[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 109 (Thursday, July 22, 2010)]
[House]
[Page H5962]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE INTELLIGENCE BUREAUCRACY: THINKING BIG INSTEAD OF THINKING SMART
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentlewoman from California (Ms. Woolsey) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Mr. Speaker, I imagine many of my colleagues have read
The Washington Post report on ``Top Secret America,'' and I hope they
are reacting as I am, with horror and outrage at the sprawling national
security and intelligence bureaucracy that has grown like a weed in
recent years. This series of articles should shock us into action, at
the very least leading us to question the conventional wisdom about how
best to keep America safe.
According to the Post, the counterterrorism and homeland security
apparatus has ballooned to some 1,271 government organizations working
in roughly 10,000 locations around the country. There are now so many
agencies analyzing so much information and issuing so many reports that
the whole thing has become redundant, unmanageable, and ineffective.
Actually, we can't measure its precise effectiveness because so much
of it is shrouded in secrecy. Much of the information about these
agencies is classified and therefore not subject to the scrutiny it so
badly needs.
If this system, which is so big that the Post refers to it as a
fourth branch of government, were a domestic social program, my friends
on the other side of the aisle would call it out-of-control spending.
{time} 1640
Yet somehow, when the antigovernment rhetoric starts flying, it is
never the wasteful defense and intelligence programs that come in for
the harshest criticism. I'd be curious to hear, for example, why we can
afford this behemoth, but we can't afford to pass a comprehensive jobs
package. The organizational chart for this system looks like an octopus
family on steroids, Mr. Speaker, and there are so many tentacles that
it makes the proper information sharing and dot connecting nearly
impossible.
I couldn't help but note the irony. If memory serves me, 9/11 exposed
the inability of our intelligence agencies to coordinate and
communicate properly with one another. So what have we done in response
to 9/11?
We've grown our intelligence infrastructure in a way that makes it
even harder to coordinate and communicate.
Of course, we would tolerate a little bit of bloat if the evidence
were clear that the system were working; but according to the Post's
analysis, both the Fort Hood shooting and the Christmas Day bomber
could have been intercepted early on if this bureaucracy hadn't been so
unwieldy, so inefficient and unresponsive. The intelligence was there,
but it never got into the right hands or it was lost in an avalanche of
other data.
Mr. Speaker, when it comes to protecting America, we are thinking big
instead of thinking smart. There has to be a better way. We can have
the intelligence capabilities we need at a fraction of the current
cost, and we can use much of the savings on initiatives that attack
terrorism at its roots--in places where despair and hopelessness lead
people to turn to terrorism in the first place. We need to dramatically
increase our investment in everything from agriculture to education to
democracy-building to conflict resolution in the trouble spots of the
world.
Maybe if we increased our global humanitarian outreach, if we
empowered nations instead of invading and occupying them, then top
secret America wouldn't even be necessary.
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