Chairman Kean, Vice Chairman Hamilton, distinguished members of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States; it is an honor for me to appear before you today and to provide whatever modest assistance I can in your vital and extremely difficult task. Neither the American people nor our Federal, State and Local governments have yet been able to fully understand the long-developing crisis in National Security which suddenly revealed itself to us on 9/11. Neither have we been able to fully understand what is happening to us nor why it has happened. Consequently, it should be no surprise that we have not yet been able to set a clear course for the future and to determine what steps we must take to increase the likelihood that such disasters can be prevented in the future. Attacks by those who carried out the events of 9/11 have continued against American interests since that time, although none as yet taken place again within the United States itself. But that is just a matter of time. It falls to your Commission, therefore, to provide the clearest possible view of the causes of 9/11 - both the motivations and passions of those abroad who are consumed with hatred for us, as well as an understanding of the workings of the national security elements of government which served us well before 9/11 and those that did not. It is only with this information that you will be able to judge the adequacy of those changes which have been put in place since September 2002 and to highlight those things still be done. A difficult task, but one in which failure is not an option.
I hope that my experience in both government and the private sector over the past 35 years will be of some value to your efforts. For more than 30 years as an officer of the CIA, I served primarily in the Middle East (Beirut, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Cyprus, Turkey) and, as a consequence, devoted a large portion of my professional attention to the problem of terrorism and the efforts of our government and those of our allies to counter it. From 1992 until retirement from CIA, I was Associate Deputy Director for Operations. I then spent five years as Senior Advisor to the Director and Deputy Director of the FBI, with primary responsibility for improving the interaction and cooperation between CIA and FBI and in assisting the FBI as it expanded its relations and interactions with foreign law enforcement agencies. Counterterrorism was obviously a primary focus here, as it was during the following period when I chaired, on behalf of the Secretary of Defense, The DCI and the Director of the FBI, a commission to reform national counterintelligence (understood in this context to include the entire universe of threats, secretly implemented, which would cause unacceptable harm to our national and economic interests - terrorist organizations as well as hostile foreign intelligence services.) Finally, I now head a Washington based firm which provides training and on-the-ground assistance to individuals and organizations who must go into harms' way and face the dangers of terrorism in places like Iraq and Afghanistan. Obviously, my testimony and comments here today reflect only my own views and do not in any way pretend to represent the thinking of any of my previous employers or associates.
All Americans have personalized the ways in which the attacks of 9/11 came home to them. For me it was the awful understanding, sometime during the night of September 11-12, of the magnitude of my failure, and that of my colleagues at the FBI, CIA and DOD, to fully implement those systemic changes to our national security structure writ large that could have prevented this attack. Harsh, but true. Put even more baldly, if the elements of our national security structure - CIA, FBI, NSA, DoD, NSC, DOJ and others - had actually established and implemented those changes and improvements in the way each operated and interacted - separately as well as jointly - that we had told ourselves, the Congress and the American people had already been accomplished, then the story of 9/11 could well have been different. The tragedy is that we had the vision, but not the will.
The focus of this discussion is "Government Organization and Domestic Intelligence". I will not therefore address those elements of national security which are focused primarily abroad. Before moving on to what to some will seem to be unfair attention to the inadequacy of the domestic intelligence piece and those government organizations that are responsible for it, let me make clear my view that those foreign focused entities - CIA, NSA, DoD and others - have much improvement to make on their sides as well. This, however, is not the proper forum for that discussion.
Last July, John Hamre and I and five other colleagues collaborated on an article published in The Economist and entitled "America Needs More Spies" (July 10th, 2003). It focuses on the critical requirement to improve the collection of intelligence domestically. We asserted that the harsh facts of the 9/11 tragedy are that "secret members of a conspiratorial foreign organization operated clandestinely abroad and in this country for almost a decade before September 11th to plan, lay the groundwork for and successfully carry out a surprise attack on the United States. The activity was conducted by the leadership in Afghanistan, by plotters in the shadow of a Hamburg mosque, by operational travelers from abroad and by an established al-Qaida support structure based in this country."
