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Undercover man to become US' chief spy after reshuffle
AP
, WASHINGTON
Saturday, Oct 15, 2005, Page 7
A top CIA manager who remains undercover will soon oversee the traditional human spying activities for the entire intelligence community, a new position created in the post-Sept. 11 intelligence reforms.
Publicly, he is referred to simply as "Jose," said US officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the plan's full details had yet to be released.
Jose's as head of the new National Clandestine Service ends weeks of debate over whether the CIA would retain its role as the primary agency responsible for traditional human spywork, as an increasing number of US national security agencies take on this type of work.
He'll broadly coordinate operations for the FBI, Defense Department and other agencies involved in human intelligence, or the information gathered by people, rather than by technical means.
Jose serves as the director of the CIA's clandestine service, which handles the agency's human intelligence gathering.
"This is another positive step in building an Intelligence Community that is more unified, coordinated and effective," National Intelligence Director John Negroponte said in a statement about the new service on Thursday.
Forming National Clandestine Service was one of more than 70 recommendations from US President George W. Bush's commission on weapons of mass destruction, which released a bruising report in March about the current capabilities of the 15 agencies that make up the US intelligence community.
The report concluded that the "toughest targets remain largely impenetrable" to human spying operations.
CIA Porter Goss drafted a plan that would place the National Clandestine Service under his chain of command. The plan's acceptance is viewed as a victory for the CIA.
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