* Updated 19 Jan., 2012.
——
“About”: http://www.dni.gov/overview.pdf : The Director of National Intelligence (DNI) serves as the head of the Intelligence Community (IC) and is the principal advisor to the President, the National Security Council, and the Homeland Security Council (HSC) for intelligence matters related to national security. Also, the Director oversees and directs the implementation of the National Intelligence Program. The President appoints the DNI and the Deputy Director with the advice and consent of the Senate, etc. | “History”: http://www.dni.gov/history.htm : The idea of a Director of National Intelligence (DNI) dates to 1955, etc. | “About the ODNI“: http://www.dni.gov/faq_about.htm | “About the IC” (Intelligence Community): http://www.dni.gov/faq_intel.htm
—
Members of the Intelligence Community
—
—
Central Intelligence Agency – www.cia.gov : The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) is an independent agency responsible for providing national security intelligence to senior US policymakers. The Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (D/CIA) is nominated by the president with the advice and consent of the Senate. The Director manages the operations, personnel, and budget of the Central Intelligence Agency. The CIA is separated into four basic components: the National Clandestine Service, the Directorate of Intelligence, the Directorate of Science & Technology, and the Directorate of Support. They carry out “the intelligence cycle,” the process of collecting, analyzing, and disseminating intelligence information to top US government officials. In addition, the D/CIA has several staffs that deal with public affairs, human resources, mission innovation, protocol, congressional affairs, legal issues, information management, and internal oversight.
Defense Intelligence Agency – www.dia.mil : The Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) is a Department of Defense combat support agency and an important member of the United States Intelligence Community. With over 12,000 military and civilian employees worldwide, DIA is a major producer and manager of foreign military intelligence and provides military intelligence to warfighters, defense policymakers and force planners, in the Department of Defense and the Intelligence Community, in support of US military planning and operations and weapon systems acquisition. The Director of DIA is a three-star military officer who serves as principal adviser to the Secretary of Defense and to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on matters of military intelligence. The Director also chairs the Military Intelligence Board, which coordinates activities of the defense intelligence community. DIA is headquartered at the Pentagon in Washington, DC, with major operational activities at the Defense Intelligence Analysis Center (DIAC), Washington, DC, the Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center (AFMIC), Frederick, MD, and the Missile and Space Intelligence Center (MSIC), Huntsville, AL.
Department of Energy (Office of Intelligence & Counterintelligence) – www.doe.gov : The Office of Intelligence and Counterintelligence provides the Secretary, his staff and other policymakers within the Department timely, technical intelligence analyses on all aspects of foreign nuclear weapons, nuclear materials and energy issues worldwide.
Department of Homeland Security (Office of Intelligence & Analysis) – www.dhs.gov : The Office of Intelligence and Analysis is responsible for using information and intelligence from multiple sources to identify and assess current and future threats to the United States. DHS Intelligence focuses on five principal areas: improving the quality and quantity of its analysis; integrating the intelligence elements of the Department; sharing threat information and assessments with state and local governments and the private sector; ensuring DHS is an effective member of the national Intelligence Community; and strengthening relations with Congress.
Department of State (Bureau of Intelligence & Research) – www.state.gov : The Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR) provides the Secretary of State with timely, objective analysis of global developments as well as real-time insights from all-source intelligence. It serves as the focal point within the Department of State for all policy issues and activities involving the Intelligence Community. The INR Assistant Secretary reports directly to the Secretary of State and serves as the Secretary’s principal adviser on all intelligence matters. INR’s expert, independent foreign affairs analysts draw on all-source intelligence, diplomatic reporting, INR’s public opinion polling, and interaction with US and foreign scholars. Their strong regional and functional backgrounds allow them to respond rapidly to changing policy priorities and to provide early warning and in-depth analysis of events and trends that affect US foreign policy and national security interests.
Department of Treasury (Office of Intelligence & Analysis) – www.treasury.gov : The Office of Intelligence and Analysis (OIA) was established by the Intelligence Authorization Act for FY2004. The Act specifies that OIA shall be responsible for the receipt, analysis, collation, and dissemination of foreign intelligence and foreign counterintelligence information related to the operation and responsibilities of the Department of the Treasury. The Act established the Assistant Secretary for Intelligence and Analysis as the head of OIA and placed the office within the Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence (TFI).
Drug Enforcement Administration (Office of National Security Intelligence) – www.dea.gov : The Office of National Security Intelligence (NN) is responsible for providing drug-related information responsive to IC requirements. DEA/NN establishes and manages centralized tasking of requests for and analysis of national security information obtained during the course of DEA’s drug enforcement. The Office also centrally manages requests from the IC for information either reposited in DEA pursuant to the authority the Administration derives from Title 21 USC or obtained for the IC through existing assets operating pursuant to DEA’s law enforcement missions. The DEA has the largest US law enforcement presence abroad with 86 offices in 63 countries and it has over 33 years of operational experience in the foreign arena.
