your view, you said it's incomplete. You
said it needs to be clarified. And we're going to have to stay
up with it until your position is one where you can be held
accountable.
The second area I need to talk to you about is human
rights, where we also talked. This is obviously a critical
component of our foreign policy, an essential element of
America's claim to moral leadership. I think it's important
that you clear up for the public record your response to the
murder of thousands of innocent people in East Timor.
These killings were committed by paramilitary groups
supported by the Indonesian military. Some observers have
alleged that our government turned a blind eye to the
slaughter. You at that time were the head of the Pacific
Command during the time of these murders.
So right after August of 1999, when the people of East
Timor declared their independence, there was a period of
nonstop violence. Please describe for the record specifically
your interactions with the Indonesian government during that
period--that period right after independence--and what
specifically you did to end the slaughter of what eventually
became 200,000 people.
Admiral Blair. Senator, I'm very happy to have a forum like
this and a chance to talk about those allegations, because they
came up after I left active duty in 2002.
I want to say at the outset that those accusations, which
I've read, are flat wrong. At the time that we're talking
about, the objective of the United States government was to
ensure that East Timor gained its freedom. That was the best
thing that we could do for the human rights and the future of
the East Timorese, and that was the focus of our policy.
I and many other leaders of government carried out the
American government's policy at that time in our conversations
with leaders of Indonesia, both military and civilian. We
decried and said that the torture and killing that was being
conducted by paramilitary groups and some military groups in
East Timor had to stop, and unless it stopped there would be
heavier penalties paid by Indonesia, but if it did stop then
the relationship between the United States and Indonesia could
get better. That was my consistent message in several meetings
and many phone calls with Indonesian leaders.
All of those meetings and all of those phone calls were
attended by our ambassador in the country. They were the
subject of reporting cables, and they were consistent with the
government policy. So those who say that I was somehow carrying
out my own policy or saying things that were not in accordance
with American policy are just flat wrong. And East Timor is now
free and I think it was a successful policy and I'm proud of
it.
Senator Wyden. Madam Chair, my time has expired.
Two points. First, I would like to see those cables that
attest to the various communications you had. Then, Madam
Chair, depending on how many rounds we have, Congresswoman
Eshoo raises a very important issue. She is, of course, a
senior member of the other body and I would like to talk with
Admiral Blair about that.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you, Senator Wyden.
Senator Levin, you're up next.
Senator Levin. Thank you, Madam Chairman.
Chairman Feinstein. And then if Senator Rockefeller can't
get back from a vote in the Finance Committee, Senator
Chambliss--and he's not here--Senator Feingold is next, Senator
Risch is next, and Whitehouse after that.
Senator Levin. Admiral, first I want to talk about
statements that you've made about the necessity of speaking
truth to power and telling the policymakers what your judgment
or assessment is of the facts, even though they may not want to
hear those facts. George Tenet wrote a book and acknowledged
that in fact he had failed to tell the policymakers in the Bush
Administration that what they were saying publicly was wrong.
He acknowledged he had an obligation to do a better job--
quoting his book now--``of making sure that they knew where we
differed and why I should have told the Vice President that his
VFW speech had gone too far.''
Are you committed to speak truth to power? Are you
committed that when your factual assessments or intelligence
assessments say one thing, if public officials say another
thing and don't delineate between their own personal views and
what the intelligence community has informed them that you will
speak to them about that?
Admiral Blair. Yes, sir, I think that's the only way to
proceed.
Senator Levin. You made a statement in your answers for the
record about interrogation and the damage which has been done
by excessive abusive or abusive interrogation, not excessive
but abusive interrogation techniques, and the President is
going to sign an order today, apparently today, which will
prohibit the intelligence community from using and the CIA from
using coercive interrogation methods, requiring the agency to
follow the same rules used by the military in interrogating
terrorism suspects. You're all going to be under the same
rules--the intelligence community and the Defense Department,
everybody, the FBI, everybody's under the same interrogation
rules and the Army manual is going to be key to that.
Do you agree with that decision of the President?
Admiral Blair. Senator, the Executive Order which will be
released here soon provides that there will be a review of the
Army field manual as the basis for interrogation by the
military and intelligence services. Interrogations done under
the criminal prosecution responsibilities of the FBI are
different and will not be affected.
Senator Levin. Forget that reference. But in terms of the
intelligence community and the DOD, you're going to be governed
by the same rules. They will be uniform when it comes to
interrogation of detainees. Is that correct?
Admiral Blair. Yes sir, and it will not be called the Army
field manual any more. It will be called the Manual for
Government Interrogations. I think this review is very
important and I'm very aware that Senator Bond, for example,
made a strong point that I agree with, that the Army field
manual should not become the training manual for resistance
training for adversaries. So we need to be very careful about
how we do this, but we need to get it right.
Senator Levin. Do you believe they should be uniform?
Admiral Blair. I believe they should be uniform.
Senator Levin. Now let me talk to you about the use of
aggressive techniques and the harm that that can do to our
country. You made a reference in your statement and answers for
the record about the necessity to close Guantanamo because it's
a rallying cry for terrorists and harmful to our international
reputation, so closing it is important for our national
security.
Do you believe that is also true, when it comes to
interrogation methods on detainees, that how we deal with
detainees, the methods that we use in interrogation are
important methods, and that if we use abusive methods and our
reputation internationally suffers that that has a negative
impact on our national security?
Admiral Blair. Yes, sir. The President said it so
eloquently at his inauguration--``we reject the false choice
between our safety and our ideals.'' I think we can do both.
Senator Levin. My final question is that some people say
that the use of aggressive, abusive techniques can save lives.
Is it not also true, Admiral, that inhumane or abusive tactics
can cost us lives in the following ways.
Number one, some prisoners that are subjected to abusive
treatment will simply tell us what they think we want to hear,
whether true or not, in order to end the use of those abusive
techniques against them, so that it can produce false
information to use abusive techniques;
Secondly, that abusing prisoners can also strengthen their
resolve to resist and deceive because they expect us to torture
them and we confirm their worst expectations, so with some
prisoners, abusing them strengthens their resolve to resist;
Thirdly, that mistreatment of prisoners in U.S. custody
provides an excuse for other nations to abuse our captured
servicemen and women;
Fourth, that gaining a reputation as a nation that engages
in abusive tactics weakens us strategically in terms of
prestige and leadership, which works against our interests and
costs us allies in common causes to work together in common
causes;
And that, finally, abusing detainees can deprive us of the
ability to prosecute a terrorist or an alleged terrorist, as
shown by Judge Crawford's conclusions in the al-Khatani case.
Would you agree that, in other words, the use of abusive
techniques can cost us and harm our security in those ways?
Admiral Blair. I agree with points four and five based on
what I know right now, Senator Levin--that it causes us great
damage. One, two, three and six are what we have to look into
in this review that's going on. But the dangers that you cited
I'm sure have a validity and we need to look at the entire
basis of them.
Senator Levin. Will you get back to the Committee after
you've had that review and answer those questions?
Admiral Blair. Yes, sir.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you, Senator Levin.
Senator Rockefeller is next. He is not here at this time
because he's in Finance. Senator Chambliss is next. He is not
here. Senator Feingold, Senator Risch.
Senator Risch. Senator Risch will pass. Thank you, Madam
Chair.
Chairman Feinstein. Senator Whitehouse, I know you will not
pass.
Senator Whitehouse. Never been known to.
Thank you, Madam Chair. I join my colleagues in
congratulating you on becoming the Chairman of this Committee.
In the time that we spent together--and I've been on the
Committee now for two years--we've seen your intense devotion
and dedication to this, and I think we're all very confident in
your leadership, as we were in Senator Rockefeller's.
A couple of quick questions, Admiral. First of all, both
thank you and congratulations, and to your wife in particular
thank you, because I think she's going to find she sees a lot
less of you in the coming months and years than she's become
accustomed to, though I think given your background she's
probably gotten used to that. It's been done before.
You talked earlier about conflict of interest. I would like
to suggest to you that there may be areas within the
intelligence community where the discrepancy in pay between
contractors and career folks and the complexity of the
underlying task may have created a situation in which the
contractors know so much more about the program than the career
officers that the tipping point has been reached where it's
really now controlled by those contractors and to a significant
degree could well be controlled by them for their own financial
benefit rather than for real national security purposes.
