Historical Dictionary of United States Intelligence

(Martin Jones) #1
Period of Professionalization, 1945–Present

At the end of the war, President Harry S. Truman and his advisors fol-
lowed American tradition and demobilized the armed forces, including
the OSS. Even with the emergence of the USSR as a serious threat and
the rapidly changing strategic situation, the Truman administration was
slow to recognize the need for the United States to have an intelligence
capability. As a stopgap measure, and bowing to the realities of the
emerging Cold War, Congress in January 1946 established the National
Intelligence Authority (NIA) and the Central Intelligence Group (CIG)
to coordinate intelligence, primarily among the feuding military ser-
vices and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), while the civilians
debated the merits of establishing a permanent professional civilian in-
telligence organization.
A good deal of public and policy opposition to a central civilian or-
ganization focused on possible threats to civil liberties and constitutional
government. Even President Truman wanted to be certain “that no single
unit or agency of the Federal Government would have so much power
that we would find ourselves, perhaps inadvertently, slipping in the di-
rection of a police state.” The military also opposed the creation of a cen-
tral intelligence organization for bureaucratic reasons, fearing some loss
of turf, access, authority, and money if strategic military intelligence
were to be taken away by a new intelligence-gathering agency. The FBI
was opposed, too, because it did not want to lose the foreign intelligence
and espionage capabilities in Latin America that it had acquired in the
1930s.
Yet, Congress enacted the National Security Act in August of 1947,
setting up the National Security Council (NSC), a coordinating and
policy-planning body consisting of the president, vice president, and the
secretaries of defense and state. It also established the Central Intelli-
gence Agency (CIA) to coordinate intelligence analysis so that never
again would the government suffer from too many intelligence agencies
working at cross-purposes. The act specified the CIA as an independent
agency reporting to the president through the NSC to coordinate intelli-
gence activities, provide intelligence analysis to political leaders, and en-
gage in special activities that the National Security Council may direct.
The director of central intelligence (DCI), whose position was created in
1946 to coordinate intelligence information, was designated under the

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