Federal Bureau of Investigation (National Security Branch) – www.fbi.gov : The National Security Branch (NSB) was established on September 12, 2005 in response to a presidential directive to establish a “National Security Service” that combines the missions, capabilities, and resources of the counterterrorism, counterintelligence, and intelligence elements of the FBI under the leadership of a senior FBI official. The NSB strengthens the integration of the FBI’s intelligence and investigative missions. Information collected through FBI investigations is analyzed, not just to build a case for prosecution, but for its predictive value. Intelligence, in turn, drives investigative strategies. In July 2006, the Weapons of Mass Destruction Directorate was created within the NSB to integrate WMD components previously spread throughout the FBI.
National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency – www.nga.mil : The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) provides timely, relevant, and accurate geospatial intelligence in support of national security objectives. Information collected and processed by NGA is tailored for customer-specific solutions. By giving customers ready access to geospatial intelligence, NGA provides support to civilian and military leaders and contributes to the state of readiness of US military forces. NGA also contributes to humanitarian efforts such as tracking floods and fires, and in peacekeeping. NGA is a Department of Defense Combat Support Agency. Headquartered in Bethesda, MD, NGA operates major facilities in the St. Louis, MO and Washington, DC areas. The Agency also fields support teams worldwide.
National Reconnaissance Office – www.nro.gov : The National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) designs, builds and operates the nation’s reconnaissance satellites. NRO products, provided to an expanding list of customers like the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the Department of Defense (DoD), can warn of potential trouble spots around the world, help plan military operations, and monitor the environment. As part of the 16-member Intelligence Community, the NRO plays a primary role in achieving information superiority for the US Government and Armed Forces. A DoD agency, the NRO is staffed by DoD and CIA personnel. It is funded through the National Reconnaissance Program, part of the National Foreign Intelligence Program.
National Security Agency/Central Security Service – www.nsa.gov : The National Security Agency/Central Security Service (NSA/CSS) is the nation’s cryptologic organization that coordinates, directs, and performs highly specialized activities to protect US information systems and to produce foreign signals intelligence information. A high-technology organization, NSA is at the forefront of communications and information technology. NSA is also one of the most important centers of foreign language analysis and research within the US government and is said to be the largest employer of mathematicians in the United States and perhaps the world. Founded in 1952, NSA is part of the Department of Defense and a member of the US Intelligence Community. The Agency supports military customers, national policymakers, and the counterterrorism and counterintelligence communities, as well as key international allies. Most NSA/CSS employees, both civilian and military, are headquartered at Fort Meade, MD, centrally located between Baltimore and Washington, DC. Its workforce represents an unusual combination of specialties: analysts, engineers, physicists, mathematicians, linguists, computer scientists, researchers, as well as customer relations specialists, security officers, data flow experts, managers, administrative officers and clerical assistants.
United States Air Force – www.af.mil : Air Force Intelligence plays a critical role in the defense of our nation, providing aerial reconnaissance and surveillance in every conflict and contingency operation since its establishment as a separate service in 1947. Air Force aerial reconnaissance and surveillance began with open cockpits and observers drawing crude maps as they flew, and rapidly advanced to photographic reconnaissance being taken from converted fighter and bomber aircraft. The establishment of the Air Force also coincided with the development of specialized aircraft for intelligence gathering. The Air Force continues to operate the ‘U-2,’ and has added unmanned aerial vehicles like the ‘Global Hawk’ and ‘Predator’ as intelligence platforms. Additionally, the Air Force is key to the development and use of intelligence gathered from space platforms. Air Force Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) played key roles during the Cold War in dispelling the bomber gap, the missile gap, and verifying both the presence and withdrawal of nuclear-capable missiles from Cuba in 1962. The end of the Cold War only increased the demand for intelligence, and Air Force intelligence continues to play the dominant role in the conduct and analysis of aerial reconnaissance and surveillance operations. Air Force ISR resources are imbedded in each Unified Command’s air component, down to the wing and squadron levels. Air Force ISR professionals work at every level of command and across the entire national intelligence community, continuously preparing for and conducting operations from full-scale conflict to peacekeeping, counterdrug, counterterrorism, and humanitarian and disaster relief. In 2006, the Air Force designated the first Headquarters USAF Intelligence Director (HQ USAF/A2) as a three-star general officer position and full Deputy Chief of Staff, Intelligence.
United States Army – www.army.mil : The US Army Intelligence department (G2) is responsible for policy formulation, planning, programming, budgeting, management, staff supervision, evaluation, and oversight for intelligence activities for the Department of the Army. The G2 is responsible for the overall coordination of the five major military intelligence (MI) disciplines within the Army: Imagery Intelligence, Signals Intelligence, Human Intelligence, Measurement and Signature Intelligence, and Counterintelligence and Security Countermeasures.
United States Coast Guard – www.uscg.mil : The United States Coast Guard is a military, multi-mission, maritime service within the Department of Homeland Security. The Coast Guard is one of the nation’s five armed services. With maritime security as its North Star, core roles are protecting the public, the environment, and guarding US economic and security interests. It performs those missions in any maritime region in which those interests may be at risk, including America’s ports, coastal waters, offshore regions, inland waterways, and international waters. To assist in accomplishing the many diverse missions of the Coast Guard, senior leadership, and operational commanders rely on the Coast Guard Intelligence and Criminal Investigations Program. The Coast Guard became a member of the Intelligence Community on 28 December 2001.