I think if we're going to solve that problem it requires a
resurgence of the career infrastructure so that the weight of
knowledge, the weight of authority, the weight of expectations
remains in public hands and doesn't become part of President
Eisenhower's military-industrial complex, with all the weight
on the industrial side.
Is that something you're willing to look into as you take
these responsibilities?
Admiral Blair. Absolutely, Senator Whitehouse. The
Institute for Defense Analyses that I was President of was a
federally funded research and development center, which is sort
of part way from government official to the contractor, and I
saw those sorts of conflicts that you recognize.
The role of contractors, the disparity in pay that fuels
that role, and the influence on policy, I will look at that
closely within the intelligence community and assure that we
have purely governmental functions being done by government
employees and those things that are being done by contractors
are those things that are appropriate from the point of view of
economy and efficiency but not the point of view of policy.
While we're on the subject, one of the controversial ones,
of course, is interrogators. My strong preference is that
interrogators in the intelligence world be a professional cadre
of the best interrogators in the business for this function,
and that our use of contractors be limited to times where maybe
you need a particular dialect of a language that is not spoken
or some unusual circumstance. But that's my strong preference.
I don't know what the situation is now.
Senator Whitehouse. I think you'll find strong support for
that preference from this Committee.
On the general subject of torture as well, the argument has
been made over and over in public that the techniques that we
have used have resulted in actionable information that saved
American lives. My experience is that the efforts of this
Committee to actually get a fact that proves that have been
unavailing.
We stop at the sort of conclusory level and you try to push
behind it and it's been very hard to get. I think it's an
important question to know, how also you feel about this issue,
whether or not it truly was effective in any respect.
Will you support our committee's efforts to drill down and
actually find out whether those statements were true?
Admiral Blair. I intend to make those efforts myself, and
certainly when I understand it I'll be happy to try to convince
you on the Committee that we have it right, because I, like
you, have heard many anecdotes, I've heard stories, I've gotten
phone calls from people who have been in the business. We're
going to sort this out and look at it objectively and find out
what the right answer is.
But, as we talked before, that's not the only answer. There
is the immediate tactical benefit. There is this larger
question, which is going to be a matter of judgment, and that
is what is America's reputation. And in my experience America's
reputation is what has others doing the right thing when we're
not watching; that's very important. It's been a great benefit
to us over the years, that has a great value in and of itself.
Senator Whitehouse. In that context, in my last few
seconds, secrecy is a rare and special privilege in a
democracy. It runs counter to the basic tenets of democracy,
but it is necessary in certain circumstances. But I think we
grant it to you, the American public grants it to you in trust,
with the trust that it will be used only for national security
purposes. My experience is that over and over and over again
we've seen official secrecy used not for national security
purposes but to mislead the public and to frame or more
particularly mis-frame an outside political debate.
Will you pledge to us that you will take this trust of
secrecy that you were given as Director of National
Intelligence and use it only to protect national security and
not to manipulate public opinion or frame or mis-frame critical
debates?
Admiral Blair. Absolutely, Senator. I think spin is the
basis of political campaigns. It's not something we should use
our classification authority for, and the release of
information should not be some that is politicized. It should
be something to inform.
Senator Whitehouse. Thank you, Chairman.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you, Senator. Senator Feingold,
you're next.
Senator Feingold. I thank the Chair and, of course,
congratulate her as well. I'm looking forward to working with
you, as I did with Chairman Rockefeller, and the new
Administration.
The Executive Orders on detention and interrogation are
extraordinarily good news for both the rule of law and our
national security. As President Obama put it so clearly on
Tuesday, we reject as false the choice between our safety and
our ideals. That simple statement, which we have been waiting
to hear for eight long years is, in my view, the bedrock on
which Congress can develop a new relationship with the
executive branch.
That relationship is going to include vigorous, independent
oversight by this Committee of the intelligence community. But
based on everything I've heard so far from the President and
from you, Admiral Blair, from Congressman Panetta, I have every
expectation that this relationship will be collaborative and
grounded in mutual respect between our two coequal branches of
government, with all of us working toward a common purpose.
I ask the Chair to put a longer statement in the record, if
there's no objection.
Chairman Feinstein. Without objection.
[The prepared statement of Senator Feingold follows:]
Statement of Hon. Russ Feingold, a U.S. Senator From Wisconsin
``With the inauguration of President Obama this week, we--the new
Administration and the Congress--have a long-overdue opportunity to
strengthen an intelligence community that has been distracted and
undermined by the lawlessness of the Bush Administration. As President
Obama put it so clearly on Tuesday, `we reject as false the choice
between our safety and our ideals.' That simple statement, which we
have been waiting to hear for eight long years, is, in my view, the
bedrock on which Congress can finally develop a new relationship with
the executive branch. That relationship is going to include vigorous,
independent oversight by this committee of the intelligence community.
But, based on everything I have heard so far, from the President, from
you, Admiral Blair, and from Congressman Panetta, I have every
expectation that this relationship will be collaborative and grounded
in mutual respect between our two co-equal branches of government, with
all of us working toward a common purpose.
``Our consideration of Admiral Blair's nomination to be Director of
National Intelligence is a key first step in establishing this
relationship and in defining this common purpose. I hope and expect
that Admiral Blair will state clearly that he and other officials of
the Obama Administration will keep the full congressional intelligence
committees fully and currently informed on all intelligence matters, a
statutory requirement violated repeatedly by the Bush Administration.
And I anticipate that he will provide assurances that no one--not the
DNI and not the President--is above the law.
``I have two overriding concerns related to the position of DNI.
First is the critical need to continue and broaden reform efforts by
integrating the intelligence community with the rest of the United
States government. This includes developing strategies for collecting
and analyzing information needed to inform foreign policy decisions and
defend the nation, whether collected clandestinely by the intelligence
community, or overtly, particularly through State Department reporting.
Legislation introduced by Senator Nagel and myself last year would
establish an independent commission that would make recommendations as
to how to develop these strategies. It passed the Intelligence
Committee and I hope that the new Administration, as well as the new
Congress, will support this important effort. In addition, I was long
frustrated by the Bush Administration's repeated failure to develop
interagency counterterrorism strategies, despite requirements in
statute and repeated urgings in classified letters. It is my hope that
the incoming national security team, including the DNI, will develop
new interagency processes for developing these strategies, while
working closely with Congress.
``Second, even as the Obama Administration tackles the critical and
urgent issues of detention and interrogation, the intelligence
community must take a fresh look at the surveillance authorities it
currently holds. Many of these authorities are overbroad, lack
sufficient checks and balances, and otherwise fail to protect the
privacy and civil liberties of Americans. They include PATRIOT Act and
FISA authorities, many of which were provided by Congress in response
to Bush Administration scare tactics and political intimidation. In
classified contexts as well as publicly, I have repeatedly indicated
where I believe we can collect the intelligence we need while
protecting our constitutional rights. I have identified many of these
changes as part of a broader return to the rule of law that I have
encouraged the Obama Administration to undertake, and I am looking
forward to working with the President's team--at both the intelligence
community and the Department of Justice--on these critical matters.''
Senator Feingold. Admiral, in your responses to Committee
questions you stated that ``where there is a dispute within the
intelligence community in terms of whether proposed or ongoing
activities are in compliance with applicable law, I believe the
DNI should seek a legal opinion from the Office of Legal
Counsel at the Department of Justice.''
Given the individuals nominated to head the OLC, as well as
Mr. Holder's testimony, this statement inspires confidence.
Will you seek OLC opinions at the outset, given the
controversies surrounding many of the Bush Administration
intelligence programs, and will you work with me and other
members of this Committee in identifying and resolving current
and future legal concerns?
Admiral Blair. Yes, sir.
Senator Feingold. Admiral Blair, I know from our discussion
how much you appreciate the need for fundamental reform of our
interagency process. As we discussed, one gaping hole in this
process is the lack of any strategies to integrate the
intelligence community collection with all the overt ways in
which our government gets national security information,
particularly diplomatic reporting. Until we fill this hole and
identify who is best suited across our government to obtain the
information we need to inform our policies and protect the
nation, I don't think we'll ever be able to use our resources
wisely or effectively.
That's why this Committee actually passed legislation by
Senator Hagel and myself to create an independent commission to
recommend ways to fix this longstanding systemic problem and
why a broad range of former officials, including former
national security advisors from both parties have endorsed this
legislation.
