DOD eyes cyberspy exec

The Pentagon wants to create a national counterintelligence executive to help the Defense Department tap the abilities of all national counterintelligence forces and fend off cyberspies.

DOD's 2001 Annual Report to the President and Congress

The Pentagon wants to create a national counterintelligence executive to help the Defense Department tap the abilities of all national counterintelligence forces and fend off cyberspies.

The Pentagon disclosed its intent to create the new position in its 2001 "Annual Report to the President and Congress," a yearly outline of the department's goals and accomplishments.

The department has worked with the FBI and the CIA to develop a new counter-intelligence strategy known as CI 21, which is designed to fend off spies who exploit modern computer technology and the Internet to steal U.S. secrets.

The effort has had trouble attracting interagency approval, but now DOD intends to create a counterintelligence board of directors led by the FBI director and composed of the secretary of Defense, the deputy director of the CIA and a senior official from the Justice Department.

"The board will appoint a national [counterintelligence] executive who will serve as the nation's leader for CI," the report states.

In addition, DOD will form a new joint counterintelligence center that will provide "strategic focus and unity of effort" to support combatant commands—a concept developed and successfully tested during the Kosovo conflict.

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