United States Marine Corps – www.marines.mil : Within the Marine Corps, intelligence is an inherent component of the command decision-making process. Under Marine Corps doctrine, intelligence is considered the foundation on which the operational effort is built and the premise on which all training, doctrine, and equipment are developed. The Marine Corps Intelligence mission is to provide commanders at every level with seamless, tailored, timely, and mission-essential intelligence and to ensure this intelligence is integrated into the operational planning process. Because Marine forces are employed primarily at the tactical level, Marine Corps intelligence activities are oriented toward tactical support. The service allocates resources and manpower to develop and maintain specific expertise in the areas of human and technical reconnaissance and surveillance, general military/naval intelligence duties, human-source intelligence, counterintelligence, imagery intelligence, signals intelligence, and tactical exploitation of national capabilities. The Marine Corps’ Director of Intelligence is the Commandant’s principal intelligence staff officer and the functional manager for intelligence, counterintelligence, and cryptologic matters.
United States Navy – www.navy.mil : Established on March 23, 1882, Naval Intelligence is the oldest continuous serving US intelligence service. It is a global intelligence enterprise of over 20,000 uniformed and civilian personnel. The Naval Intelligence primary production organization, the Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI), located at the National Maritime Intelligence Center (NMIC) in Suitland, MD, is the lead Department of Defense production center for maritime intelligence. ONI supports a variety of missions including US military acquisition and development, counter-terrorism, counter-proliferation, counter-narcotics, customs enforcement and, through partnerships and information sharing agreements with the US Coast Guard and US Northern Command, Homeland Security and Homeland Defense. While ONI is the largest Naval Intelligence organization with the largest concentration of Naval Intelligence civilians, most of Naval Intelligence is comprises active duty military personnel, serving throughout the world.
——
Leadership / Bios and Photos - http://www.dni.gov/bios.htm
—
James R. Clapper, Jr. - National Intelligence Director
-James R Clapper Jr 6702 Sanger Hill Rd; Oriskany Falls, NY 13425-3833 [65+]
-?>James Clapper Charlottesville, VA 22901-7321 [Susan]
******
-David C Gompert 319 S Pitt St; Alexandria, VA 22314-3711 (703) 683-4775 [65+ / Cynthia A Gompert]
******
Stephanie O’Sullivan - Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence (PDDNI)
******
Robert Cardillo – Deputy DNI for Intelligence Integration (DDNI/II)
******
Andrew P. Hallman – Asst Deputy DNI for Intelligence Integration (ADDNI/II)
******
Dawn Meyerriecks - Asst DDNI; Acquisition, Technology and Facilities (AT&F)
-Dawn C Meyerriecks Purcellville, VA 20132 Email me »
******
Deborah A. Kircher - Asst DNI – Chief Human Capital Officer (CHCO)
-Deborah A Kircher 124 Martin Ln; Alexandria, VA 22304-7747 (703) 313-0690 [50-54]
******
Marilyn A. Vacca - Asst DNI; Chief Financial Officer (CFO)
******
Al Tarasiuk - Asst DNI; Chief Information Officer (CIO)
-Al Tarasiuk (Age 53) Herndon, VA
Email
Phone <<<Location: Herndon, VA, Reston, VA, Springfield, VA, Falls Church, VA. Possible Relatives: Sandra Tarasiuk. Name Appears As: Adolf Tarasiuk, Adolfo L Tarasiuk Jr.
******
L. Roger Mason, Jr. - Asst DNI; Systems and Resource Analyses (SRA)
******
Richard Fravel - Asst DNI; Policy & Strategy (P&S)
http://www.dni.gov/fravel_bio.htm - Immediately prior to this position, he served as the Chief Operating Officer (COO) at the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA). ..He is a member of the Central Intelligence Agency’s Senior Intelligence Service since July 1996.
******
Robert S. Litt - General Counsel (GC)
-Robert S Litt 4000 Rosemary St; Chevy Chase, MD 20815-5222 (301) 652-8562 [60-64 / Deborah G Litt, Rachel H Litt]
******
I. Charles McCullough III - IC Inspector General (IC IG)
******
Alexander Joel - Civil Liberties Protection Officer (CLPO)
-Alexander W Joel 13 Pepperell Ct; Bethesda, MD 20817-4663 (301) 365-5783 [45-49 / Hilary A Joel]
******
Shawn Turner - Director, Public Affairs (PAO)
******
Kathleen Turner - Director, Legislative Affairs (OLA)
******
Patricia Taylor - Chief, IC EEO & Diversity
******
Robert M. Bryant - National Counterintelligence Executive (NCIX)
******
Kshemendra Paul - Program Manager, Information Sharing Environment (ISE)
Chief architect, Office of Management and Budget. First job: “Lab technician at the National Bureau of Standards (now National Institute of Standards and Technology).”
| Kshemendra Paul | 48 | Reston, VA | View Details |
******
Matthew G. Olsen - Director, National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC)
******
Maja M. Lehnus - Director, National Counterproliferation Center (NCPC)
http://www.dni.gov/lehnus_bio.htm - Mrs. Maja Lehnus became the Director of the National Counterproliferation Center in January 2012. She came to NCPC most recently from her position as Director of the Weapons Intelligence, Nonproliferation, and Arms Control Center (WINPAC) since October 2007, having previously served as Deputy Director of WINPAC since December 2003. …Lehnus served as the Chief of the DCI’s Iraq WMD Review Group, etc.