Admiral, would you support the establishment of an
independent commission to recommend how the U.S. government as
a whole can more effectively collect and analyze all the
information it needs?
Admiral Blair. Senator Feingold, as I said in our
conversation, I completely agree with the premise of that
legislation. I would prefer, if confirmed, to take a look at
what the situation is inside before I sign up for one
particular solution to that problem, but I pledge to talk with
you about a way forward, and with the other members of the
Committee, about taking on this very important problem.
Because you're right. Often there are outside experts who
know as much about a subject as do those who rely on classified
information, and our obligation is to get the best
intelligence, the best reports to policymakers and the
executive branch, and those of you in the Congress, so you can
make good policy.
Right now I believe that we don't have a system that
integrates those two sources very well.
Senator Feingold. I look forward to hearing from you on
this specific legislation and your general comments in the
future.
I know Senator Wyden already addressed this and I do want
to bring this up. Although I'm a strong supporter of your
nomination, I want to talk about this area of East Timor
briefly. As you know, I've had longstanding and continuing
concerns about human rights abuses and lack of accountability
in Indonesia. We no doubt have substantive differences about
U.S. policy, but I want to address at this hearing today the
allegations and the press and the Washington Post that,
initially at least, you worked around our ambassador in
Indonesia in order to get to Jakarta for enagement with
Indonesian military officers, notwithstanding the Army
atrocities in East Timor.
Are those allegations accurate?
Admiral Blair. No, sir, they're not.
Senator Feingold. It says in the press reports that the
ambassador was with you at all the meetings, but the press
account suggests that you went around him to get to Jakarta,
and that notwithstanding his presence in the meetings that he
was supportive neither of the trip nor the outreach to the
Indonesian military.
Is that accurate?
Admiral Blair. No, sir, that's not accurate. I had my
position on military relations with Indonesia as part of
internal discussions--what kind, how much, what to shut off,
what to continue with. I made recommendations within our
interagency process on that.
When it came to dealing with the Indonesians, I was a
member of the government, carrying out government policy in
what I said to the Indonesians. There were no wink-wink nod-
nods from me to Indonesian officers to go ahead and do what you
want, I'm for you. That's absolutely flat wrong.
I carried out the government policy in my relations with
Indonesia. Within the policy debates of the United States I
made my recommendations, and I then carried out the policy of
the government as it was decided.
So those allegations are wrong.
Senator Feingold. Thank you for responding to that on the
record. We all agree the United States should support human
rights, but how we achieve that is a fundamental policy
question, should not be dismissed, and I do appreciate your
candid response.
Thank you, Madam Chairman.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you very much. Senator Chambliss,
you've returned. You're next in line.
Senator Chambliss. Thank you, Madam Chairman.
Admiral Blair thanks for your willingness to continue to be
a public servant. We appreciate it very much. And thanks to
your family.
As you know, Admiral, there's nobody in the Senate that's
more familiar with the F-22 program and the studies around it.
I'm very familiar with the IDA, and I am very familiar with
that IDA report, your involvement in it. And in my opinion that
should not be an issue, and, Madam Chairman, I think the record
should correctly reflect that.
Admiral, you stated a little earlier--I think I got this
right--that one of the obligations of the DNI is to oversee the
hunting down of extremist Muslims who seek to do us harm. I
agree with you. That certainly is one of the main functions of
our intelligence community.
That conflicts somewhat, though, with the issue of Gitmo
and the closing of that facility. We've got 245 of the meanest,
nastiest killers in the world still at Gitmo. We know that 18
that have been released previously have been either re-captured
or killed on the battlefield. We suspect that there's another
43 that have been released down there that have once again
engaged in battle trying to kill and harm Americans.
Now what we are proposing to do with the closing of
Guantanamo Bay is to bring those 245 mean, nasty killers to
U.S. soil or seek to transfer them to other countries.
We've been trying to transfer them to other countries for
seven years, in some cases, less than that in others, and
frankly I don't see that happening. So I think we can expect
that most of those prisoners down there are going to come into
the U.S. system in some form.
I can guarantee you that a certain percentage of those will
ultimately be released on some sort of technicality that may be
present in the judicial system. So what we're going to have is
all of a sudden, in all likelihood, the release of some of
those individuals into our society. We know they are mean,
nasty killers, and if it's our job to hunt down those
extremists who seek to do us harm, isn't that a conflict with
the position which you have and the administration has relative
to Guantanamo Bay?
Admiral Blair. Senator Chambliss, in the last seven years
or so I think we've wrestled with this exact question of
whether we're talking about prosecuting crimes, whether we're
talking about fighting a war. And, as you eloquently put it, I
don't think we have found the correct way to treat this new
type of campaign that we are engaged in.
On the one hand, we have to fight it like a war and detain
people and get information from them and protect our citizens.
On the other hand, we have to maintain our stature as a country
that's governed by its values and governed by ideals.
We've gone back and forth in many different ways. These
Executive Orders are going to give this Administration a chance
to take a look at those tough issues and come up with creative
solutions for them. The decision to close Guantanamo comes
right along with a very hard look at what do we do with those
245 people that are there. As you said, there aren't pretty
choices for what we have to do with them. The choice of what we
do in the future is the subject of another review for
apprehension, detention and interrogation, the ideals.
So we will take advantage of all the experience we've
gained in the last several years. We'll be true to our ideals
and to our safety, and will come up with a proposal of how to
square these issues.
But I'd be kidding you if I told you there was a magic
solution there that nobody's found yet. We just have to figure
out the best way we can and that's what these reviews are
about.
Senator Chambliss. Well, appreciate your honesty in that
respect, because I think it's going to be extremely difficult
to reconcile the two, of trying to treat these folks as normal
prisoners when they're anything but normal prisoners.
The other issue I want to mention to you is the issue that
you and I talked about in my office relative to information
sharing. Admiral McConnell made some very positive changes in
that respect, and I think there's been a lot of headway made
since September 11 on breaking down the stovepipes within the
FBI, within the CIA, and our other intelligence agencies, and I
appreciate your commitment to continue down that road of trying
to make sure that we broaden the information sharing between
our intelligence communities, and thank you for your commitment
to doing that. We look forward to working with you in that
respect.
Thank you, Madam Chairman.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you. We just learned the
President has just signed the executive orders, so those are
now taking place.
Senator Rockefeller has returned. Senator.
Senator Rockefeller. Thank you, Madam Chairman. Admiral
Blair, my sort of formal question is what are you going to do
about the gang of eight. I think it's probably more or less
impossible for you to answer that question at this point.
Oversight committees like to get answers from people who
are just on their first day and under their first minute of an
Executive Order, all clear and clean. But in that oversight is
the sort of sacred bond between the legislative branch and the
administrative branch, executive branch of government.
It's an important question. When is it that you have to in
fact adhere, if that is the case at all, to a more select group
of people simply because information is so explosive or so
imminent or so timely that you adhere to a gang of eight, so to
speak, gang of four, gang of 16, whatever it might be, or is it
that you just make up your mind that this is a trustworthy
group of people? We haven't had any leaks out of this Committee
for a very, very long time. I think I know where most of them
come from, but they don't come from the Congress or from the
intelligence committees.
What do you do about that?
Admiral Blair. Senator Rockefeller, that's a very important
question. I have some experience in my executive branch service
of the whole business of classification and need to know and so
on.
I think the first thing to recognize is that I believe we
are in a new era in the relationship between the two branches
of government represented here, and that by all of the
statements I have heard from the leadership and others and by
what I know of, if confirmed, my colleagues on the national
security team, we look on it as a team sport in which we're
trying to win the same game.
So I think that makes a difference right at the start of
it. The second thing I've learned over time is people are more
important than rules, that the development of trust, the
development of informal communication mechanisms, such as the
Chairman mentioned, so that we're not caught in some desperate
last-minute phone calls to try to repair damage that wasn't
thought of because we hadn't been meeting more frequently and
earlier is much the exception and not the rule.
The attitude that we don't use classification and sharing
as a way to hide things, the recognition that there are
legitimate reasons to hold things to small groups, but, on the
other hand, the recognition that certainly when I was a senior
commander and, as you said, I never pulled any triggers at that
level. I didn't do my own staff work, we need to have processes
which don't just check a block on telling somebody but actually
get the information across to the right people in a way that
protects secrecy.
