Thursday, December 11, 2008

What I LOVE ...

I know, I know. I am always a hundred million years late when it comes to music. But really I've been listening to M.I.A. for a while and just got her CD. Here is a picture of her with a great T-shirt that I totally want. Some people think that she is singing about terrorism in Paper Planes. I think she is just singing about gansta stuff that is popular on hip-hop stations and has been forever. Anyway! I think she is fabulous! Jeanie

Watch the video for Paper Planes:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7sei-eEjy4g
Read the lyrics and decide for yourself (these lyrics are close enough for me):
http://www.metrolyrics.com/paper-planes-lyrics-mia.html?page=19#comments

Note that you have to listen to the song before you read the lyrics!

Cool Flash link re state corruption ...

LOVE those Flash designers!

P.S. Again: I'm sorry the cover has nothing to do with this post! I just believe the world should CELEBRATE art!
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2008-12-10-corruptstates_N.htm?se=yahoorefer

A Spy CEO for Obama

By David Ignatius

Thursday, December 11, 2008; A25

What should President-elect Barack Obama do about the intelligence community? He has appointed the other top members of his national security team, but intrigue still surrounds his choices for director of national intelligence and director of the CIA. Prospective nominees are caught in a rumor mill that's worthy of Beirut.

As usual with anything involving intelligence, the left and the right are trading blows -- with the professional spooks caught in the middle. The only people who looked really happy at the CIA Christmas party last week were the journalists, who were feasting on the hors d'oeuvres and spicy gossip.

Rather than rush to answer "who" questions, Obama should spend some time thinking about what he wants from the intelligence agencies -- and whether the structure that's in place makes sense. More than any part of the government, the intelligence community needs good management, but that requires more clarity about the mission.

Administrations that don't know what they want from intelligence often pick the wrong people. Under Bill Clinton, for example, the clamor for a conservative Democrat led to the appointment of James Woolsey -- a smart lawyer, but someone with so little White House access he might as well have communicated by carrier pigeon. Clinton's next choice was John Deutch, who wasn't sure he wanted the job and, by most accounts, did it poorly. George W. Bush made a string of mistakes with intelligence, but among the worst was his appointment of Porter Goss, a former congressman who further demoralized a battered agency.

The "what" questions are crucial now because the intelligence community is still reeling from a messy reorganization in 2006. That ill-considered "reform" created a big new DNI bureaucracy while leaving everything else intact. The result was like a lumpy pudding. The CIA has gotten the brunt of the DNI's often duplicative supervision, partly because the other big intelligence agencies (the FBI, the NSA, etc.) are all protected by Cabinet officers.

The DNI's hand got heavier in July with a new executive order that specifies his authority -- especially to second-guess the CIA. The spy world is now in a dither about a new directive that would allow the DNI to designate a non-CIA person as his representative in foreign capitals, gutting the authority of the local chief of station. These bureaucratic machinations have left foreign intelligence chiefs wondering who's in charge.

Should the Obama administration continue the DNI structure? The answer is probably yes, because yet another reorganization would drive everyone bonkers. But what should this intelligence czar do? In a perfect world, he would be the Warren Buffett of intelligence. That is, the DNI would be the chief executive of a diverse portfolio of intelligence agencies. The director would maintain accountability and quality control but let the agency heads run their businesses.

What's needed is an experienced, first-rate manager "who is less interested in briefing the president in the morning than in ensuring that the community has the best tools and processes to make the PDB [President's Daily Brief] a world-class product," says one former top-level intelligence official.

I would add that the left-right slugfest -- in which liberals stress accountability and conservatives emphasize performance -- is wrong. The intelligence community needs more of both, urgently.

To avoid duplicating functions, it would make sense to move analysis into the DNI's shop -- and let a leaner, more aggressive CIA focus on spying. "We should be thinking about CIA the way the British think about MI6, with a career intelligence professional at the head who has a fixed term that transcends elections," the former top official argues.

The Great Mentioner (whom we pundits consult about who's being "mentioned" for top jobs) continues to spin out names for intelligence posts: Former CIA officer and Obama intelligence transition chief John Brennan was thought to be a likely CIA director until he was vaporized by left-wing opposition. Retired Adm. Dennis Blair is a leading candidate for DNI, but some wonder whether the community needs yet another ex-military official. Rep. Jane Harman gets high marks for strong oversight, but some worry about the Porter Goss problem of appointing a politician.

The right answer? Find the Buffett-like manager who can create a truly great U.S. intelligence system at DNI, then let that person pick a CIA director who will be nonpolitical. And then, as the late CIA Director Richard Helms liked to tell his trench-coated colleagues, "Let's get on with it."

The writer is co-host of PostGlobal, an online discussion of international issues. His e-mail address is davidignatius@washpost.com.

Bugging Blagojevich

Note that I just love the Capitalism cover. It doesn't really have anything to do with the FBI bugging Blago. -- Jeanie

WIRETAPS

Feds leave no trace behind when they sneak in

December 11, 2008

NATASHA KORECKI
Federal Courts Reporter

Casing a building. Picking locks in the dark. Planting bugs and listening in on conversations, often for just 30 seconds at a time.

It sounds like the stuff of a mob investigation.

But this was the likely mode of operation for federal investigators as they incredibly, surreptitiously recorded a sitting governor.

Winning a court order to bug Gov. Blagojevich's campaign office and home was no easy feat and came only after a series of rigorous legal thresholds were met by authorities, U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald said.

The break for the feds came with information provided by Blagojevich fund-raiser John Wyma. In October, Wyma told officials the governor was in a race to collect more than $2 million in cash from state donors before a new ethics law went into effect Jan. 1, according to charges.

The feds say they met the threshold to record Blagojevich because Wyma was witness to current alleged illegal conduct and they showed there was no other way to get the evidence (Wyma refused to wear a wire).

Then came the execution.

"They're very discreet in the way they go about doing it," said Joseph C. Ways, former No. 2 in the Chicago FBI office who now handles internal affairs for Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart. "You have people able to pick locks. They won't break a window or anything, nothing that leaves any signs of forced entry."

After the devices were set, the FBI couldn't listen in on any conversations they chose. Rather, agents wearing headphones broke in to conversations for about 30 seconds. If it didn't sound like criminal talk, they had to shut off the recording switch and wait two to three minutes before cutting in again to see if it changed direction.

Before agents are even allowed to listen in, they have to attend a special meeting explaining the rules and sign papers saying they'll abide by them, Ways said.

"The courts look at these as the severest invasion of privacy that an investigative agency can be asked to do," said Ways.

Blagojevich was charged Tuesday with shaking down campaign donors as well as candidates for an open U.S. Senate seat.

Former prosecutor Patrick Collins said the government did not meet the bar to record former Gov. George Ryan. But such evidence is invaluable in court, he said.


"The prosecution probably got more evidence in the last six weeks than they did in the preceding [five] years," Collins said.