-Maja M Lehnus 4208 Thorncroft Ter; Olney, MD 20832-2950 (301) 570-8215 [David S Lehnus]
——
The way the DNI ”Leadership” page appeared over a year ago
—
James R. Clapper, Jr. - Director of National Intelligence (DNI)
******
LTG John F. Kimmons, Director, Intelligence Staff
-John F Kimmons 225 Second Ave SW; Fort McNair, DC 20024-5123 [55-59 / Kathryn E Kimmons, Kurt Kimmons]
******
Peter Lavoy, DDNI for Analysis
-Peter Lavoy 1502 Mintwood Dr; Mc Lean, VA 22101-4113 (703) 442-8699 [Debra L Lavoy, Naomi Louison, J Saatlou]
*****
*****
David R. Shedd, DDNI for Policy, Plans, and Requirements
-David R Shedd 9701 Counsellor Dr; Vienna, VA 22181-3252 (703) 242-0655 [50-54 / Lisa A Shedd]
—
DDNI for Collection
—
—
Dawn Meyerriecks, DDNI for Acquisition and Technology
******
Robert S. Litt, General Counsel
******
Priscilla Guthrie, ADNI – Chief Information Officer
******
Paula J. Roberts, ADNI – Chief Human Capital Officer
******
Marilyn A. Vacca, ADNI – Chief Financial Officer
******
L. Roger Mason, Jr, ADNI – Systems and Resource Analyses
—
ADNI – Afghanistan/Pakistan
—
Kshemendra N. Paul, Program Manager, ISE
******
Sylvia L. Copeland, North Korea Mission Manager
Sylvia L. Copeland, North Korea Mission Manager
******
Alexander Joel, Civil Liberties Protection Officer
Alexander Joel, Civil Liberties Protection Officer
| Roslyn Ann Mazer | Washington, DC | 62 | View Details | |
| Roslyn Ann Mazer | Baltimore, MD | 62 | View Details |
******
Patricia Taylor, Chief, IC EEO & Diversity
******
Arthur House, Director of Communications
* http://www.dni.gov/house_bio.htm
Patricia Taylor, Chief, IC EEO & Diversity
******
Arthur House, Director of Communications
* http://www.dni.gov/house_bio.htm
—
Executive Secretary
Executive Secretary
—
Michael Leiter, (WAS) Director, NCTC (national “counterterrorism” center)
-Michael E Leiter 4532 Macomb St NW Washington, DC 20016-2753
******
Robert M. Bryant, National Counterintelligence Executive (NCIX)
******
Joseph DeTrani, Director, NCPC
******
Robert M. Bryant, National Counterintelligence Executive (NCIX)
******
Joseph DeTrani, Director, NCPC
******
Teresa Domzal, Chancellor, National Intelligence University
http://www.dni.gov/porter_bio.htm (and see below.)
******
Christopher A. Kojm, Chairman, National Intelligence Council
******
Christopher A. Kojm, Chairman, National Intelligence Council
-Christopher A Kojm 4716 44th St NW; Washington, DC 20016-4504 (202) 363-2359 [55-59 / Ann E Misback]
-Christopher A Kojm 4505 Amherst Rd; College Park, MD 20740-3633 (301) 864-7105 [Louis E Misback, Peggy A Misback]
——
ODNI Centers
—
CENTER for SECURITY EVALUATION (CSE) / NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT ACTIVITY (NIEMA) - SEE http://www.dni.gov/NIEMA.htm : NIEMA’S MISSION: Plan and manage the ODNI’s Emergency Management and Continuity programs and build an enduring, collaborative strategic system to ensure the ODNI can perform its Primary Mission Essential Functions (PMEF’s) and, etc.
—
Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA) - http://www.iarpa.gov/ : IARPA invests in high-risk/high-payoff research that has the potential to provide our nation with an overwhelming intelligence advantage over future adversaries. “IARPA by design does not have an operational mission, and its focus is on capabilities that the user community might want in the future, not on the requirements they have today.” IARPA is located at the University of Maryland, M Square Research Park in College Park, Maryland.
—
Dr. Lisa Porter, IARPA Director
******
Ardisson L. Lyons -Deputy Director
-Ardisson L Lyons 8015 Wolftrap Rd; Dunn Loring, VA 22027-1054 (703) 883-8027 [45-49 / Linda S Lyons]
—
—
Edward Baranoski - Office Director
******
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/frank-robey/7/367/105 - Past: Associate Group Leader at MIT Lincoln Laboratory; Senor Engineering Specialist at Emerson Electric; Member of the Technical Staff at Hewlett-Packard; Technician at Electro Devices Inc.—
Program Managers
—
David Coombs
Areas of Interest: Robotics and unmanned systems; sensors and perception; GPS-denied position and navigation; communications; mission management and autonomy; power solutions for extended duration missions; effectors and locomotion. | http://www.linkedin.com/in/coombs
******
Michael C. King
Biometrics; Computational Imaging.