So all these things are at play in a tough new era of
shifting threats and speed and new kinds of things that could
be damaging to us. And all I can pledge to you, Senator, is
let's turn this new page, let's work together, let's follow the
law but let's go beyond the law and have those kinds of things
that will develop that trust and support, and I think we can do
the right thing for the country.
Senator Rockefeller. Thank you for that. My time is about
to run out, so I won't get into my cyber security question, but
I'd like to.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you very much.
A roll call vote began at 11:35. Senator Snowe is the next
one up. You would like a second round? Well, then I think some
of us should go and vote right now and then come back. Preside,
if you will, and I'll recognize Senator Snowe.
Senator Wyden. Madam Chair, would it be acceptable to go
vote and still come back?
Chairman Feinstein. Yes.
Senator Snowe. Thank you, Madam Chair.
Welcome, Admiral Blair. I appreciate your willingness to
serve our country once again. You certainly have an impressive
resume, and it certainly will serve this department is it
undergoes a major transition since its inception. Certainly
that's been one of the goals of this committee, is to ensure
that the department is coordinated, integrated, and is
functioning for the purposes it was originally designed and
intended.
One of the issues--and I know we discussed this during the
course of our meeting--was on the issue of FBI transformation
and transforming the FBI to a more counterterrorism posture.
It's far from being institutionalized at this point.
Over the years, since the department was created, for
example, the 9/11 commissioners were before this Committee back
in 2005 and indicated at the time that intelligence reform--and
gave the FBI a C based on their recommendations. And then, of
course, Governor Kean, who was a cochair of the commission,
came before the Committee in 2006 and again stated that the FBI
had moved too slowly to improve its ability to prevent future
terrorist plots, was plagued by turnovers in its senior ranks,
was not even close to where they said they would be.
Then the Inspector General for the Department of Justice in
2007 found that the professional divide between analysts and
special agents remained a problem, and that barriers to
acceptance and cooperation between the two groups must be
addressed if the FBI is to efficiently and effectively meet its
mission of preventing terrorist acts.
So the bottom line is that we truly still experience some
very difficult transitions within the FBI to transform to get
more analysts, to provide the proper training, the number of
analysts. Our Committee just in the recent intelligence
authorization, which is still languishing regrettably in a
House-Senate conference, said that the FBI has yet to make the
dramatic leaps necessary to address the threats facing our
nation and that, astonishingly, only a third of special agents
and intelligence analysts even have access to the Internet at
their desktops.
I think that gives you an idea of the problem that still
exists and persists within the FBI concerning the central point
in terms of intelligence reform. I know you indicated that you
pledge to work with the Attorney General, the Director of the
FBI, and that the threat is too urgent for us not to intervene.
Could you please outline for us, to the Committee how you
intend to compel the FBI to undertake these reforms?
Admiral Blair. Senator Snowe, this is a new area for me
and, more importantly, I think it's a new area for all of us,
in that after 9/11 this new responsibility or newly emphasized
responsibility for the FBI came on.
That series of reports you cited, clearly it's a work in
progress that needs to be worked on. If confirmed, I will get
into that area. I know that funding from the National
Intelligence Program goes to the FBI for that purpose. That
needs to be funded in the right way and spent in the right way.
That's certainly my responsibility.
I have known Director Mueller from the time that I was on
active duty, and I look forward to working with him and the new
Attorney General. At this point, Senator, I can simply agree
with you on the importance of the transformation and pledge
that I will look at it as a priority issue and, if confirmed, I
will work hard to make sure it's working. And I will come back
with you and talk about what needs to be done to make it
everything it should be.
Senator Snowe. I appreciate that. And one of the
recommendations made in talking with the cochairs of the 9/11
commission before this Committee was to establish some metrics
and standards by which we can measure our performance but also
in compliance with these recommendations, because it's
certainly long overdue, and the resistance or whatever the case
may be, I think that that culture has to truly change, because
that is the central part of intelligence reform and making sure
that we're on the cutting-edge of being able to fight any
terrorist threats.
I know we discussed this as well, an Inspector General for
the entire intelligence community. That's been one of my goals
and objectives, to pass an Inspector General for the entire
community. I know, in reading the responses that you gave to
the Committee with respect to that, that you indicated that a
statutory Inspector General may add an unnecessary layer of
bureaucracy on top of a system that is functioning adequately.
But you have sort of a stovepipe approach for Inspector
Generals. I don't think it's going to add a layer. The fact is,
you want an Inspector General to be able to view the entire
community and go across agencies for accountability, to
identify problems, because that certainly has been a problem in
the past, a failure to identify serious terrorist threats.
We've seen too many instances of intelligence failure to
adequately analyze information, failure to share information
within the community. So those failures demand better
accountability for the entire intelligence community. That's
what would be important about an Inspector General, to be able
to look across all the intelligence agencies.
Admiral Blair. Senator Snowe, I certainly agree with the
thrust of your question, which is that there are many issues
that cut across agencies and the Inspector General system is a
good system to attempt to improve many of them. I will look
hard at that. I know you are personally interested in that
issue, and I look forward to working with you on it, if
confirmed.
Senator Snowe. Thank you, Admiral. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Vice Chairman Bond [presiding]. Thank you, Senator Snowe.
If you will tell them that we are coming.
Senator Nelson, have you had a round of questions?
Senator Nelson. No, I'm waiting.
Vice Chairman Bond. Well, you and I will go for it.
Senator Nelson. I think we have about seven minutes left.
Vice Chairman Bond. If Senator Snowe will tell them we're
coming.
Senator Nelson. Six or seven minutes.
Admiral Blair, I just want you to know how much I
appreciate your public service to our country; the same to your
wife, who often does not get the recognition of the long and
distinguished public service. I'm happy for you personally that
this could be a capstone on a very lengthy and distinguished
career.
I'm going to submit some questions for the record, but the
one thing that I want to say is that you are going to really
have to exert control and crack the whip, and you're going to
have to come to us with proposed legislation to strengthen your
hand as the Director of National Intelligence, because when the
legislation that created your office was set up, it was too
watered down in allowing separation and stovepipes with some of
the other intelligence agencies.
The whole idea after 9/11 was to get this all where we
could all coordinate it under an office that you're going to
assume. In the meantime, what we've had is great cooperation
from Secretary Gates, from the head of the CIA and the head of
NSA and the other agencies--that's informally. Formally, we've
got to create those lines of authority for you to be able to do
it.
So I can tell you I speak for our Committee that we want
you to come forth suggesting legislation that would strengthen
your hand, improve the efficiency, cooperation, and
collaboration of all of the intelligence agencies. That way
we're going to get a better intelligence product.
Admiral Blair. Yes, sir. I can't imagine an incoming
director could have a more reassuring set of words than those,
Senator Nelson. I'll look at it and if I need it, I'll come
back to you, sir.
Senator Nelson. Thank you.
Senator Wyden. Senator Bond, I think you're next.
Vice Chairman Bond. Thank you for advising me. I'm going to
run in a few minutes, Senator Wyden, and I will turn it over to
you, whatever gavel I have left.
Admiral, you visited Singapore a few years ago, discussing
the arrest by Singapore authorities of individuals believed to
be linked to terrorist groups and you stated, and I quote:
``Singapore's actions and actions within the United States, we
aggressively arrested terrorists and interrogated them
ourselves and made a difference and I think we're all safer;
our countries are going on the offensive now, not just waiting
back behind a big wall or more standoff distances.''
Do you still believe we need to be on the offensive,
aggressively arresting and interrogating terror suspects?
Admiral Blair. Absolutely, Senator.
Vice Chairman Bond. Do you believe the CIA's interrogation
and detention program has been effective?
Admiral Blair. Mr. Vice Chairman, I'll have to look into
that more closely before I can give you a good answer on that
one.
Vice Chairman Bond. The Executive Order has been issued
about the Army field manual. You have stated that at least
there may be an argument that if you have an Army field manual
that is widely published and available to al-Qa'ida and other
top terrorist leaders, it would not be effective. Is that your
view or where do you stand on that?
Admiral Blair. Mr. Vice Chairman, we talked about that in
your office. I very much share your concern that we not turn
our manual into a training manual for our adversaries. And I
will play my part in that as the Vice Chair of that review,
with that issue very much in mind.
Vice Chairman Bond. President Obama has issued an Executive
Order applying the field manual. But, as I understand the
situation, he has an Executive Order--the authority to issue an
Executive Order describing techniques, classified techniques,
that could be used by the Agency that would be different from
that used by the Army. Is that your understanding?
