[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 163 (Tuesday, December 18, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8136-S8137]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO CARYN WAGNER
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, I wish to recognize today an
extraordinary public servant and a dedicated leader of the U.S.
intelligence community, Ms. Caryn Anne Wagner, the Under Secretary for
Intelligence and Analysis--I&A--at the Department of Homeland Security.
After 30 years of devoted Federal service, Caryn came out of retirement
in 2010 when the President nominated her to the Under Secretary
position. She was confirmed for this position and has proven herself a
manager and leader of what had been a troubled agency. After nearly 3
years in the job, Ms. Wagner will retire again on Friday, December 21.
I am sorry to see her leave but wish her the very best as she prepares
for her next chapter.
I came to know Caryn when she was nominated to be the Under Secretary
for Intelligence and Analysis. Since then, she has drawn on the depth
and breadth of her experience in the intelligence community and the
Congress to build the foundations of a Homeland Security intelligence
office that will long outlast her tenure. The mission of I&A is to
provide the Department of Homeland Security with the intelligence and
information it needs to keep the homeland safe, secure, and resilient
and to bring to the intelligence community the information and analysis
from the Department's thousands of officers posted at our Nation's
airports, borders, and numerous other places around the world. It also
informs and empowers State, local, and tribal governments and law
enforcement on the frontlines of our homeland defense against
terrorism.
Caryn's many years of experience in the intelligence community,
combined with an indepth knowledge of the National Intelligence
Program, collaborative instincts, and insightful thinking on
intelligence matters have been key components of her success. She
previously held senior positions involving oversight of the collection
and analysis of intelligence to include: the Director of Analysis and
Production and Director of the Military intelligence staff for the
Defense Intelligence Agency, where she was responsible for development
and management of the General Defense Intelligence Program; the Defense
Intelligence Agency's senior representative to the U.S. European
Command and North Atlantic Treaty Organization--NATO--Assistant Deputy
Director of National Intelligence for Management and the first chief
financial officer for the National Intelligence Program; as well as the
Executive Director for Intelligence Community Affairs. In that role,
she was responsible for the Community Management staff, which provided
strategic planning, policy formulation, resource planning, program
assessment and budget oversight for the intelligence community. Adding
to her experience in the executive branch, she also served for a brief
time in the private sector, where she provided support to military
operations, intelligence planning, and intelligence systems
architecture development. She also served our Nation in uniform for 8
years as a signals intelligence and electronic warfare officer in the
U.S. Army, and in the Congress as budget director for the House
Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.
But I want to note in particular her role as Under Secretary in the
Department of Homeland Security. Caryn stepped into a relatively new
organization that had some notable problems,
[[Page S8137]]
to include an unclear mission, a shocking overreliance on a workforce
in which government contractors outnumbered employees, and major
shortfalls in office budgeting and spending. Drawing upon her
considerable experience, Caryn was able to shape I&A's personnel
structure to match as closely as possible that of the larger
intelligence community; thereby greatly decreasing the number of
contractors, flattening the Federal grade structure, and moving junior
and midgrade personnel into career ladder positions. She also addressed
and conquered basic management challenges that had previously gone
unnoticed and unaddressed. As a result, I&A now has a functioning
process to develop a budget request and execution plan; procedures in
place for hiring and training qualified personnel; and procedures for
identifying the need for policies, then writing, publishing and
enforcing them.
While overseeing the Department of Homeland Security's intelligence
functions, Under Secretary Wagner has promoted information sharing and
engagement with State, local, and tribal partners and has championed
the consolidation of the Department's counterintelligence mission. In
the critical area of cyber security, Caryn has overseen I&A's close
collaboration and analytic support to the Department's National
Protection and Programs Directorate.
Under Secretary Wagner has approached every issue with a pragmatic
and professional approach that should be a model for all who follow
her.
I would also like to note that over the past year or so, I have had a
series of dinners and informal gatherings with senior women in the
intelligence community. In that context, I have gotten to know Caryn on
a more personal level, and I hope that we will continue our friendship
after her retirement.
Our Nation owes this public servant a tremendous debt of gratitude. I
wish to thank her on behalf of the committee for her decades of
exceptional service to our country and to wish her and her husband Chad
the very best in the days and years ahead. Caryn can at long last
dedicate more time to her love of gardening, travel, theater going and
fine dining, and I wish her all the very best.
____________________