"President Bush will no longer get a separate daily intelligence
report on terrorist threats, ending a practice that began after the
Sept. 11 attacks, according to senior U.S. intelligence officials who
outlined changes affecting analysts at the nation's spy agencies Tuesday."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-intel20jul20,1,4823498.story?coll=la-headlines-nation

THE NATION
Daily Threat Briefing to End
As part of an overhaul of intelligence practices, portions of a report
to Bush on terrorism will be wrapped into the spy chief's summary.
By Greg Miller
Times Staff Writer

July 20, 2005

WASHINGTON — President Bush will no longer get a separate daily
intelligence report on terrorist threats, ending a practice that began
after the Sept. 11 attacks, according to senior U.S. intelligence
officials who outlined changes affecting analysts at the nation's spy
agencies Tuesday.

Instead, the most important elements of the so-called President's
Terror Threat Report will be incorporated into the daily briefing Bush
gets from Director of National Intelligence John D. Negroponte, the
officials said.

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, described the
consolidation as part of a broader effort to streamline intelligence
reports for top government officials while also taking steps to
prevent the sorts of analytic failures that contributed to erroneous
prewar assessments on Iraq.

Several changes are aimed at improving what is known as the
President's Daily Brief, a highly classified report that summarizes
major international developments tracked by the nation's spy agencies.

Although previously drafted by the CIA, the President's Daily Brief
has "become a community product" prepared by Negroponte's staff. It
routinely includes input from other agencies in the nation's
intelligence community, said one of the two officials who briefed
reporters Tuesday.

Both officials are senior officers on the National Intelligence
Council, a panel that reports to Negroponte and is increasingly
serving as a clearinghouse for the work done by analysts at the CIA,
State Department, Defense Intelligence Agency and the 12 other members
of the intelligence community.

The National Intelligence Council has traditionally served as an
in-house think tank for the intelligence community. It is best known
for producing the National Intelligence Estimates — reports that are
meant to convey a consensus view in the intelligence community on
issues confronting policymakers.

But in another significant shift, the officials said the intelligence
council would no longer be focused on building consensus among
analysts at various agencies and instead would call attention to
disagreements on crucial topics. When disagreements emerge, the plan
is "not to smooth them out but to highlight them," one official said.

The change is in response to criticism of prewar analysis on Iraq, in
which dissenting views were relegated to footnotes in reports that
reached erroneous, sweeping conclusions that Iraq had stockpiles of
banned weapons.

The officials declined to discuss intelligence community assessments
on specific topics. Other government officials said the National
Intelligence Council had recently completed several high-level
estimates on Iran that reflected a new emphasis on acknowledging
uncertainty in intelligence reports.

Unlike prewar assessments on Iraq, the estimates on Iran "are very
upfront about what they know, what they don't know and what level of
certainty they have in their judgments," said a government official
who has read the Iran reports.

One of the recent reports expressed relatively high confidence in
describing Iran's uranium enrichment program, said the official, who
requested anonymity. "But what it's for, what their intentions are —
there is less confidence in those areas," the official said.






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