Historical Dictionary of United States Intelligence

(Martin Jones) #1
efficacy and appropriateness” of U.S. intelligence activities in the
global environment of the post–Cold Warperiod. The commission
released its report on 1 March 1996, titled “Preparing for the 21st
Century: An Appraisal of U.S. Intelligence,” which examined the
entire range of intelligence issues, such as the size of the intelli-
gence community (IC), collection capabilities, organizations, over-
all structure, management, analysis, and oversight. The report also
addressed the proposal to give the director of central intelligence
(DCI) direct line control of the major Department of Defense
(DOD) intelligence agencies—the National Security Agency
(NSA), the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), and the Na-
tional Imagery and Mapping Agency (NIMA). In 1996, Congress
passed legislation providing the DCI with greater power to coordi-
nate the IC but declined to give him direct control.

COMMITTEE OF SECRET CORRESPONDENCE.Created on
29 November 1775, the Committee on Secret Correspondence car-
ried out intelligence activities for the Continental Congress, corre-
sponded with agents, and established precedents for secrecy in its
operations. The committee included numerous well-known Revo-
lutionary War figures, including Benjamin Franklinand James
Lovell, the latter becoming Congress’s expert on codes and ci-
phers, thereby earning him the sobriquet of “the father of Ameri-
can cryptology.”
The committee employed secret agents abroad, conducted covert
actions, devised codes and ciphers, funded propagandaactivities,
authorized the opening of private mail, acquired foreign publications
for analysis, and established a courier system.
On 17 April 1777, the Committee of Secret Correspondence was
renamed the Committee of Foreign Affairs, but kept its intelligence
function. Matters of diplomacy were conducted by other committees
or by the Congress as a whole. With the creation of a Department of
Foreign Affairs—the forerunner of the Department of State—on 10
January 1781, correspondence “for the purpose of obtaining the most
extensive and useful information relative to foreign affairs” was
shifted to the new body, whose secretary was empowered to corre-
spond “with all other persons from whom he may expect to receive
useful information.” See alsoHOUSE INTERNATIONAL RELA-
TIONS COMMITTEE; SONS OF LIBERTY.

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