Get the Finest Rolex Watch Replica !
 
We only sell premium watches. There's no battery in these replicas just like 
the real ones since they charge themselves as you move. The second hand moves 
JUST like the real ones, too. These original watches sell in stores for 
thousands of dollars. We sell them for much less. 
 
- Replicated to the Smallest Detail
- 98% Perfectly Accurate Markings 
- Signature Green Sticker w/ Serial Number on Watch Back
- Magnified Quickset Date
- Includes all Proper Markings
 
http://www.ineewatch.com/a







 
 





















President Bush, embracing nearly all of the recommendations of a blue-ribbon 
intelligence commission, said Wednesday he was creating a national security 
service within the
FBI to specialize in intelligence as part of a shake-up of the nation's 
disparate spy agencies.
ADVERTISEMENT

A fact sheet describing the White House's broad acceptance of the panel's 
suggestions said that three recommendations would be studied and that one 
unidentified recommendation ? which was classified ? was being rejected. The 
decisions come after a 90-day review led by the National Security Council's 
homeland security adviser, Frances Fragos Townsend.

Along with the list of changes being heeded, Bush also issued an executive 
order freezing assets of individuals or groups involved in activities related 
to the spread of weapons of mass destruction.

The changes being adopted include directing the Justice Department to 
consolidate its counterterrorism, espionage and intelligence units. Bush also 
will ask Congress to create a new assistant attorney general position to help 
centralize those operations.

The Justice Department and the FBI "have made substantial progress toward 
strengthening their national security capabilities and coordinating effectively 
with other elements of the government with related responsibilities, but 
further prompt action is necessary to meet challenges to the security of the 
United States," Bush wrote in a memo to intelligence community leaders.

In March, a nine-member commission led by Republican Judge Laurence Silberman 
and former Democratic Sen. Charles Robb put forward a scathing 600-page report 
on the intelligence community and its ability to understand and protect against 
the threat from weapons of mass destruction.

Bush asked for the Robb-Silberman review in early 2004 after it became clear 
that prewar intelligence on
Iraq was flawed. After a 13-month investigation, the commission concluded the 
intelligence community was "dead wrong" in almost all of its prewar findings on 
Iraq's arsenal.

Bush also asked the commission to study the sweeping intelligence reform law 
that Congress passed in December, which created a new national intelligence 
director to oversee the 15 agencies that make up the U.S. intelligence 
community.

One of the panel's recommendations being left for further review was one 
directing the director of national intelligence to hold accountable those 
organizations that contributed to the flawed assessments of Iraq's weapons of 
mass destruction programs. The administration said that the intelligence 
director was still reviewing the need for reforms "that may include greater DNI 
oversight and changes in organizational roles and responsibilities."

Among the 70 changes being accepted by the administration ? out of 74 
recommended ? were:

_Forming a new National Counter Proliferation Center to coordinate the U.S. 
government's collection and analysis of intelligence on nuclear, biological and 
chemical weapons. The task is now performed by many national security agencies.

_Asking Congress to reform its oversight of the intelligence community, a 
controversial proposal that could provoke turf wars and other difficulties on 
Capitol Hill. "Absent changes by Congress, IC (intelligence community) reform 
efforts will be handicapped and experience difficulty in reaching the desired 
outcomes," the administration response read.

? Putting
CIA Director Porter Goss in charge of all overseas human intelligence, or 
traditional spy work, done by government operatives.

_Proposing legislation that would extend the duration of electronic 
surveillance in cases involving foreign agents.

? Implementing new procedures for dissenting intelligence analysis to be 
allowed to float up to senior officials.

? Giving the intelligence director a staff of "mission managers" who will 
develop strategies for specific intelligence areas. As an example, the 
commission said the director could have a mission manager focused on a specific 
country, such as China.

It was left unclear what exactly National Intelligence Director John 
Negroponte's role would be in the president's morning intelligence briefing. 
The commission wanted him freed from the duty to give him more time to focus on 
the intelligence community's long-term priorities, which the White House said 
it supported without providing details.

The panel also had emphasized that the White House needed to put its full 
support behind Negroponte as he takes on the intelligence agencies' "almost 
perfect record of resisting external recommendations."

The commission's findings ? and the White House's acceptance of them ? follow 
numerous reforms already ordered by Congress, the White House and within 
government agencies themselves since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and the 
botched Iraq intelligence estimates.

They also follow a number of bruising critiques of the CIA, FBI, Defense 
Department and other elements of the intelligence community. The Robb-Silberman 
commission's March report was the most recent from an independent panel.


-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to