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27 September 2006


http://usinfo.state.gov/xarchives/display.html?p=washfile-english&y=2006&m=September&x=20060926182525adynned0.6570703

26 September 2006

President To Declassify Intelligence Report on Iraq

Bush calls idea of reducing terrorism by leaving Iraq "preposterous"

Washington -- President Bush announced September 26 that he will release portions [below] of a classified intelligence report that he said the American news media mischaracterized as linking Iraqi security operations with an increased terrorist threat in the United States.

Speaking to the media September 26 alongside Afghan President Hamid Karzai, Bush said the classified National Intelligence Estimate completed in April, titled Trends in Global Terrorism: Implications for the United States, will be made available for public review.

Articles in major U.S. newspapers on September 24, citing anonymous sources, gave an impression that the report dealt principally with the relationship between Iraq and international terrorism, and stated that U.S. involvement in Iraq had made terrorism worse.

"Some people have guessed what is in the report and have concluded that going into Iraq was a mistake. I strongly disagree," Bush says.

"I think it's a mistake for people to believe that going on the offense against people that want to do harm to the American people makes us less safe," he said.

Terrorists are in Iraq and Afghanistan, he continued, because they seek to stop young democracies from developing. They use the struggles there as recruitment tools, he said, as Osama bin Laden previously used Somalia and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

"[T]o suggest that if we weren't in Iraq, we would see a rosier scenario with fewer extremists joining the radical movement requires us to ignore 20 years of experience," Bush said. The United States was not in Iraq when the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, occurred, he said, nor when the World Trade Center in New York first was attacked in 1993; nor when U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania were attacked in 1998, nor when the destroyer USS Cole was attacked in 2000.

"My judgment is: If we weren't in Iraq, they'd find some other excuse, because they have ambitions. They kill in order to achieve their objectives," he said.

The president reiterated his position that the U.S. government will do "whatever it takes" to protect its citizens, and that the best way to do that in the War on Terror is to defeat the terrorists overseas.

"We're not going to let their excuses stop us from staying on the offense," he said.

As for the National Intelligence Estimate, the president said he found it interesting that stories about the report, which was finished in April, did not appear in the press until now. "Somebody has taken it upon themselves to leak classified information for political purposes," he said, referring to possible attempts to influence the U.S. national elections on November 7.

Bush told reporters he has directed John Negroponte, the director of national intelligence, to declassify the document as soon as possible to stop speculation about its findings and any attempt “to confuse the American people about the nature of this enemy."

Negroponte also spoke about the intelligence report in remarks he made September 25 at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington. He said the recent media stories "left the incorrect impression that this [report] dealt principally with the relationship between Iraq and international terrorism."

In reality, the director said, the report "provides a broad, strategic framework for understanding the trends that will define the primary international terrorist threats to United States interests over the coming five years."

The process the report describes started years ago and still continues, he added. The segment on Iraq represents only a small portion of the overall report, he said.

A transcript of Bush’s remarks is available on the White House Web site. The full text [below] of Negroponte’s prepared remarks is available on Web site of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.

For more on U.S. responses to and policies about terrorism, see Response to Terrorism.

(Distributed by the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.go


http://www.dni.gov/press_releases/Declassified_NIE_Key_Judgments.pdf

Declassified Key Judgments of the National
Intelligence Estimate Trends in Global Terrorism:
Implications for the United States dated April 2006

Key Judgments

United States-led counterterrorism efforts have seriously damaged the leadership of al-Qa’ida and disrupted its operations; however, we judge that al-Qa’ida will continue to pose the greatest threat to the Homeland and US interests abroad by a single terrorist organization. We also assess that the global jihadist movement—which includes al-Qa’ida, affiliated and independent terrorist groups, and emerging networks and cells—is spreading and adapting to counterterrorism efforts.

We assess that the global jihadist movement is decentralized, lacks a coherent global strategy, and is becoming more diffuse. New jihadist networks and cells, with anti-American agendas, are increasingly likely to emerge. The confluence of shared purpose and dispersed actors will make it harder to find and undermine jihadist groups.

We assess that the Iraq jihad is shaping a new generation of terrorist leaders and operatives; perceived jihadist success there would inspire more fighters to continue the struggle elsewhere.

We assess that the underlying factors fueling the spread of the movement outweigh its vulnerabilities and are likely to do so for the duration of the timeframe of this Estimate.

