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Negroponte Selected As Intelligence Chief (Pelosi's snide comment at the end)
Guardian Unlimited ^ | Thursday February 17, 2005 10:31 PM | KATHERINE SHRADER

Posted on 02/17/2005 9:20:36 PM PST by delacoert

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush named John Negroponte, the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, as the government's first national intelligence director Thursday, turning to a veteran diplomat to revive a spy community besieged by criticism after the Sept. 11 attacks.

Ending a nine-week search, Bush chose Negroponte, who has been in Iraq for less than a year, for the difficult job of implementing the most sweeping intelligence overhaul in 50 years.

Negroponte, 65, is tasked with bringing together 15 highly competitive spy agencies and learning to work with the combative Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, the brand new CIA Director Porter Goss and other intelligence leaders. He'll oversee a covert intelligence budget estimated at $40 billion.

Negroponte, a former ambassador to the United Nations and to a number of countries, called the job his ``most challenging assignment'' in more than 40 years of government work.

He was widely believed not to have been the first choice, but Bush officials denied the president had had trouble filling the position.

If confirmed by the Senate, as expected, Negroponte said he planned ``reform of the intelligence community in ways designed to best meet the intelligence needs of the 21st century.''

Bush signaled that he sees Negroponte as the man to steer his intelligence clearinghouse. ``If we're going to stop the terrorists before they strike, we must ensure that our intelligence agencies work as a single, unified enterprise,'' Bush said.

Negroponte will have coveted time with the president during daily intelligence briefings and will have authority over the spy community's intelligence collection priorities. Perhaps most importantly, Bush made clear that Negroponte will set budgets for the national intelligence agencies.

``People who control the money, people who have access to the president generally have a lot of influence,'' Bush said. ``And that's why John Negroponte is going to have a lot of influence.''

Bush also announced he had chosen an intelligence insider to serve as Negroponte's deputy, Lt. Gen. Michael Hayden, the National Security Agency's director since 1999. As the longest-serving head of the secretive codebreaking and eavesdropping agency, Hayden pushed for change by asking some longtime personnel to retire and increasing reliance on technology contractors.

For years, blue-ribbon commissions have proposed creating a single, powerful director to oversee the entire intelligence community, but the concept didn't gain momentum until recommended by the independent Sept. 11 Commission.

Bush and other senior administration officials initially resisted, but reversed course after an exceptional lobbying effort by the families of 9/11 attack victims. Congress approved the new post in December as part of the most significant intelligence overhaul since 1947.

Yet intelligence veterans remain concerned about whether the job will wield enough power to lead government elements that handle everything from recruiting spies to eavesdropping to steering satellites.

Some say the authorities of the intelligence chief are too ambiguous as established in the legislation. The position was also excluded from the Cabinet to shield it from politics, requiring Negroponte to work directly with more senior personalities such as Rumsfeld.

According to one informed administration official who spoke on the condition of anonymity, former CIA Director Robert Gates was the White House's first choice, but he and other candidates declined the post over concerns about the job's authority.

White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card rejected reports that Bush had a difficult time filling the job. ``It's just not true,'' he said.

Bush has trusted Negroponte with trying assignments. He was ambassador to the U.N. when U.S. relations with the world organization were declining over the approaching Iraq invasion. Last year, Bush sent him to Iraq as ambassador during the middle of a bloody insurgency.

Negroponte has held official posts in eight countries, including ambassadorships in Honduras, Mexico and the Philippines. He also understands the intelligence demands of policy-makers, serving in President Reagan's National Security Council from 1987 to 1989.

Some Democrats on Capitol Hill expressed concern that Negroponte's departure from Iraq would create a crucial vacancy less than a month after the country's first democratic elections.

His nomination as U.N. ambassador was held up for half a year over criticism regarding his record as ambassador in Honduras from 1981 to 1985.

Critics suspected he played a key role in carrying out the Reagan administration's covert strategy to crush the left-wing Sandinista government in Nicaragua - an element of the Iran-Contra scandal.

Human rights groups also alleged that Negroponte acquiesced in rights abuses by Honduran death squads funded and partly trained by the CIA. Negroponte said during his U.N. confirmation hearings that he did not believe death squads were operating there.

In a statement Thursday, Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Pat Roberts, R-Kan., praised Negroponte's selection and said the panel would hold a confirmation hearing as soon as his duties in Iraq are complete. A Roberts aide said that could still be weeks away.

The committee's top Democrat, Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia, called Negroponte ``a sound choice.'' Others reacted more coolly.

Said House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California: ``As one who has disagreed with Ambassador Negroponte for over 20 years ... I am pleased that he is now in a position that doesn't have anything to do with policy.''


TOPICS: News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: negroponte; pelosi; queenofmean
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Pelosi's mouth is a gift that keeps on giving.
1 posted on 02/17/2005 9:20:38 PM PST by delacoert
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To: delacoert

That Democratic "working together" crap in action.


2 posted on 02/17/2005 9:26:31 PM PST by Darkwolf377 ("Drowning someone...I wouldn't have a part in that."--Teddy K)
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To: delacoert

I'll bet there are thousands of her constituents who would make the same reference to her intellience.


3 posted on 02/17/2005 9:29:06 PM PST by conshack
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To: delacoert

THEY STILL"DON'T GET IT". Will they EVER beam down here with the people??????


