Historical Dictionary of United States Intelligence

(Martin Jones) #1

NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE PRODUCTION BOARD (NIPB).


Established in 1979, the NIPB now operates under the National In-
telligence Council (NIC) and is chaired by an associate director of
central intelligence. In addition to advising the director of national
intelligence (DNI) on all production matters, it oversees several in-
telligence community (IC) programs that focus on minimizing un-
necessary duplication of effort and maximizing efforts to meet con-
sumer needs. The NIPB consists of the heads of the intelligence
community’s analytic and production organizations or other appro-
priate designees. It is the senior intelligence community advisory fo-
rum for achieving consensus on analysis and production issues.

NATIONAL MILITARY AUTHORITY. See DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE; INTELLIGENCE REFORM AND TERRORISM PRE-
VENTION ACT.

NATIONAL PHOTOGRAPHIC INTERPRETATION CENTER


(NPIC).The NPIC was a joint Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and
Department of Defense(DOD) unit that analyzed photographic and
imagery intelligence(IMINT) and produced reports and other products
for national-level customers, including the military. First established in
1953 as the Photographic Intelligence Division within the CIA, the unit
merged in 1958 with a statistical analysis group to form the Photo-
graphic Interpretation Center (PIC). The National Security Council
(NSC) transformed the PIC into the NPIC in 1961 by requiring it to
serve all national-level customers, including those outside the CIA. The
CIA’s Office of Imagery Analysis continued to serve CIA’s needs and
often duplicated and competed with the NPIC. The National Imagery
and Mapping Agency (NIMA) absorbed the NPIC in 1996. Imagery
interpretation is now within the jurisdiction of the National Geospatial-
Intelligence Agency (NGA).

NATIONAL RECONNAISSANCE OFFICE (NRO).The NRO is
the manager of America’s airborne and space reconnaissance pro-
grams. The NRO now contracts for, builds, controls, and uses the
hardware that goes into airborne and space reconnaissance. It also
constructs and uses sensors for the exploitation of intelligence in-
formation from emissions of factories, nuclear power plants, nu-
clear explosions, and the like, and from foreign military equipment

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