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Home Front: WoT
Senate Approves Intelligence Bill
2007-10-04
WASHINGTON -- The Senate has scrapped its bid to obtain the archive of daily intelligence briefings given to the president on Iraq prior to the 2003 invasion. That request was among several controversial provisions dropped from an intelligence bill, leading to the measure's unanimous Senate passage Wednesday.
George Bush has been some lame duck President, hasn't he? It's getting to the point where he's piling up wins against the Dhimmicrats like the Marines are piling up wins against the Taliban ...
The provision sought to give the Senate and House intelligence committees access to all presidential daily briefs between 1997 and 2003 that referred to Iraq _ an attempt to determine whether the White House mischaracterized intelligence prior to the war. Senate Republicans objected, saying the documents had already been reviewed by an independent commission, according to a congressional official.
That would be the 9/11 Commission. The Dhimmis might have just asked their own Jamie Gorelick; she was front and center in the doings up until 2001.
The final version of the bill also dropped a requirement that the director of national intelligence conduct an assessment of the effects of global climate change on national security.
Because we couldn't possibly fight al-Qaeda if it meant sacrificing the polar bears ...
The overall legislation would give Congress' approval for the whole range of intelligence programs over the coming year, including spy satellites and eavesdropping, human spying and battlefield collection, along with recommended spending levels. Most of the bill is secret.

The House approved its own version of the bill in May, and the two chambers now must work out differences between the two versions.

The Senate bill also gives new power to the inspector general in the office of the director of national intelligence to conduct investigations into Pentagon programs, which consume about 80 percent of the nation's intelligence budget. The bill also requires the director of national intelligence to alert Congress when the cost of any major intelligence acquisition program grows by 20 percent or more. If it increases by as much as 40 percent, the president has to certify the program is necessary to national security and that there are no viable alternatives. Similar requirements already apply to major defense acquisition programs.
Posted by:Steve White

#3  Senate Approves Intelligence Bill

The Senate and "intelligence"? I assume this doesn't have anything to do with them?
Posted by: tu3031   2007-10-04 11:05  

#2  Might as well drop it. Nobody cares about last season's losing scores or strategies.... if your WINNING this season, and next season looks even more promising!
Posted by: Besoeker   2007-10-04 05:08  

#1  To hell with capitol hill. Buncha hack fools.
Posted by: newc   2007-10-04 04:15  

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