4 posted on 02/17/2005 9:32:06 PM PST by Uncle George
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To: delacoert

Right Nancy, the post has nothing to do with selling insurance.


5 posted on 02/17/2005 9:36:19 PM PST by Waco
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To: delacoert

" I am pleased that he is now in a position that doesn't have anything to do with policy.''

I am uncomfortable with the idea of a single bottleneck for intelligence information to the nation's leaders.


6 posted on 02/17/2005 9:43:36 PM PST by Western Phil
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To: delacoert


Does She know anything other than snide remarks?


7 posted on 02/17/2005 9:53:40 PM PST by msnimje
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To: delacoert

"If confirmed by the Senate, as expected, Negroponte said he planned ``reform of the intelligence community in ways designed to best meet the intelligence needs of the 21st century.''

Again, I question his appointment to such a powerful position. He has ZERO background in intelligence, so how will he know what the agencies need for the 21st century.

One of these days when I have time, I'm going to get my hands on everything I can find and read up on this man. He might be perfectly honest and upright.

He just strikes me as not knowledgeable enough for this postion. But then I didn't agree with pro-choice, pro-illegal, gungrabber Gonzales
either.


8 posted on 02/17/2005 10:07:30 PM PST by ETERNAL WARMING (We have the best politicians corporate money can buy)
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To: ETERNAL WARMING

bump


9 posted on 02/17/2005 10:24:04 PM PST by GeronL (The Old Media is at war with the New Media...... We are all Matt Drudges now.)
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To: ETERNAL WARMING
Again, I question his appointment to such a powerful position. He has ZERO background in intelligence, so how will he know what the agencies need for the 21st century.

By that logic, cabinet secretaries and agency heads would only be drawn from the ranks of career bureaucrats. (God help us all!)

Most sucessful people are highly adapatable and multifaceted. My problem w/ Negroponte is that his experience is primarily diplomatic, rather than executive.

10 posted on 02/17/2005 10:33:54 PM PST by clee1 (Islam is a deadly plague; liberalism is the AIDS virus that prevents us from defending ourselves.)
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To: msnimje
Does She know anything other than snide remarks?

Yes, which lane to get into to cross the Bay Bridge.

11 posted on 02/17/2005 10:44:00 PM PST by farmfriend ( Congratulations. You are everything we've come to expect from years of government training.)
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To: delacoert
Critics suspected he played a key role in carrying out the Reagan administration's covert strategy to crush the left-wing Sandinista government in Nicaragua - an element of the Iran-Contra scandal.


And this is negative, how?
12 posted on 02/17/2005 10:52:41 PM PST by Arnold Zephel
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To: ETERNAL WARMING
What the he** are you smoking? Let me know when you find us a perfect world to live in.

This gent is a pro among pros. His experience in Latin America alone is worth a dozen PHD's behind his name.

IMO we are most fortunate to have men of such caliber available to serve in the savage environment of Washington, these days. In the private sector the Ambassador could command a salary and a functional environment ten times his current pay-grade.
13 posted on 02/17/2005 10:53:09 PM PST by dk/coro
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To: ETERNAL WARMING

In my exerience the successful manager need not know anything in the subject area, but has to be a skillful diplomat


14 posted on 02/17/2005 11:49:45 PM PST by eclectic (Liberalism is a mental disorder)
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To: clee1

Those diplomatic skills will come in handy as he oversees 15 different agencies who are all competing for "turf".


15 posted on 02/17/2005 11:51:28 PM PST by ambrose (....)
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To: ambrose

Point well taken.


16 posted on 02/18/2005 12:11:25 AM PST by clee1 (Islam is a deadly plague; liberalism is the AIDS virus that prevents us from defending ourselves.)
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To: clee1
My problem w/ Negroponte is that his experience is primarily diplomatic, rather than executive.

In the '80s, Negroponte was killing communists in Honduras, Nicaragua and El Salvador. I'm very pleased with his style of "diplomacy".

17 posted on 02/18/2005 12:40:42 AM PST by 10mm
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To: ETERNAL WARMING
"He has ZERO background in intelligence, so how will he know what the agencies need for the 21st century. "

What? He's been an ambassador. What do you think embassies do? What do you think a station chief is?

18 posted on 02/18/2005 7:02:02 AM PST by bayourod ("Give us a chance and we'll give you a choice." RNC)
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To: delacoert
AND THE ARCHIVES KEEP GIVING --

MIDI - PUT ON A HAPPY FACE

Nancy Pelosi, we plead…put on a burqa, please
Appeasement has been your creed…put on a burqa please

You show it every time how much you loathe…the USA
Please climb up on that Golden Gate you've got…and fly away

You're a RAT, you're a liar…put on a burqa, please
Dear, your pants are on fire…put on a burqa, please

Like all the libs you are so filled with sleaze
Just put on a burqa, please

You're in the weasel axis…put on a burqa, please
First thought is raise our taxes…put on a burqa, please

You show it every time how much you loathe…the USA
Please climb up on that Golden Gate you've got…and fly away

You may say we are right wing…put on a burqa, please
But we say you are frightening…put on a burqa, please

Like all the libs you are so filled with sleaze
Just put on a burqa, please

19 posted on 02/18/2005 7:06:45 AM PST by doug from upland (Ray Charles --- a great musician and safer driver than Ted Kennedy)
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To: delacoert

He was FSO in Siagon.


20 posted on 02/19/2005 2:57:04 AM PST by larryjohnson (USAF(ret))
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