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Negroponte Leaves Top US Intelligence Job to Return to Diplomatic
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=15A80E6:A6F02AD83191E16080A8708056BB2A149574F7DCC14957C0 Job changing hands
just over two years after President Bush signed law creating the post 
The top U.S. intelligence job is changing hands just over two years
after President Bush signed a law creating the post. The Office of
Director of National Intelligence was established to break down
bureaucratic barriers among U.S. spy agencies - a factor, critics say,
in the failure to detect the terrorist plot against the United States
on September 11, 2001. As VOA correspondent Gary Thomas reports,
outgoing Director John Negroponte's skills as a career diplomat proved
useful in the job.







President Bush, left, looks on as John Negroponte speaks after being
introduced as nominee for Deputy Secretary of State, 5 Jan
2007 President Bush's decision to name John Negroponte the first
director of national intelligence in February 2005 was something of a
surprise. Negroponte's expertise was as a career diplomat, not as a
professional in the intelligence field.

But analysts say those diplomatic skills were precisely what was
needed for the national intelligence director, whose chief mandate is
to coordinate the efforts of 16 diverse and secretive agencies that
are often fiercely protective of their bureaucratic turf - a task that
one analyst likens to "herding cats."

Fred Burton, vice president for counter-terrorism at the private
intelligence firm Stratfor, says Negroponte made a good start at
getting the agencies to work together.

"I think the timing and the politics at the time was instrumental to
the creation of this position," he said. "Let's face it, you had a
situation at hand where you had the two major players, the CIA and the
FBI, not sharing information. And someone had to come in to get these
individuals to 'play well in the sandbox' and to share. And I think
that that has been done, and the level of cooperation at that level
has never been better."

The post of director of national intelligence, or DNI, was created in
response to recommendations by the national commission that analyzed
the terror attacks on the United States in 2001. But as former CIA
Deputy Director John McLaughlin tells VOA, the law establishing the
position was rather vague about the extent of the national
intelligence director's authority, and Negroponte had to work hard to
establish it.

"The law that created the DNI's position was a rather spongy law, in
the sense that his authorities were not laid out with crystal
clarity," said McLaughlin. "There was a lot of ambiguity in the way
his authorities were described. And so he had to assert his authority
in a number of areas, in order to establish it in ways that the law
did not do with perfect clarity. And I think he's done this."

Now John Negroponte returns home, as he put it, to the diplomatic
world as deputy secretary of state. To replace him, President Bush
turned this time to a former intelligence professional, retired
Admiral Mike McConnell.







Mike McConnell makes remarks after being introduced by President Bush
at  the White House,  5 Jan 2007McConnell served as the senior
intelligence officer to Colin Powell when, as chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, Powell ran the first Gulf War in 1991. He later
became head of the National Security Agency, which deals with
technical intelligence and is the country's biggest spy agency. For
the past 10 years, he has worked for the consulting firm Booz Allen
Hamilton.

McConnell says he has stayed involved in intelligence issues since
leaving government.

"Fortunately, my work over the past 10 years after leaving government
has allowed me to stay focused on the national security and
intelligence communities as a strategist and as a consultant," he
said. "Therefore, in many respects, I never left."

John McLaughlin says McConnell enjoys an advantage that Negroponte
lacked in the job, because he already knows the inner workings of the
intelligence agencies.

"Mike McConnell will have a relative advantage because he will
understand at some fingertip level how these agencies work and what
their relative strengths and weaknesses and comparative advantages
are," he said. "This was something that was new to John Negroponte,
whose strength was on the substantive side - very strong - and on the
management and diplomatic side. McConnell will bring those strengths
to the plate here, but he will also have the background of extensive
time spent down in the trenches of the intelligence business."

Fred Burton, himself a former CIA intelligence officer, says the
combination of intelligence background and private sector experience
make Mike McConnell a good choice to be the second U.S. director of
national intelligence. "They are reaching back into an individual who
has spent a great deal of time in the intelligence community, but also
has that private sector experience now," he said. "I think that that
is a positive step, in my opinion."

Burton and other analysts say the DNI job remains a difficult one
because, while federal-level intelligence agencies are working
together better, there is still difficulty in getting them to share
information with state and local intelligence and law enforcement
officials.