Admiral Blair. My understanding is we want to revise the
Army field manual and make it the manual that goes for both
military and intelligence interrogation and to have the
guidance so that it's uniform across those agencies, depending,
of course. There are many different things in the manual.
Vice Chairman Bond. If the agency is the only one using it,
if you disseminated that manual to some 20,000 military
personnel who would not be conducting, necessarily conducting,
those interrogations and for whom the Army questioners do not
need it, why would you describe methods that should not become
public to a broad group of people for whom the Army field
manual is appropriate?
Admiral Blair. Senator, we face this dilemma all the time
in military doctrine. We have large amounts of unclassified
doctrine for our troops to use, but we don't put anything in
there that our enemies can use against us. And we'll figure it
out for this manual, which will be the manual for everyone to
use.
Vice Chairman Bond. Will it be available to members of the
Army--would it be limited, would access to that information be
limited to those in the agency who are directly involved or
might be directly involved in interrogations?
Admiral Blair. It will be limited to those who need it,
both within the armed forces and within the intelligence
service.
Vice Chairman Bond. We've discussed the FISA Act
amendments. Do you believe that private partners who assisted
the government should have the civil liability protection that
they have been accorded as a result of our Act and the
determination by the Attorney General?
Admiral Blair. Senator, I'm going back in my mind to your
previous question. I hope I don't meet you in a court of law
some day, because I think I'd lose. When I said this manual
would be available to those need it, there will be some sort of
document that's widely available in an unclassified form, but
the specific techniques that can provide training value to
adversaries, we will handle much more carefully.
I was just thinking about that answer.
Vice Chairman Bond. That essentially is what the current
Administration has done.
Admiral Blair. We have to look at this, Senator.
Vice Chairman Bond. I don't ask you to comment on that. The
PATRIOT Act has three provisions that are expiring--roving
wiretaps, the authority to target lone wolf agents, and the 215
business records. Have you had a chance to review that and take
a position on renewing the PATRIOT Act, those three provisions?
Admiral Blair. Mr. Vice Chairman, I understand that those
provisions that you have described came into force fairly
recently. I'm sure everybody on this Committee is more familiar
with them than I am. I know that there are reports that I will
be responsible, if confirmed, for submitting. We will be
gathering data as we go. There have been some Inspector General
reports. I'd like a chance to digest all of that before I give
you a definitive answer on it, sir.
Vice Chairman Bond. I spoke about DNI authorities. What
would you describe is the appropriate role of the DNI? How
would you like to see the DNI function?
Admiral Blair. I think that the concepts of leading and
managing are the core concepts there, and this has to be, as I
said in an earlier answer, more than just signing a piece of
paper and putting out a glossy brochure. It has to be working
on the incentives down through the organization so that those
who do their job are rewarded and those who don't do their job
are moved out, as you described.
So it's a complex management challenge.
Vice Chairman Bond. You just answered my second question on
accountability. You also, I think, in a previous answer
indicated you had some sense of the incomplete authorities of
the DNI. We will discuss those later, but I think you will find
that they are very important.
A final question. How important do you think it is to
prosecute leakers of classified information?
Admiral Blair. You know, Senator, I've been bothered
throughout my career, as you have, by leakers. If I could ever
catch one of those, it would be very good to prosecute them. So
I believe that we need to make sure that people who leak are
held to account for it.
Vice Chairman Bond. Thank you very much, Admiral.
I'm going to turn this over to the distinguished Senator
from Oregon and try to make the floor vote. I will ask
unanimous consent and hereby grant it to put my additional
questions in the record.
I thank you for your testimony.
Senator Wyden [presiding]. I thank the Vice Chairman.
Before the Vice Chair leaves, one of the many reasons I'm going
to miss you is I've enjoyed working with you, and the two of us
have been leaders of the bipartisan effort to increase the
penalties against those who leak in the kinds of situations
that the Vice Chairman has mentioned.
Let me start, Admiral, with this question. For years the
warrantless wiretapping program and the coercive interrogation
program was withheld from most members of this Committee. Was
that justifiable, in your view?
Admiral Blair. Senator, it is difficult to cast ourselves
back to those days right after 9/11 and the feeling that was in
the land at that time. As I said in my statement, I think that
the actions that are taken by the intelligence community in
gathering intelligence on Americans need to have a lawful
basis, need to have procedures that are tight, and need to be
reviewed. I can tell you that going forward they will meet all
those criteria.
Senator Wyden. With respect to my question, most of the
members of this Committee had that information concealed from
us for years. I'm not talking about a short period of time. Was
it justifiable to conceal from most members of this Committee
that information for years?
Admiral Blair. Senator, going forward, I will not conceal
information that you ought to have from you for years.
Senator Wyden. Why are you not willing to respond in a yes
or no fashion to this question, because past is always
prologue. I share your view with respect to something that
might have been short-term.
Admiral Blair. My only reason for hesitation is I don't
have direct knowledge of it, and I'm just hesitant to give you
a categorical answer without having known more about it.
Senator Wyden. This member of the Committee is saying that
for myself and most members of the Committee it was concealed.
Admiral Blair. The situation as you describe it, Senator,
is wrong.
Senator Wyden. Thank you. I appreciate your reaching that
judgment.
Admiral, two other areas. If the Government Accountability
Office is conducting a study at the direction of one of the
intelligence committees using properly cleared staff, will you
give them access to do their work?
Admiral Blair. I'm sorry, would you repeat the question,
Senator?
Senator Wyden. If the GAO is conducting a study at the
direction of one of the intelligence committees, using properly
cleared staff, will you give them the access they need to do
their work?
Admiral Blair. Senator, I'm aware that the direction of GAO
studies and terms of them are generally subject to talk between
the two branches of government for a variety of reasons, and,
subject to having those discussions, I ultimately believe the
GAO has a job to do, and I will help them do that job.
Senator Wyden. I would appreciate it, and I would also
appreciate you following that up with Chairwoman Eshoo. This is
something she's brought to my attention, and I think her point
is very valid.
Admiral Blair. It sounds like there's a story behind this,
Senator, and if we can talk about that story I think we can fix
it.
Senator Wyden. Fair enough.
The third area I wanted to talk about that we talked about
in the office is the overclassification of government
documents. This has been done by executive branches that were
dominated by Presidents of both political parties. Governor
Kean put it pretty well when he talked about his work on the
commission, where he said well over half of the documents he
saw that were classified didn't need to be classified.
I expect that you and I will be doing a lot of work
together with respect to situations, but what is your general
view with respect to whether overclassification is a serious
problem, and what would be your thoughts, just for purposes of
this very short discussion, in terms of dealing with it?
Admiral Blair. As we discussed in your office, my
experience has been the same as that which you relate, that
there is a great deal of overclassification. Some of it I think
is done for the wrong reasons, to try to hide things from the
light of day. Some of it is because in our system there is no
incentive not to do that, and there are plenty of penalties to
do the reverse, in case you get something wrong and don't
classify it. So I think we need to do fundamental work on the
system.
But I think, in the case of intelligence in particular, we
need to sort of demystify a lot of the work that's done in the
intelligence business, which is very smart people looking at a
lot of information and trying to reach judgments. Many times
our adversaries know more about it than our citizens do, which
is not the way it ought to be. So I basically agree with the
general thrust of your remarks, Senator Wyden. I'll be working
to see if we can come up with a different approach that
incentivizes it at the right level and informs not only those
of you with security clearances on this Committee but the wider
interests of the public whose support we need.
Senator Wyden. Admiral, my time is up. I just want to state
this morning I intend to support your nomination. I think
you've been candid this morning and I appreciate it and look
forward to working with you.
Admiral Blair. I look forward to working with you, if
confirmed, sir.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you, Senator Wyden.
Admiral, my intention is to go for another half-hour. If
all the Senators have their questions answered by then, we will
adjourn the hearing. I'm sure that won't be a painful decision
for you. But I'd like to ask a couple more questions. I know
Senator Whitehouse has a couple more and there may be other
returning Members, so we'll see how it goes, if that's all
right.
I wanted to ask you some questions, as others have
indicated, on holding people accountable for decisions made. I
want to know how you would hold people accountable and handle
disciplinary measures for officials in the community that were
involved at the top levels for interrogation and detention.