The bulk of the criticism of the national security establishment's performance has centered on a failure "to connect the dots." While I concede a lack of analysis and interagency communication might have a contributed marginally to this intelligence failure, the main cause was a lack of effective collection against al-Qaida - both domestically and abroad. While academics working at leisure and with the benefit of hindsight might now claim 9/11 could have been/should have been prevented on the basis of the information available beforehand, I believe those available "dots" were insufficient. The reason? Because of a lack of effective collection, the USG did not have good information on the plans, capabilities and intentions of al-Qaida -- the basis for any defensive or offensive action against any enemy. My remarks address this issue in the context of domestic collection. Under current ground rules, domestic intelligence collection is the primary, if not exclusive, responsibility of the FBI.
Before proceeding further, however, we must clarify a distinction which - sometimes unwittingly and sometimes intentionally - has clouded this debate for years. That is, we must make the critical distinction between "collection" and "gathering" as it pertains to intelligence. While the FBI correctly highlights its unmatched ability to gather evidence - and with it information - there is nonetheless a National Security imperative which distinguishes intelligence collection from a similar, but different, function found in Law Enforcement.
"Gathering" which is not driven/informed by specific, focused National Security needs is not the same as "intelligence collection" as the DCI and the Intelligence Community understand that term. This collection is accomplished not incidental to law enforcement, but by conscious, specifically targeted, operational clandestine espionage activity, whether technical, human or a combination of both. "Collection", as I will use the term today, means those intelligence activities which are dictated by, and coupled to, a policy driven, strategically determined set of collection requirements. And it is accomplished by focused, clandestine operational activity.
The harsh reality is that the FBI is not engaged today in the business of intelligence collection. Both before and after 9/11, the FBI's focus on Law Enforcement to the exclusion of an intelligence approach was very clearly demonstrated by Director Freeh's response to a Congressional query on 2 October 2002 which asked whether the FBI was truly at war with al Qaida before 9/11. He responded that the Bureau was, in fact, at war and offered as support the fact that Usama Bin Ladin had already been indicted twice. Despite disclaimers by the FBI and others, conversations with colleagues across the board up until today, convince me and many other observers that real progress in domestic intelligence collection has not, in fact, been made. Further, there is not sufficient evidence that the changes and reforms underway, despite the intense attention which Director Mueller has given this vital subject every single day since 9/11, will in fact deliver the promised result.
At the request of several commissioners, I have attached a list of questions which I believe will help you determine the true course and progress toward establishment of a domestic intelligence collection regime in the FBI. If you pursue answers to them, I believe that you will be able to determine whether the assessments made below are, in fact, accurate. Those assessments are:
Put another way, the Special Agents involved are all "intelligence collectors". But where is the domestic intelligence?
Put another way, a formidable array of appropriate and legal intelligence collection mechanisms is available, but where is the domestic intelligence?
First, I do not believe that the oft-discussed MI-5 solution is either appropriate or necessary for America. While we must establish an effective process of domestic intelligence collection if we are to meet the increasing challenges we already face from hostile quarters, we do not need a British solution which was born of British history, British governance and unique British circumstances. On the other hand, we must not continue down the path of asserting that no changes are needed and that all will be well if we institute a few improvements. No, we must make significant changes. But we need an American solution, not a foreign one.
For a variety of compelling reasons rooted in our history, governance and unique circumstances, the clearly superior American solution would leave the responsibilities for counterterrorism and counterintelligence in the FBI. The task before the Commission, I believe, is to determine whether that is possible. Given the events of 9/11, however, it cannot remain there if we cannot be confident that effective changes have been implemented. The questions prepared for the Commission are intended to help you determine whether that is, in fact, the case.
If you agree that effective domestic intelligence collection is indeed at the heart of the matter and that it, not traditional law enforcement activity, is the only way to meet the challenges we face, then it is crucial that the Commission develop some metrics which will unable you and the President and the Congress and the American people to know whether we are going in the right direction. To this end, I have prepared a brief description of what a new domestic intelligence component within the FBI would look like. These ideas were drawn, first and foremost, from discussions over many years with counterterrorism and counterintelligence experts within the FBI. While it may no longer be politically correct for some to advocate the separation of law enforcement and national security activities which this model proposes, it nonetheless represents the best advice of scores of FBI personnel and would be welcomed as an effective partner by the rest of the intelligence community. Individually, each of the elements of the model requires discussion and none are unalterable. But any attempt to force them back into the traditional FBI law enforcement structures would certainly return us to status quo ante.
