Analysis: Negroponte's Sudden Departure

http://www.upi.com/SecurityTerrorism/view.php?StoryID=20070105-115008-9310r

By SHAUN WATERMAN
UPI Homeland and National Security Editor

WASHINGTON, Jan. 5 (UPI) -- The sudden departure of Director of National
Intelligence 
John Negroponte to the State Department and his replacement by retired Adm.
 Michael McConnell risks creating a leadership vacuum in his new office,
says the 
incoming chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. 

The news of Negroponte's intended move to become deputy secretary of state, 
confirmed Friday by President Bush, comes as the post of his own deputy has 
been vacant since May, when retired Air Force Gen. Michael Hayden became 
director of the CIA -- and provoked alarm on both sides of the aisle in
Congress. 

"It is not acceptable for the top two jobs to be vacant at the same time,"
said 
Sen. John Rockefeller, D-W.Va., incoming chairman of the Senate Select
Committee 
on Intelligence in a statement. 

Calling himself "deeply troubled" by the news, and warning of a "void of
leadership" 
at the top of the management structure that is supposed to coordinate the
work 
of the 16 U.S. intelligence agencies, Rockefeller said he had approached
Senate 
Foreign Relations Committee incoming Chairman Joseph Biden, D-Del., with 
a view to ensuring that committee did not confirm Negroponte in his new job 
before his successor was confirmed to take over his current post. 

Biden's committee would have to schedule hearings for Negroponte to be
confirmed 
in his new post; Rockefeller's committee would have to hold hearings on his 
successor's confirmation. 

The apparent inability of officials to properly choreograph news of
Negroponte's 
departure, which leaked Wednesday afternoon, and the veiled threats from
Capitol 
Hill that the Senate would not allow Negroponte to move on until his
successor 
was confirmed emphasized the degree to which the White House seems to be
losing 
the ability to set the agenda as the administration moves into its final
years. 

"I will discuss with Sen. Biden a plan to sequence the confirmation hearings
to provide 
swift consideration of both nominations while ensuring that Director
Negroponte 
does not depart prior to the confirmation of his replacement," said
Rockefeller. 

Biden's office did not return calls seeking comment, but a senior
Rockefeller aide 
said that they had "just contacted" the foreign relations committee, and
were hoping 
to enter into discussions with them soon. 

"Before he (Negroponte) leaves," Sen. Kit Bond, R-Mo., the senior Republican
on 
the intelligence committee said, "we must have a new director ... on board
because 
there simply is no deputy to take over." 

"A premature departure creates an unneeded vacuum ... at a critical time." 

It was not immediately clear who the president might be able to designate as
an 
acting director of national intelligence to fill any gap between Negroponte
and his 
successor given the complex rules on personnel matters. 

The nomination of McConnell, a vice-president at Washington business and 
government consultancy Booz Allen Hamilton, who headed the National Security

Agency from 1992 to 1996, if confirmed would inaugurate the first period in
U.S. 
history since WWII when all the major intelligence posts were held by
serving or 
retired military officers, a development that caused concern in some
quarters. 

"The insistence of the administration to continually nominate career
military 
officials to lead intelligence posts," said Rep. Peter Hoekstra, R-Mich, the

senior-most Republican on the House Permanent Select Committee on
Intelligence, 
"leads me to question its commitment to including civilian oversight and
input in 
the nation's intelligence community." 

Hoekstra said he was "concern(ed) over the growing control of national
intelligence 
by the military." 

News of Negroponte's departure overshadowed reports, confirmed to United
Press 
International by a senior Senate Armed Services Committee staffer, that new 
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates has tapped retired Air Force Gen. James
Clapper, 
the recently departed director of the National Geospatial-Intelligence
Agency, or 
NGA, for the top intelligence post at the Pentagon. 

The staffer said that Clapper was "pretty well thought of," and had
"tremendous 
experience" having headed Air Force intelligence and the Defense
Intelligence 
Agency prior to taking the helm at the NGA, which interprets satellite
photos and 
draws maps for the U.S. military. 

It remained unclear what role, if any, the Senate Intelligence Committee
might 
play in Clapper's confirmation, said the Rockefeller aide. Clapper's
predecessor, 
Undersecretary for Defense Intelligence Steven Cambone, had met informally
with 
intelligence committee members during his confirmation process, but that was

before the intelligence overhaul. 

"Whatever arrangements are made they will be collegial," said the aide,
noting 
the close relationship between Rockefeller and Armed Service Committee
Chairman 
Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich. 

Negroponte's departure comes at a time of growing uncertainty about the 
effectiveness of the new director of national intelligence. Negroponte,
appointed in 
2005, was the first in the post designed by Congress as part of its major
overhaul 
of U.S. intelligence in the wake of its failure to predict or prevent the
Sept. 11 attacks. 

But many on Capitol Hill and elsewhere have questions about how effectively 
Negroponte was able to fulfill Congress' vision of leveraging budgetary,
personnel 
and policy authorities to force the 16 U.S. spy agencies to work together
more effectively. 

"Director Negroponte deserves credit for building the office from scratch
and starting 
the process of creating a true intelligence community," said Rockefeller.
But he 
added, "His successor will need to accelerate that process in order to
realize the 
vision of the intelligence reform legislation passed two years ago." 

"The next director of national intelligence will enter a changing
environment in the 
Congress and the Department of Defense," said incoming chairman of the House

Intelligence Committee, Rep. Silvestre Reyes. "This individual will have to
step in 
aggressively, and forcefully bring together the 16 Intelligence agencies."

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