I'd like to ask you if you have also reviewed the recent
report of the CIA IG involving the Peru shootdown. The
unclassified statement that I could make is that the shootdown
confirmed what our Committee found, that the program was not
managed as the President authorized, and the IG report found
that CIA officials withheld information from Congress and
Executive branch officials.
Admiral Blair. Madam Chairman, the issue of accountability
I believe goes hand-in-hand with responsibility, and you need
to assign things clearly and then give medals and promotions
and rewards to people who carry them out legally and do their
jobs well, and then you need to hold to account those who fail
to follow the directions or who do it badly.
There's a difference between those two. So I think you have
to look at what the mission was at the time, what the direction
and parameters were at the time, and you make a call as to
whether the person deserves the reward or deserves the
punishment or should be moved out of the job.
So I'm pretty traditional on these things. I intend to
establish procedures and move forward. But there are some
things in the past that have to be looked at. Inspector General
reports like the one you mentioned, which I have not had a
chance to read yet, need to be looked at, and both reward and
punishment meted out accordingly.
So I think this is absolutely key to making an effective
organization, giving people at lower levels confidence that
they will move up if they do well, that they'd better watch out
if they don't do well. So I agree with that concept.
Chairman Feinstein. I'll discuss this with you further in
another setting, if I may.
When we met last week we discussed the community's enormous
overuse of contractors and the use of contractors for what are
inherently, I believe, governmental functions. The 2007 DNI
contractor study found that contractors are now 27% of all
intelligence community personnel. They perform missions,
including interrogation of CIA detainees, which I think is
completely inappropriate and should be done by government
employees, and contractor personnel cost $80,000 more than a
government employee.
When we spoke you said this was a matter of concern and
that you intend to look into the contractor issue. I'd like you
to tell us how you intend to proceed and when you will have
some answers, because candidly I find this unacceptable. I find
hiring contractors to interrogate detainees and hiring
contractor psychologists to evaluate is just the wrong thing
for the government to do.
Admiral Blair. You showed me some summary charts from that
report from 2007, Madam Chairman, and I agree with you that
it's a serious problem. I think we have to look behind the
numbers at the motives--a big ramping up in responsibilities,
money available but not trained people available. I know that
in many branches of government the answer was hire a
contractor, in many cases a retired officer from that
organization who basically had some experience. But you can't
do that for a long time. You have to get it right. You have to
keep the governmental functions by people who get their
paycheck every two weeks and work for the government.
I will get into that issue. I agree completely that we
should have a cadre of trained government interrogators as we
move forward, and I will look at that as soon as I get in and
work in that direction. I'm not sure about the speed. I'm not
sure what the situation is right now, but I look forward, if
confirmed, to consulting with you on that.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you.
Senator Whitehouse, I think you're next and then--Senator
Rockefeller, do you want to go next?
Senator Rockefeller. Thank you, Madam Chair. I just have
one question, Admiral, and that is what I left off with about
cyber security.
What was it, a year ago, Sheldon, that Mike McConnell took
us out to an undisclosed location in Virginia, and really the
whole point of it was all about cyber security. He views it as
the premier national security problem.
There was a sense of urgency in that meeting. The problem
with things like that is you get the urgency and people collect
and then people disperse, and then you have all the various
jurisdictions. So we have a cyber initiative. Senator
Whitehouse has an enormous interest and capacity, a hunger to
be helpful in this area.
So we have the initiative which focuses on securing the
federal government, the Executive branch and Legislative branch
information networks. And that's a good start. That's a good
start.
But my main worry is the security of our country's critical
infrastructure--our electric power grid. People like to call it
smart. It just needs to get big. You can hope that it's smart
but if it gets big that's going to solve 80 percent of the
problems--our communication system, our banks, et cetera, et
cetera, et cetera. And I don't think there's probably anybody
in this Congress that hasn't been hacked into by this.
Therefore, because it's wrapped up in this thing called the
Internet, free travel across the spaces and the atmosphere,
there's an innocence to it, except that it's utterly un-
innocent when somebody intends it to be that way.
So what I would just like to get from you is what we need
to do about that, what do we need to extend in terms of the
cyber initiative, and how you personally see it.
Admiral Blair. I have some familiarity with the issues of
cyber security, Senator Rockefeller, but there's a lot that I'm
dated on or that I don't know. But I certainly share your
feeling of the priority of securing our networks.
As you point out in your question, we have to protect our
networks within the government, but from society's point of
view it's these networks, on which increasingly the basic
functions of society and country depend, that we have to be
extremely concerned about.
I think the intelligence community, within the team of
government and private organizations that have to work on it,
has the responsibility for working on the threat. It should be
the intelligence community, the National Security Agency has it
squarely in their charter, that understands the sort of
techniques and the thinking of those who are trying to, both
maliciously and with true threat intent, get into our systems
and cause them harm.
There's a lot of expertise there in the National Security
Agency and elsewhere about how we protect systems, and we need
to share that judiciously with the private sector so that we
have the best techniques to work with them.
And then, in the area of recovery which goes along with all
of this, I think the government and the intelligence agencies
within it has an extremely important role in attribution so
that you know how to recover and how to recover well.
So I think throughout this campaign there's not one answer
for it either; it's a crew race. One side pulls on the stroke
and the offense pulls ahead and then the defense pulls ahead.
We've got to keep stroking faster, better, with more teamwork,
and that's going to be something that certainly I think the
entire time that I, if confirmed, am in this job will be a very
high priority.
Senator Rockefeller. I think the point you make about
trying to keep up with the other side, usually in terms of
China and others, I think it puts us at a disadvantage in this
country. In other words, if you're trying to catch up with and
develop a stronger firewall which another country or who knows
where it comes from then breaks that down, then you have to
come back and come up with an even higher firewall of some
sort.
It's a game which is deadly and which has a very hard time
attracting public interest. When it will attract public
interest is if they close down the electric grid system, but in
the meantime we don't want that to happen so it's going to have
to be done by the government, working with the private sector,
and with an intensity which belies sort of the placid view of
the Internet's a good thing and people can talk all across the
world.
Let me just end by saying I really enjoyed the process of
working with you and I look forward very much to your
stewardship of this. We had a discussion once that you spent
your life sort of giving commands and in the military four-star
it's chain of command, and you were in our conversation very,
very sincere in understanding the dimensions of this problem
and the need to share with the Legislative branch, although
that sometimes can be very painful--hours in hearings, and you
say why did I ever get myself into this.
But it is a team effort. We are Team America and we are
under attack, and we have to go at it with that kind of
cooperative point of view. And I think you're precisely the guy
to do it, and I think also that you will be very strong in your
views and help move the IC community effectively.
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you, Senator Rockefeller.
Senator Whitehouse.
Senator Whitehouse. Thank you, Chairman.
Admiral, just a moment ago, in response to a question from
Senator Bond, you indicated that there will be a public
document on interrogations, but specifics of interrogation
techniques may be held back. That's more or less the design of
the Army field manual approach now--19 techniques, but the
precise manner of their implementation is not disclosed.
Is that what you intended to mean by your response?
Admiral Blair. Thank you for giving me a chance to talk
about that again, Senator Whitehouse. I don't know.
Senator Whitehouse. You weren't talking about using
techniques outside the Army field manual.
Admiral Blair. What I was thinking--the general pattern
that I had in mind is that information widely available is more
general than that which is specifically used, which is of value
to potential adversaries. That is, we use this in many other
techniques in which we have to assure the American people that
we are acting correctly, but nonetheless we don't want to
provide open intelligence support to those who are trying to
come after us.
So striking that balance, the one way I'm familiar with, is
the more general public documents and then, as the level of
specificity increases, more limited in the distribution, more
careful in the classification. So I'm certainly going in
thinking in those terms but I don't know if that's the right
answer.
Senator Whitehouse. But not outside of the bounds of the
unclassified array you begin with.
Admiral Blair. No, sir. The idea is not: here's this public
document--just kidding, here's the real stuff. That's not what
I'm saying.
Senator Whitehouse. That's what I needed to hear. Thank
you.
We have, during my brief tenure on this Committee, over and
over again seen alarming, appalling leaks of classified
information and over and over over again, every single time, as
best I can tell, those are leaks outside of the legislative
branch, out of the intelligence community, not from Congress,
not from this Committee, and it happens over and over and over
again.
Apparently the record of getting these turned over for
investigation and prosecution has been zero. I'm not sure. It's
probably classified what the number was that we were given
yesterday as to how many had been turned over. It was a large
number, out of which zero cases resulted.