Some will claim that establishing a new organization along the lines described below is either, on the one hand, unnecessary or, on the other, too disruptive to contemplate in the midst of our war on terrorism. Those are the arguments for status quo which will leave us exposed to the same risks and dangers we faced before 9/11. In addition to providing a roadmap and way ahead for real domestic intelligence collection, these 11 points are also clear mile posts for the FBI, the President, the Congress and the American people. Within the next 12 months, the FBI should make clear, measurable progress and:
To summarize, I believe the intelligence failure of 9/11 was mainly caused by the lack of effective intelligence collection at home and abroad. In the domestic context, it is clear that the FBI needs to improve greatly its intelligence collection so that there are meaningful "dots" to connect and analyze. Some observers believe the FBI since 9/11 has made real progress in this direction. I and many others do not. I have attempted today to provide information and a construct for reaching an objective conclusion on this vital matter. The stakes are far too high to settle for anything short of absolute certainty that the FBI is on the right track and that the great gap in domestic intelligence collection has been closed before we are attacked again. I hope that the "mile posts" presented above will enable the Commission to judge the present reality against an observable, quantifiable end state. If you accept this end state, then the Commission should be able to determine by the end of its term whether we are indeed on the road to achieving it. The Commission's report can make this clear to the President, the Congress and the American people.
If the FBI can make this truly significant change and no longer cling to the law enforcement centered traditions and approaches which served them and the country so well against another set of adversaries in another time, then we should all get firmly behind their reform efforts and bring the resources of our country to bear to insure that they succeed. If, however, the FBI cannot fully make this transition - and this will be clear to you as you approach the end of the Commission's deliberations, then, I believe, you will have no choice but to propose some even more radical solution which places these responsibilities for counterterrorism and counterintelligence in another, perhaps new, organization. The stakes are just too high, and the time too short, to do otherwise.
Distinguished Commissioners, you have by far the most difficult task. If my contribution is helpful in you efforts, I am grateful to be of assistance. If I can help in you further deliberations, I will be available.
Thank you for inviting me to appear before the Commission. I am pleased to answer any questions you may have.
Mr. MacGaffin has held positions of significant responsibility within the Central Intelligence Agency, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and as a Consultant to various government and private sector entities. He has been involved directly and substantively in matters of intelligence collection, law enforcement, counterterrorism, counterintelligence and security for nearly 40 years.
Mr. MacGaffin served as an officer with the CIA for 31 years, retiring as a member of the Senior Intelligence Service. His assignments include serving as Chief of Station for 5 overseas locations and responsibility for activities throughout the world. At the time of his retirement Mr. MacGaffin served as the Associate Deputy Director for Operations - the second ranking position in the nation's Clandestine Service.
After leaving the CIA, Mr. MacGaffin became the Senior Advisor to the Director and Deputy Director of the FBI, responsible for long range enhancement of CIA/FBI relationships and for the development of the FBI's Five Year Strategic Plan and its global deployments. Counterterrorism, Counterintelligence and Security were the central focus of his responsibilities in this position.
In 1998, Mr. MacGaffin chaired a commission on behalf of the Secretary of Defense, the Director of Central Intelligence and the Director of the FBI to restructure the national Counterintelligence System. That effort, known as CI-21, was established by Presidential Decision Directive 75 signed by President Clinton and implemented by the Bush Administration. The Commission evaluated security, counterintelligence and other threats to the US Government and private sector in the decade ahead.
Since the conclusion of the Commission, Mr. MacGaffin has served as a consultant to various government departments (DoD, CIA) and corporations (Conoco, Gray Hawk Systems, Niagara-Mohawk, General Dynamics, Veridian) providing advice and assistance in a range of areas including counterterrorism, counterintelligence and security throughout the world.
At present Mr. MacGaffin heads AKE LLC, a Washington-based firm specializing in integrated risk solutions for a wide range of clients from international media, non-governmental organizations and others in the private sector. Mr. MacGaffin is a member of the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) Global Organized Crime Project, chaired by Judge William H. Webster. He serves on the Defense Science Board (DSB) Taskforce on Homeland Security and in 2002 was a member of the DSB Taskforce on Intelligence in Support of the War on Terrorism sponsored by the Secretary of Defense and the Director of Central Intelligence. He is a member of the CSIS Project on Transnational Threats and serves on the CSIS Private Sector Advisory Group which provides a forum for Fortune 500 corporate security executives and national security specialists jointly to develop public/private approaches to Homeland Security. He has also participated in a major public/private sector working group on the potential impact of terrorism on the Agriculture and Public Health communities sponsored by the ANSER Corporation.
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