******
Emily Kintzer - Smart Collection Program Manager
******
Chris Reed
Target tracking and Location, Communications systems, Navigation systems, Detection and Estimation, and Signal processing.
******
Adam Russell
Human performance/behavior, Cross-cultural understanding/training, Cognitive neuroscience, Neuroanthropology, Trust, Affiliation, Negotiation, Interpersonal and small-group dynamics, Cognition enhancement, Deception detection, Human performance in extreme environments, Genomics, Human-machine interfaces.
******
Derek Tournear
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/derek-tournear/20/1a8/8b2 | Space systems and sensors to enhance national security; New technologies to enable long standoff nuclear material detection.******
Sam Wilson
Areas of Interest: Autonomous vehicle systems for smart collection of data; Energy efficiency and harvesting for extended endurance operations; Biologically inspired movement for smart collections; Efficient flight-like movement through air or water for improved system performance; Human interface for autonomous systems (e.g., communications, navigation, launch/recover, transportation, and storage).
Areas of Interest: Autonomous vehicle systems for smart collection of data; Energy efficiency and harvesting for extended endurance operations; Biologically inspired movement for smart collections; Efficient flight-like movement through air or water for improved system performance; Human interface for autonomous systems (e.g., communications, navigation, launch/recover, transportation, and storage).
—
—
Peter Highnam - Office Director
-Peter T Highnam 206 N Lee St; Falls Church, VA 22046-3231 (703) 532-3865 [50-54 / Peng S Highnam]
******
Terry Purkable – Deputy Director
| Terry Lyn Purkable | Bethesda, MD | 52 | View Details | |
| Terry L Purkable | Mount Airy, MD | View Details |
—
Program Managers
—
Arthur Becker
Tactical Applications of Knowledge Discovery; Fusion of Multimodal Data; Information Sharing Technology.
******
Rita Bush
Jill Crisman
John Garofolo
Mary Harper
Mark Heiligman (no longer listed)
Jason Matheny
Heather McCallum-Bayliss
Brad Minnery
Dewey Murdick
—
—
-Peter D Haaland 3061 Porter St NW; Washington, DC 20008-3272 (202) 248-4206 [50-54 / Belinda J Haaland, Erika J Haaland] Prior: Louisville, CO (2008)
******
Dennis Polla – Acting Office Director
—
Program Managers
—
Mark Heiligman
Marc Manheimer
Michael Mandelberg (no longer listed here)
Karl Roenigk
William Vanderlinde
W. Konrad Vesey
—
Information Sharing Environment (ISE) - http://www.ise.gov/ (“Information sharing site that focuses on counter-terrorism & national security.”)
Define ISE Mission Processes – End-to-end mission process improvement is at the heart of building the ISE. The primary focus of the ISE is any mission process, anywhere, which has a material impact on detecting, preventing, disrupting, responding to, or mitigating terrorist activity. End-to-end mission processes are operated by ISE mission partners and directly support frontline law enforcement, public safety, homeland security, intelligence, defense, and diplomatic personnel, etc. | Nationwide SAR Initiative – The Nationwide Suspicious Activity Reporting (SAR) Initiative (NSI) builds on what law enforcement and other agencies have been doing for years—gathering information regarding behaviors and incidents associated with criminal activity—and establishes a standardized process whereby SAR information can be shared among agencies to help detect and prevent terrorism-related criminal activity, etc.
—
Kshemendra Paul - Program Manager (see above)
******
Michael J. Howell - Deputy Program Manager
Michael J. Howell - Deputy Program Manager
******
Nick Harris - Chief of Staff
******
David A. Bray - Executive for Innovation, Integration, and Interoperability
David A. Bray - Executive for Innovation, Integration, and Interoperability
—
National Counterintelligence Executive (ONCIX) - http://www.ncix.gov/about/index.html : “Our Mission” – Lead an integrated national CI effort against foreign intelligence threats to the United States. | ONCIX is part of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and is staffed by senior counterintelligence (CI) and other specialists from across the national intelligence and security communities. The ONCIX develops, coordinates, and produces: * Annual foreign intelligence threat assessments and other analytic CI products. * An annual national CI strategy for the US Government. * Priorities for CI collection, investigations, and operations. * CI program budgets and evaluations that reflect strategic priorities. * In-depth espionage damage assessments. * CI awareness, outreach, and training standards policies.
—
Robert M. “Bear” Bryant – National Counterintelligence Executive (appointed 21 Sep 2009)
—
In September 2010, ONCIX absorbed the DNI’s Special Security Center (SSC) and the Center for Security Evaluation (CSE). Read more about the merger HERE.
—
National Counterproliferation Center (NCPC) - http://ncpc.dni.gov/ : NCPC was founded on November 21, 2005 in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence to help the United States counter the threats caused by the proliferation of chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear weapons.
NCPC works with the Intelligence Community to identify critical holes in our WMD knowledge – resulting from shortfalls in collection, analysis or exploitation – and then develop solutions to reduce or close these gaps.