Which suggests to me that there is a significant lack of
energy and interest within the intelligence community in truly
policing this stuff and that the device for kind of getting rid
of it or fobbing it off is to say well, we'll send it over to
the Department of Justice and if they can't prosecute it as a
criminal offense, well, we're not going to take any further
interest, when you have all sorts of personnel, administrative,
supervisory and other authorities to deal with this as well.
Now you can send as good a message by firing somebody as
you can by marching them out in handcuffs in many situations.
So I hope we can work with you on this later, but I hope
that you will consider this business of leakage to be a
significant and serious one and that you will be willing to use
your administrative authorities and demand that those agencies
reporting to you use their administrative authorities and not
just pass the buck to DOJ and when they find out that it's for
some reason not a criminal offense that they care to prosecute,
and kind of feel they can kind of wash their hands of the
problem. It's a serious problem and very serious national
security information has been released because of it.
Admiral Blair. I completely agree, Senator Whitehouse. If
confirmed, I'd like to come and talk to you about some ideas
where we can build in some technical and some procedural
safeguards into agencies so that it's not a case of going back
afterwards and trying to get records and question people but we
have some tools that will let everybody who works for the
government know that if you are going to pass classified
information to a reporter or to someone there will be a trace
of it which will make it relatively quick to identify you as
the one who did it, so you shouldn't ought to think about it.
So I would look forward to talking with you. Now, as I say
that, we of course have been discussing aggressive techniques
which have stepped over the line in the past, but I think we
can work out something that will get people away from it. I've
been bedeviled for years by reading things in the paper that I
thought were very private and classified accounts of meetings
that I participated in, and it just helps our enemies and
messes up good government and we'd better find a way to get on
top of it.
Senator Whitehouse. I appreciate that.
Madam Chair, may I ask one more question? Senator Levin has
given me permission to do that.
Chairman Feinstein. Yes, certainly.
Senator Whitehouse. The focus of this hearing has to a
degree been on the mistakes and the mishaps and misdirection of
the past. It has left, I think, potentially, a flavor that
these are troubled agencies. I just want to say I was in
Afghanistan recently up at a forward operating base in a former
Soviet prison with no windows in the shadow of the border--no
lights at night because it would attract rocket and mortar
fire, pretty severe conditions of privation. And folks who will
be working for you were operating there at a level of morale
and enthusiasm and professionalism and tempo and expertise that
just took my breath away. It is really, really impressive what
is going on out there.
I think there were probably some very goodhearted and
professional people swept up in some of these mistakes, and
particularly those who were involved and the interrogation
procedures, detentions and so forth. It strikes me that one
thing they are entitled to from their country, as they did what
they believed was approved and legitimate and what they were
told to do and what they thought would help the country, is to
have accurate legal advice now about what their real
predicament is.
I hope that you will consider working with your colleagues
at the Department of Justice to try to get them a fair and
proper legal status report of what their situation is so they
can understand what potential vulnerabilities they may have
taken on, particularly at the individual agent level, in
perfectly good faith without having any legal degree or
anything that might suggest to them that somehow something had
gone wrong up at the White House, in the Office of Legal
Counsel and all these places to pollute the information that
they were given.
Now they may be stuck with it. They may be people who
should be careful about where they travel and so forth. So I
would urge you to consider that. I think it's important. I
think it's part of what we can do for them to try to make this
right and, as I said, there are some extraordinarily wonderful
people who will be working for you.
Thank you, Chairman.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you very much, Senator. Senator
Levin.
Senator Levin. Thank you very much.
Chairman Feinstein. Oh, if I could ask staff, there are
certain members that have not had an opportunity to speak. You
know who they are. If you could tell them that now would be the
time, because the intention is to adjourn when we finish this
round. Thank you.
Senator Levin. Thank you, Madam Chairman.
Admiral, the National Counterterrorism Center, the NCTC,
was created by the Intelligence Reform Act of '04. It was given
two broad missions and I think you've already identified
basically those missions. After four years of existence, does
the NCTC function at the level that Congress and the President
intended? You just participated in a review of their activities
and the intelligence community in general. So on a scale of,
say, one to ten, how would you rate NCTC in terms of access to
intelligence, the quality of its analysis, and its ability to
control what gets collected?
Admiral Blair. I'll need some more time to give you an
exact answer, Senator Levin, but I happen to know retired
Admiral Scott Redd, who was the director there for a while.
He's a friend and I had a chance to talk to him about it. I've
talked with people who have worked with NCTC, and my impression
is that that place is good and getting better all the time but
I don't think it's perfect.
I think we're on a good slope there and we need more,
faster, better.
Senator Levin. Going back to the question that a number of
us have asked about, which is the treatment of detainees, there
is a new Executive Order which has now been signed. In your
judgment, is waterboarding torture?
Admiral Blair. I think in answering that question, Senator
Levin, I would say that there will be no waterboarding on my
watch. There will be no torture my watch.
Senator Levin. Let me ask the question again. From what you
know of waterboarding, is it torture?
Admiral Blair. In answering that question, Senator, I'm
very much aware that there were dedicated officers in the
intelligence service who thought they were carrying out
activities which had been authorized at the highest levels and
properly authorized. They had doubts about them originally, so
they asked and asked again. Then they were given direction and
then they took action.
I don't intend to reopen those cases of those officers who
acted within their duties. So I'm hesitating to set a standard
here which will put in jeopardy some of the dedicated
intelligence officers who checked to see that what they were
doing was legal and then did what they were told to do.
Senator Levin. The problem with that answer is that the
Attorney General nominee has given us his judgment, and your
reluctance to give your own judgment on that question, it seems
to me, is troubling to me, because I don't think there's the
slightest doubt about it, regardless of what the former Vice
President said.
So I'm looking for your judgment on that question from what
you know of waterboarding. In your judgment, is it torture? If
the Attorney General designee can answer that, it seems to me
you ought to be able to give us an answer as well.
Admiral Blair. Senator, you'll just have to make the
inference from my answer that on my watch we will not
waterboard.
Senator Levin. We had a senior intelligence officer in
front of us, Colonel Steve Kleinman, in front of the Armed
Services Committee--I believe it may have been a hearing of
this Committee--and this is what he said, and this has to do
with the use of abusive tactics.
He says, ``I was privileged to join 14 of America's most
accomplished intelligence and law enforcement professionals in
an intensive discussion of best practices in interrogation.
Representing the Central Intelligence Agency, the Department of
Defense and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, we
collectively represented 350 years of operational experience in
conducting thousands of interrogations and debriefings. Our
respective professional experiences led us to a single emphatic
conclusion. The most effective method for consistently
eliciting accurate and comprehensive information from even the
most defiant individuals, to include terrorists and insurgents,
was through a patient, systematic, and culturally enlightened
effort to build an operationally useful relationship.''
Do you agree with that?
Admiral Blair. Based on everything I know, I agree with
that, yes, sir.
Senator Levin. Thank you. My time is up. Thank you, Madam
Chairman.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you very much, Senator Levin.
Senator Hatch, you are up.
Senator Hatch. Thank you, Madam Chairman. I just want to
congratulate you on your ascension to the chairmanship of this
really, really important committee. We've worked together on a
lot of things. I have a lot of respect for you and I appreciate
the way you've started this Committee and started your tenure
here. It personally means a lot to me.
Admiral Blair, I want to welcome you. You've given long and
distinguished service to this country and I have nothing but
respect for you.
We've had rather extensive conversation in my office and I
personally appreciated the forthrightness with which you
approach this job and really approach everything. You're the
kind of guy that I think makes a difference in this world and
who can certainly make a difference in this job. It's one of
the most important jobs in this country today.
I also want to pay tribute to Mike McConnell. When he came
in, it was overwhelming, and you'll find it to be so as well.
But a lot of the overwhelming part he's helped to put together
and resolved. He's helped to resolve these approaches, but
there are still plenty of problems and you'll find that that's
so when you get there.
I suspect you're likely to spend an awful lot of time
before this Committee, and I certainly expect you to be
confirmed. I wish you success in the role as the nation's third
Director of National Intelligence.
If I could just ask a couple of questions, Admiral Blair, I
believe the July 2004 report by this Committee cataloging and
analyzing the Iraq WMD intelligence failure prior to 2002 was
the most comprehensive report done on this subject. It might be
the most important report ever done in the history of this
Committee.