Concomitant vulnerabilities in the jihadist movement have emerged that, if fully exposed and exploited, could begin to slow the spread of the movement. They include dependence on the continuation of Muslim-related conflicts, the limited appeal of the jihadists. radical ideology, the emergence of respected voices of moderation, and criticism of the violent tactics employed against mostly Muslim citizens.

If democratic reform efforts in Muslim majority nations progress over the next five years, political participation probably would drive a wedge between intransigent extremists and groups willing to use the political process to achieve their local objectives. Nonetheless, attendant reforms and potentially destabilizing transitions will create new opportunities for jihadists to exploit.

Al-Qa’ida, now merged with Abu Mus’ab al-Zarqawi’s network, is exploiting the situation in Iraq to attract new recruits and donors and to maintain its leadership role.

Other affiliated Sunni extremist organizations, such as Jemaah Islamiya, Ansar al-Sunnah, and several North African groups, unless countered, are likely to expand their reach and become more capable of multiple and/or mass-casualty attacks outside their traditional areas of operation.

We assess that such groups pose less of a danger to the Homeland than does al-Qa'ida but will pose varying degrees of threat to our allies and to US interests abroad. The focus of their attacks is likely to ebb and flow between local regime targets and regional or global ones.

We judge that most jihadist groups -- both well-known and newly formed -- will use improvised explosive devices and suicide attacks focused primarily on soft targets to implement their asymmetric warfare strategy, and that they will attempt to conduct sustained terrorist attacks in urban environments. Fighters with experience in Iraq are a potential source of leadership for jihadists pursuing these tactics.

While Iran, and to a lesser extent Syria, remain the most active state sponsors of terrorism, many other states will be unable to prevent territory or resources from being exploited by terrorists.

Anti-US and anti-globalization sentiment is on the rise and fueling other radical ideologies. This could prompt some leftist, nationalist, or separatist groups to adopt terrorist methods to attack US interests. The radicalization process is occurring more quickly, more widely, and more anonymously in the Internet age, raising the likelihood of surprise attacks by unknown groups whose members and supporters may be difficult to pinpoint.


http://www.dni.gov/speeches/20060925_speech.pdf

Remarks by the Director of National Intelligence
Ambassador John D. Negroponte

Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars

Washington, DC

September 25, 2006

_______________________________________________________________

AS PREPARED FOR DELIVERY

Thank you for that very kind introduction, Lee. I'm delighted to be here at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars this evening and pleased to see many good friends in attendance.

Tonight I would like to focus on a public policy concern that I think is relevant to Wilson Center.s broad agenda and narrow it down a bit as I go to address some of my particular policy concerns as Director of National Intelligence.

The issue is America.s competitiveness in the fields of science and technology, which was assessed from an economic perspective earlier this year in an excellent report by the National Academies of Sciences and Engineering and the Institute of Medicine.

That report, called Rising Above the Gathering Storm, described a world that is being transformed from a scientific and technological perspective at a breath-taking rate of change -- and it offered a number of alarming statistics about how America is responding to that change.

I'll cite a few of those statistics:

These statistics should give us pause when we consider the fact that we are living in the midst of a sustained technical revolution.

Advances in technology, then, are accelerating, and thanks to globalization, they are spreading. The United States no longer corners the market on technology in general and in fact lags in some very significant segments of the market. State-of-the-art commercial technology is available globally and at very favorable prices. In 1990 we had a positive trade balance for high-tech products in the vicinity of $30 billion. In 2003, we had a negative trade balance for high-tech products in the vicinity of $30 billion.

The primary focus of the National Academies' report was on economic competitiveness. My concerns, in implementing intelligence reform, center on national security, which of course includes, but is by no means limited to, US economic competitiveness. Let me give you just a few examples of the challenges we face.

It is well known that young jihadists in Internet cafes, armed with laptops and DVD players, are constantly aiming to further extremist ideology and are attempting to replicate training via the Internet.

Islamic extremist fighters utilize improvised explosive devices and other weaponry, and their methods are becoming increasingly lethal due to technological advances. They are unleashing destruction in Iraq, Afghanistan, and most recently in Lebanon.

In other words, we are confronting adversaries who are achieving exponential improvements in their operations through widely available, cutting-edge technology in which their R&D costs are any CEO's dream: zero.

I could go on in this vein for some time, but I think the point is made that we've got a competitive challenge that will negatively impact our national security unless we take steps to deal with it right away.

The Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 understood this challenge. It created the position of Director of Science and Technology within my office and established the Director of National Intelligence Science and Technology Committee, comprising the principal science officers from various elements of the Intelligence Community.

These senior scientists have reviewed our S&T performance and identified three categories of "gaps" that we must address: mission gaps, capability gaps, and underlying process gaps. I'd like to talk to you a bit about each of these gaps, and then share with you our efforts to close them.

To cite a few mission gaps, we need to be able to do a better job:

With regard to capability gaps, we need to address some significant deficiencies. Among these:

Why are we experiencing these and other "gaps"? In part it's because our investment pattern is weighted very heavily toward big ticket, multiple year programs that yield incremental improvements against current priorities. We are becoming less agile than our targets at exploiting technology.and spending more time and money doing it.

Within the Intelligence Community and in discussions with our oversight committees on Capitol Hill, we are taking major steps to close our mission and capability gaps through process improvements and a very close study of how we can best make use of our resources. Our primary mission in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence is to ensure the full integration of the foreign, military, and domestic dimensions of intelligence into a unified enterprise. Our approach to S&T must be consistent with the integration of the Intelligence Community as a whole.

To foment creative, cost-effective basic research into critical intelligence challenges, we have proposed creating a parallel to the highly successful Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). I would note that the National Academies made a similar proposal vis-à-vis the nation's energy needs, but again, our initiative would focus exclusively on intelligence questions. The Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA) would conduct S&T research that:

To foster the indispensable element of speed in moving research into practice, we have initiated the Rapid Technology Transition Initiative (RTTI). Our objective here is twofold:

To ensure maximum return on the overall S&T investment within the IC, we have developed a unified IC S&T Investment Plan. This fulfills an important provision of the Intelligence Reform statute and already has generated valuable new insights on three key issues:

For example we are making some transformative breakthroughs in S&T analysis, particularly within the processing of voluminous data.

I can tell you that information technology is allowing our collectors and analysts to work more closely as a team. Today's technologies allow for far-flung collectors to combine the strengths of many different sensors and platforms, bringing perishable information home in time to protect the nation.

Last but not least, I would return to some of the data I cited with regard to the S&T human resources other nations are developing more quickly than we are. Science and technology-- basic research and practical applications of that research -- clearly are a function of human capital. That's as true in the field of intelligence as it is in business. Good scientists do good research.

We therefore have instituted numerous programs to attract, retain, and motivate scientists and technologists of the first rank. Through our Fellows program, for example, we provide leading IC researchers with untied funds to develop and pursue projects of their choosing. In our Ambassadors program, we enhance synergy across the Intelligence Community and the social networks of key technologists by assigning them for one year to other agencies.

By means of other rotational assignments and our new joint duty requirement for promotion to the senior ranks of the Intelligence Community, we are promoting an "expeditionary" mentality that brings researchers into contact with field and operational challenges. There have been many pay-offs already. If we are more effective in dealing with a major challenge such as locating high-value terrorists, it is at least partly due to the innovations of some of our most senior and most creative scientists.

So, yes, we do face a daunting set of challenges in today's world, and they are different challenges from those of the last century -- not only because our adversaries are different in kind and character, but also because their weapons and technical resources are different in kind and character. There are ways in which we can maintain and extend important advantages, however, if we act with a sense of urgency and if we embrace the imperatives and inevitability of change. From the perspective of dealing with international terrorists, proliferators of weapons of mass destruction, and unfriendly states that are masters of denial and deception, revolutionary advances in science and technology are essential.

As I noted earlier, we need to ensure that when it comes to S&T, speed, surprise, and synergy are on our side. This has to be a priority for us as we implement our comprehensive program of intelligence reform, and it is.

Before I close, I want also to talk about an entirely different subject. Last Sunday.s newspapers carried stories about a classified National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) completed last April, entitled Trends in Global Terrorism: Implications for the United States. These stories left the incorrect impression that this NIE dealt principally with the relationship between Iraq and international terrorism.

In fact, the Estimate provides a broad, strategic framework for understanding the trends that will define the primary international terrorist threats to United States interests over the coming five years. It attempts to describe a process that started years ago and is continuing. The discussion of Iraq represents a small portion of the overall NIE.

To provide some context let me elaborate on how I have generally characterized our assessments on previous occasions, often before Congress, and in ways consistent with April's NIE:

Thank you very much.