In conjunction with the policy community, NCPC also helps to identify long-term proliferation threats and requirements, and develops strategies to ensure that the Intelligence Community is positioned to address these over-the-horizon threats. ..To do this, NCPC depends not only on the 16 agencies of the Intelligence Community, but also partners across the US Government, in addition to experts in the private sector. ..Counterproliferation efforts aim to eliminate or reduce the threats caused by the development and spread of WMD, etc.
—
NCPC Leadership: http://ncpc.dni.gov/leadership.htm
—
Maja M. Lehnus – Director (see above)
******
Joseph DeTrani – Director (effective January 4, 2010) (no longer listed here; and see above)
******
Robert Walpole - Principal Deputy Director of the Center
—
STAFF –The majority of the NCPC staff are detailees from Intelligence Community agencies, as well as the Department of State, the Department of Defense, and the Department of Energy’s National Laboratories. NCPC has seven directorates [Global Biological Threat; Intelligence Integration; Interdiction & Networks; Military & Outreach; Resource Management & Investment; Science & Technology; WMD - Security Issues], each lead by a Deputy Director [names no longer listed in the following manner]:
—
Scot Lopp, Deputy Director for Intelligence & Action Integration
******
Kathy Faleris, Deputy Director for Requirements & Gaps Integration
******
Joe Pritchard, Deputy Director for Interdiction & Networks
******
Randy Tritt (Acting), Deputy Director for Resource Management & Investment
******
Dr. Lawrence D. Kerr, Deputy Director for Global Biological Threat
******
Dr. Melanie Elder, Deputy Director for Science & Technology
—
National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC) – http://www.nctc.gov/ : NCTC was established by Presidential Executive Order 13354 in August 2004, and codified by the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 (IRTPA). NCTC implements a key recommendation of the 9/11 Commission: “Breaking the older mold of national government organizations, this NCTC should be a center for joint operational planning and joint intelligence, staffed by personnel from the various agencies.” ..NCTC is staffed by more than 500 personnel from more than 16 departments and agencies (approximately 60 percent of whom are detailed to NCTC). NCTC is organizationally part of the ODNI. …NCTC’s core missions are derived primarily from IRTPA, as supplemented by other statutes, Executive Orders, and Intelligence Community Directives, etc. ..“Analyzing the Threat” By law, NCTC serves as the primary organization in the United States Government (USG) for integrating and analyzing all intelligence pertaining to counterterrorism (except for information pertaining exclusively to domestic terrorism). ..NCTC integrates foreign and domestic analysis from across the Intelligence Community (IC) and produces a wide-range of detailed assessments designed to support senior policymakers and other members of the policy, intelligence, law enforcement, defense, homeland security, and foreign affairs communities. Prime examples of NCTC analytic products include items for the President’s Daily Brief (PDB) and the daily National Terrorism Bulletin (NTB). NCTC is also the central player in the ODNI’s Homeland Threat Task Force, which orchestrates interagency collaboration and keeps senior policymakers informed about threats to the Homeland via a weekly update, etc.
—
Matthew G. Olsen – Director
******
******
Andrew M. Liepman – Principal Deputy Director
-Andrew M Liepman 3235 Juniper Ln; Falls Church, VA 22044-1608 (703) 241-8223 [50-54 / Mary P Tighe]
******
—
National Intelligence Council (NIC) – http://www.dni.gov/nic/NIC_home.html : “About”: The National Intelligence Council (NIC) is the Intelligence Community’s (IC’s) center for midterm and long-term strategic thinking, etc. READ MORE>>>http://www.dni.gov/nic/NIC_about.html “History”: The National Intelligence Council has produced “estimative” intelligence—forward-looking assessments of national security issues—for senior US policy makers since 1979. Its origins, however, go back to the aftermath of World War II. READ MORE>>>http://www.dni.gov/nic/NIC_history.html | Past NIC chairmen>>>http://www.dni.gov/nic/NIC_chairmen.html
–
Personnel - http://www.dni.gov/nic/NIC_personnel.html
—
Christopher A. Kojm – Chairman (2009-present)
-Christopher A Kojm 4716 44th St NW; Washington, DC 20016-4504 (202) 363-2359 [55-59 / Ann E Misback]
-Christopher A Kojm 4505 Amherst Rd; College Park, MD 20740-3633 (301) 864-7105 [Louis E Misback, Peggy A Misback]
******
Joseph Gartin - Vice Chairman, National Intelligence Council
Gartin was appointed Vice Chairman in March 2011. Over the past 25 years, he has served in a variety of leadership and analytic positions with the Central Intelligence Agency, Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the former National Photographic Interpretation Center, and the former Intelligence Community Staff’s Committee for Imagery Requirements and Exploitation. Immediately prior to joining the NIC, he served as Director for Leadership, Diversity, and Language Programs in CIA’s Directorate of Intelligence, providing corporate oversight of SI efforts to recruit, develop, and retain a world-class workforce. Previous assignments include Assistant Deputy Director of National Intelligence for the President’s Daily Briefing; Director and Deputy Director of CIA’s Office of Asian Pacific, Latin American, and African Analysis; and Issue Manager for Southeast Asia. He served on the CIA Korea Task Force during the mid-1990s and at a reconnaissance satellite operations center in the early 1990s
******
Vaughn F. Bishop – Vice Chairman (no longer listed here)
Bishop was appointed to the Vice Chairman position in July 2010. He previously served in the NIC as the National Intelligence Officer for Africa. Prior to joining the CIA in 1981, Dr. Bishop served as an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Emory University. He began his career at CIA as an analyst working on a broad range of African issues before becoming the Deputy National Intelligence Officer for Africa in 1984. Since then he has established and led a number of task forces on crisis situations including Somalia and Rwanda. Bishop has held a number of increasingly senior management positions including Chief of the Operations Center, Chief of Africa Division in the Directorate of Intelligence, DCI Representative to the Pacific Command, Deputy Director of the Office of Transnational Issues, Director of the Office of Asian Pacific, Latin American, and African Analysis, and Chief Operating Officer for the Directorate of Intelligence. He conducted his field work for his dissertation in Kano, Nigeria in 1969-1970. | http://www.linkedin.com/company/pherson-associates - now at Pherson Associates, LLC.