Have you had a chance to read it?
Admiral Blair. I've read the summary of it, Senator Hatch,
and I agree it's an extremely thorough document.
Senator Hatch. What do you believe explains the failure of
the Intelligence Community in assessing the presence of weapons
of mass destruction in Iraq in 2002?
Admiral Blair. I've had a chance to talk to some of the
officers who were involved in that in fairly senior positions,
and, as I would describe it, I think there were a bunch of
tumblers on that lock that all fell into place to produce that
very wrong result. Some of them had to do with the lack of
sources and sheer lack of penetration. Others had to do with
attitudes of analysis which were flawed.
Part of it had to do also with the extraordinary political
pressure that was placed on some of the analysts. So I think
there were a bunch of things that contributed to it, Senator
Hatch.
But what I think is really important is that when that
happened, it was so clear it was wrong, the intelligence
community actually took a standdown, stopped, stopped work,
every analyst, half a day on how did this happen, and then went
through a process of really critical self-examination and put
in place a series of corrective measures to make sure it
wouldn't happen again.
Senator Hatch. Well, they weren't alone when they did this,
because almost every major intelligence department of all the
major countries felt exactly the same way.
Admiral Blair. It doesn't excuse it.
Senator Hatch. By the way, just to correct you, the report
expressly said that there was no political pressure involved,
so you might want to read it from that standpoint as well.
Admiral Blair. I'm sort of thinking small ``p'' political--
the intense overwatch, the high stakes.
Senator Hatch. Even there, they denied that there was any
of that--at least that's my recollection of it, and I think I'm
accurate on that.
I also want to praise General Hayden. He's been a
tremendous asset to the country. He's straightforward and of
course he's been very forthright with this Committee as he
served as DCIA. He's a very, very fine man.
What do you believe the IC has done to address the flaws in
the analytic tradecraft that contributed to the Iraq WMD
intelligence failure?
Admiral Blair. Some of the things I'm familiar with,
Senator--and in the little bit of looking at it that I've done,
which is not as extensive as yours--the re-examination of the
process of reaching an intelligence judgment, checklist of
checking assumptions and bringing in contrary views. And these
sorts of ways of putting together an assessment I think have
been now institutionalized within the intelligence community.
So I think the primary point there is to make it clear to
policymakers how well you know what you're saying, because you
have to come down and make a call. That's the intelligence
business.
But there are some calls that are 90/10 calls because you
have really good intelligence and some calls which are 51/49
calls because you didn't have that good evidence so you just
have to use your judgment. I think the main thing is the people
in the intelligence business have to make it clear to those who
have to make the policies that this one we are very sure of and
this one is based on making our best judgment based on
relatively limited information so that the policymaker can
avoid the wrong and make the right policies. I think that has
been drilled into the intelligence community and, if confirmed,
will certainly continue.
Senator Hatch. Madam Chairman, my time is up, but could I
ask one more question?
Chairman Feinstein. Certainly.
Senator Hatch. I'm the longest-serving person on this
Committee. It's a very good Committee. Naturally I'm on so many
other committees I can't give as much time to it as I'd like
but I devote a lot of time to it as well.
I particularly appreciate the time the Chairperson has
given over these years. She has taken it very seriously, and I
commend you to work with her as closely as you can.
But a fundamental concern of mine when it comes to the
questions of reforming the intelligence community has been the
critique that in the past the intelligence community has not
been a learning organization. When I speak of ``learning
organizations'' I think specifically of the military. When
soldiers, marines, airmen and sailors are not in combat, They
are constantly in training. Even in combat every engagement is
followed by a lessons learned exercise.
For example, if a new type of IED is detonated at 4:00 p.m.
this afternoon in Baghdad, that event is analyzed almost
immediately. By morning our commanders in the theater will know
about it. And then when not in combat the military is
constantly studying and training. The military, in short, is a
learning organization. Over your career in the military, a
professional soldier, sailor, airman or marine will spend years
in training and school in a twenty year career following their
initial training; an intelligence officer will spend only
weeks.
Now this is of particular concern to me because I know that
in this new conflict, the global war on terror, our
intelligence officers in the field are learning a great deal
about how to deal with armed groups, and I'm not sure if these
lessons are being captured into evolving tradecraft or are
taught to new officers or incorporated into an evolving
doctrine. I'm unaware of the institutional mechanisms that are
designed to do just that.
Do you believe that the IC is a learning organization?
Should it be? How often should officers be exposed to training
and studies? What are the institutions of learning in the IC,
and do you foresee changing those?
Admiral Blair. Senator, of those questions the one I can
answer unequivocally is number two. Yes, the intelligence
community should be a learning organization. I have only a
limited knowledge of the organizations to do it. I know there
is a CIA Center for lessons learned, because I happen to know
the director of it from my past life. I know there is a new
director of the Intelligence University and the education
component, as you say, is absolutely vital.
So this is another of those areas that I bring some
background within an organization that believed in learning. I
carry that belief with me and I'll dive into it and make the
proper changes there if they need to be made. And I look
forward to consulting with you about it.
Senator Hatch. Thank you, Admiral. I'm grateful for your
service and your willingness to do this. It's a difficult job
and a demanding job. I'm grateful for all the service you've
given all these years.
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you very much, Senator Hatch.
Admiral, it looks like we've come to the end of this hearing.
The Committee may have some questions for the record and
will try to get them to you by the end of today.
I'd like to mark this up as soon as possible. In order to
do so, we will need to see the answers to the questions, so the
quicker you can get those back to us, the quicker we can do our
markup.
Also I want to take a moment to thank Admiral McConnell and
General Hayden for their service to our country and to the
community. Those of us that have worked with them know that
they did the very best they could and I think did some very
strong and positive things for both the CIA and the community
that the DNI heads. So their services are very much appreciated
and I want to make that clear.
I would also like to express my welcome to your wife, Diane
Blair. Thank you for your patience during this hearing.
I believe that completes our questions.
Admiral Blair. May I make one final statement, Madam
Chairman?
Chairman Feinstein. Yes, you may.
Admiral Blair. As I think over the last three hours, it
seems we've been somber, negative and so on, and I just don't
want to end on that note. If you confirm me, going in, I'm
extremely optimistic about what we can do with intelligence for
this country. We've got tens of thousands of incredibly
dedicated, smart, hardworking people that want to do the right
mission. You've given us a lot of money. It's a public figure.
You've doubled it. We're going to win this puppy. This is not
something I'm discouraged about. This is not something I have
my tail between my legs about, nor does the entire community.
We've got a mission. We're going to do it great, we're going to
be worthy of the American people, and we're going to win it.
So I don't want to end on a note of how difficult this is
and how many mistakes have been made in the past. I wanted to
end on a note of the incredible energy and capability and
dedication and resources you've made available to the fine men
and women of the intelligence services who go out there and do
a great job.
Chairman Feinstein. I appreciate that. I think we all
appreciate the service of the men and women of the intelligence
community, and there are a lot of them there. It's true the
good things take care of themselves. The difficult problems and
the untoward happenings always come to our attention, so
necessarily we have to deal with them.
I think what's important is that we have an openness
between the Committee, between you, between the various
agencies and that you are forthcoming with us. There's nothing
that puts the Committee in a stone wall position more than
being refused data or having someone be untruthful with us. So
if we can have a candid, upfront, anticipatory relationship and
include in when things are developing problems and what the
solutions are and have an opportunity to discuss them with you,
I think that's very helpful.
I mentioned to you that one of our committee's best
meetings was when General Hayden invited us to come over to
Langley and we spent an hour and a half or so with them on
certain classified programs. The back-and-forth was very useful
and also enabled us to really understand the full course of
what was being discussed, kind of away from the harassment of
having to do two committees or be interrupted to go to a phone.
So I hope you will facilitate more of those kinds of
interactions. We're also going to put together a CODEL of the
entire Committee, if you can join us, to go to some of the
operations throughout the world so that the entire Committee is
able to see the on-the-ground effort, the difficulties of that
effort, and I hope come back much better informed for that
trip. It will be a hard-working trip, I promise you that.
Admiral Blair. I think it's a wonderful idea.
Chairman Feinstein. Thank you. Thank you very much.
If there's no further testimony to come before this
Committee, the meeting is adjourned.
[Whereupon, at 12:40 p.m., the Committee adjourned.]
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