Intel Reform Failure...Good?
It may not be best, as Hunter points out, to strip the Pentagon of its authority over military intelligence budgets because it already accounts for nearly all of intelligence spending. By demanding that the bill contain provisions regulating driver's licenses, Sensenbrenner is forcing discussion about how to deal with a critical area of counterterrorism, according to Heritage Foundation Senior Fellow James Jay Carafano.
As proven by the rush job three years ago that formed the Department of Homeland Security, a botched reform is no reform at all. While the maze of 15 agencies and numerous committees that comprise the nation's intelligence community definitely needs restructuring, it should be done methodically.
We shall see.
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