******
Matthew J. Burrows - Counselor, and Director of Analysis and Production Staff
Burrows joined the CIA in 1986, where he served as analyst for the Directorate of Intelligence (DI), covering Western Europe, including the development of European institutions such as the European Union. In 1998-1999 he was the first holder of the Intelligence Community Fellowship, and served at the Council of Foreign Relations in New York. Other previous positions included assignments as special assistant to the US UN Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, 1999-2001, and Deputy National Security Advisor to US Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill in 2001-2002. He is a member of the DI’s Senior Analyst Service. * ”Current Threat Assessment, FPC Briefing, March 24, 2010” (w/ pic): http://fpc.state.gov/138987.htm
******
Mark Roth - Chief of Staff
******
Casimir A. Yost – Director, Long Range Analysis Unit
-Casimir A Yost 5411 Spangler Ave; Bethesda, MD 20816-1800 (301) 229-2013 [65+ / Carol H Yost, Aubrey W Yost]
******
Joy M. Miller – Senior Advisor, Global Health Security (no longer listed here – office is presently listed as “vacant”)
Miller accepted her current position on the National Intelligence Council as Senior Advisor, Global Health Security in February 2010. Miller joined the NIC from the Defense Intelligence Agency, Directorate of Analysis and is a member of the Defense Intelligence Senior Level. ..Miller served as Chief Scientist, National Center for Medical Intelligence (NCMI), formerly known as the Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center from May 2006 until February 2010. At NCMI, Miller directed long-term intelligence forecasts on health threats and issues of concern to US interests worldwide; strategic planning for scientific and technical research; and management of external relations with domestic and foreign partner agencies to strengthen analysis and improve warning. Prior to this assignment, she served as a Senior Intelligence Officer and later as Chief of the Epidemiology and Environmental Health Division where she directly supported the Intelligence Community’s activities to provide earliest possible warning of emerging disease threats such as severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and avian influenza…After twelve years of private veterinary practice, she joined the California Department of Health Services as an epidemiologist in the Cancer Detection Section. She subsequently served eight years as a United States Air Force Public Health Officer, with assignment as the Chief, Air Force Health Surveillance and a unique follow-on tour with the Epidemic Intelligence Service at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
—
NIC / National Intelligence Officers
—
Jeffrey Burton – Acting National Intelligence Officer for Africa
******
Sean Kanuck – National Intelligence Officer for Cyber Issues
Kanuck was appointed as the first National Intelligence Officer for Cyber Issues in May 2011. Kanuck came to the NIC after a decade of experience in the CIA’s Information Operations Center, including both analytic and field assignments. In his Senior Analytic Service role, he was a contributing author for the 2009 White House Cyberspace Policy Review, an Intelligence Fellow with the Directorates for Cybersecurity and Combating Terrorism at the National Security Council, and a member of the US delegation to the UN Group of Governmental Experts on international information security. …Prior to government service, Kanuck practiced law with Skadden Arps et al. in New York, where he specialized in mergers and acquisitions, corporate finance, and banking matters. He is a member of the International Institute for Strategic Studies, and his academic publications focus on information warfare and international law.
-Sean P Kanuck 330 S West St, Apt 308; Alexandria, VA 22314-5928 [Ingrid Ellingsen]
******
Paul Heer – East Asia
******
Roger Kubarych – Economic Issues
-Roger M Kubarych 3 Erie St; Irvington, NY 10533-2607 (914) 591-4754 [65+ / Timothy Kubarych]
-Roger M Kubarych 420 Riverside Dr, Apt 11B1; New York, NY 10025-7773 (518) 329-7894 [65+ / Tim Kubarych, Gregory Kubarych]
-Roger Kubarych Copake, NY (518) 329-7894
******
Dr. Karen Donfried – National Intelligence Officer for Europe
| Karen E Donfried | Amherst, MA | 48 | View Details | |
| Karen Donfried | San Diego, CA | View Details |
******
Andrew B. Claster - National Intelligence Officer for North Korea
-Andrew B Claster 1800 N Nelson St; Arlington, VA 22207-3625 (703) 276-0748 [55-59 / Lucia S Claster]
******
Richard D. Kauzlarich – Europe (no longer listed here)
******
John M. Landry – Military Issues
General Landry was named National Intelligence Officer for Military Issues (previously titled Conventional Military Issues) in December 1993 after a distinguished career in the US Army. Before joining the NIC, he served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Guard/Reserve Affairs, Office of the Secretary of Defense. In 1989, he was assigned as Chief of Staff, VII Corp, US Army, Europe, a position he held during Operation DESERT STORM. Landry also was assigned to armored cavalry units in Europe and Vietnam, where he earned the Bronze and Silver Stars. He was an Assistant to SACEUR, commanded an Army Cavalry Squadron in Europe and an Armored Brigade in the 4th Division at Fort Carson, and later served as Chief of Strategic Plans and Policy on the Army Staff.
******
Alan Pino – Near East
-Alan R Pino 13129 Thornapple Pl; Herndon, VA 20171-3919 (703) 391-9481 [60-64 / Diana F Pino, Elise Pino, Alexander Pino]
******
Eugene B. Rumer – Russia and Eurasia
-Eugene “L” Rumer 5030 Van Ness St NW; Washington, DC 20016-1918 [50-54 / Sally Donnelly]
******
Lawrence K. Gershwin – Science and Technology
-Lawrence Gershwin 1201 Stable Gate Ct; Mc Lean, VA 22102-2516 (703) 790-0828 [Gwendolyn S Gershwin, Matthew Gershwin]
******
Neil H. Joeck – South Asia (no longer listed here)
******
Julie E. Cohen – Transnational Threats
Cohen was appointed the National Intelligence Officer for Transnational Threats in February 2009. Cohen is a career CIA officer and a member of its Senior Intelligence Service. She most recently completed a joint duty assignment as Chair of the National SIGINT Analysis and Production Subcommittee of the National SIGINT Committee. Previously she served as Group Chief for two different groups in CIA’s Counterterrorism Center, Office of Terrorism Analysis, worked in the Office of the Inspector General, and led teams of analysts covering the transitioning states of the former Soviet Union and Central Europe, European regional issues, and the Soviet military.
******
Melissa Applegate – Warning (no longer listed)
Applegate is on a rotational assignment from the Defense Intelligence Agency, serving as the National Intelligence Officer for Warning on the National Intelligence Council. Applegate is a career intelligence officer with 30 years of service. ..She has experience in a range of joint, combined, conventional, and unconventional intelligence and operational disciplines. Applegate was a military intelligence officer in the U.S. Army from 1981-1994; she held a variety of command and staff assignments, and participated in both Operation Just Cause in Panama in 1989 and Operation Desert Storm in 1991. She has a broad background in crisis management, asymmetric dynamics, and global trend analysis.
******
Andrew M. Gibb – Weapons of Mass Destruction and Proliferation (no longer listed here)
Gibb assumed his duties as National Intelligence Officer for Weapons of Mass Destruction and Proliferation in July 2009. Gibb joined the NIC from the CIA where he was a member of the Senior Analytic Service in the Directorate of Intelligence. He worked at CIA from 2000-2008 as an analyst on Middle East nuclear programs. From 1993-2000, Gibb covered similar issues as an analyst at DIA. ..Mr. Gibb was a National Security Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School from 2008 to 2009. Gibb served as a nuclear submarine officer in the US Navy from 1985 to 2002 and retired as an intelligence officer in the Navy Reserve in 2006.
******
John F. McShane – Western Hemisphere
McShane is the National Intelligence Officer for Western Hemisphere and assumed this position in February 2009. ..A career CIA officer, McShane is a member of its Senior Intelligence Service. He has served more than 25 years in the CIA and Intelligence Community and most recently completed a joint duty assignment as the CIA Representative and Instructor at the National Defense University. He served as Dean of the CIA’s Sherman Kent School for Intelligence Analysis prior to his assignment at the National Defense University. Other assignments included serving as Acting Director of the Directorate of Analysis and Production, National Security Agency; Director, Office of Asian Pacific and Latin American Analysis, CIA; and Issue Manager for Cuba, Haiti, and the Caribbean, CIA. In the early 1990s, he served as a Deputy National Intelligence Officer for Latin America on the National Intelligence Council and also as the Director for Latin America and the Caribbean on the National Security Council staff at the White House.
—
Special Security Center (SSC) – http://www.dni.gov/ssc/default.htm : The SSC exists to assist the DNI, in his dual role as head of the Intelligence Community (IC), and as the Security Executive Agent for US Government security clearance programs (pursuant to Executive Order 13467). SSC assists in the execution of DNI responsibility to share and protect national intelligence information throughout the IC, the US government, US contractors, state and local officials and our foreign partners, etc. | Org. chart: http://www.dni.gov/ssc/org_chart.htm
—
John P. Fitzpatrick – Director, and director of CAPCO
******
Gina Otto – Deputy Director
******
Ken Ehinger – Executive Officer
******
R. Wayne Belk – Dep. Director CAPCO
******
William F. O’Neill – Dep. Dir. Community Services
******
Gene L. Stampler – Dep. Dir. Oversight and Liason
******
Rick Hohman – Dep. Dir. Policy and Strategic Planning
——
——