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Annual Report on FY 1997 Intelligence Community Activities
This report responds to a Congressionally directed action contained in the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1998. Referencing section 109 (as amended in 1996) of the National Security Act of 1947, the Act directs the President to submit an unclassified report ''on the requirements of the United States for intelligence and the activities of the Intelligence Community.'' In keeping with this requirement, this report identifies areas where intelligence is required to meet the national security interests of the United States, and reflects the priorities established by the Administration for implementation by the Director of Central Intelligence for FY 1997. The report includes significant accomplishments as well as initiatives that are being undertaken to strengthen the Community's performance. A classified annex also will be provided to the Congress to supplement information contained in this unclassified report.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
1998-03-10
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Unclassified Report to Congress on the Acquisition of Technology Relating to Weapons of Mass Destruction and Advanced Conventional Munitions, 1 July Through 31 December 2001
As directed by Congress, this report, submitted by the Director of the Central Intelligence, outlines the acquisition by foreign countries during the preceding 6 months of dual-use and other technology useful for the development or production of weapons of mass destruction (including nuclear weapons, chemical weapons, and biological weapons) and advanced conventional munitions. As stated, this report is submitted to Congress every six months.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2001-09-07
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Strategic Investment Plan for Intelligence Community Analysis
This document lays out a ten-year Strategic Investment Plan for Intelligence Community Analysis (SIP). It outlines the goals and future requirements for the 11 agencies of the National intelligence Production Board
(NIPB) and the implementing actions--budgetary, procedural, and policy--that are needed to build and maintain the Intelligence Community's core analytic
capabilities. It specifies deliverables beginning in FY 2001.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2000-01
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Unclassified Report to Congress on the Acquisition of Technology Relating to Weapons of Mass Destruction and Advanced Conventional Munitions, 1 January Through 30 June 2001
As directed by Congress, this report, submitted by the Director of the Central Intelligence, outlines the acquisition by foreign countries during the preceding 6 months of dual-use and other technology useful for the development or production of weapons of mass destruction (including nuclear weapons, chemical weapons, and biological weapons) and advanced conventional munitions. As stated, this report is submitted to Congress every six months.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2002-01-30
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Unclassified Report to Congress on the Acquisition of Technology Relating to Weapons of Mass Destruction and Advanced Conventional Munitions, 1 January Through 30 June 2000
As directed by Congress, this report, submitted by the Director of the Central Intelligence, outlines the acquisition by foreign countries during the preceding 6 months of dual-use and other technology useful for the development or production of weapons of mass destruction (including nuclear weapons, chemical weapons, and biological weapons) and advanced conventional munitions. As stated, this report is submitted to Congress every six months.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2001-02-22
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Unclassified Report to Congress on the Acquisition of Technology Relating to Weapons of Mass Destruction and Advanced Conventional Munitions, 1 July Through 31 December 1999
As directed by Congress, this report, submitted by the Director of the Central Intelligence, outlines the acquisition by foreign countries during the preceding 6 months of dual-use and other technology useful for the development or production of weapons of mass destruction (including nuclear weapons, chemical weapons, and biological weapons) and advanced conventional munitions. As stated, this report is submitted to Congress every six months.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
1999-02-09
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Unclassified Report to Congress on the Acquisition of Technology Relating to Weapons of Mass Destruction and Advanced Conventional Munitions, 1 January Through 30 June 1999
As directed by Congress, this report, submitted by the Director of the Central Intelligence, outlines the acquisition by foreign countries during the preceding 6 months of dual-use and other technology useful for the development or production of weapons of mass destruction (including nuclear weapons, chemical weapons, and biological weapons) and advanced conventional munitions. As stated, this report is submitted to Congress every six months.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2000-02-02
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2002 Annual Report of the United States Intelligence Community
This report, along with its classified annex, fulfills the requirement for an annual report as stated in the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1997, Sections 109(a) and 105(d) of the National Security Act of 1947, as amended. The Director of Central Intelligence (DCI) FY2002 Annual Report of the United States Intelligence Community provides insight into the activities and accomplishments of the Intelligence Community (IC). The mission of the Intelligence Community is to provide policymakers, military commanders, and law enforcement officials with timely, accurate intelligence on a wide range of national security issues. Within this context, sources and methods must be protected. Therefore, this report acknowledges only a small fraction of the total contribution made by the men and women of the Intelligence Community. This report, which is unclassified, addresses accomplishments of the Intelligence Community measured against the national security missions. A Classified Annex to the Annual Report provides additional detail and is provided to the Congressional Intelligence, Appropriations, and Armed Services Committees.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
Tenet, George J., 1953-
2003-01
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Long-Term Global Demographic Trends: Reshaping the Geopolitical Landscape
Global demographic trends will have far-reaching consequences for the key elements of national power: economic, military, and political within the larger global community. Allies and rivals alike will cope differently-- some better than others. Reforms require advance notice and gradual implementation that, given the immediacy of many of the world's demographic challenges, leave no room for complacency. This paper identifies the factors that will be most important in shaping the worldwide demographic landscape in 2020 and beyond. It examines how societies are coping with the broad range of demographic challenges and assesses what conditions may be key to transforming demographic trends into security issues of interest to the United States. This assessment draws on the results of a two-day strategic planning conference in October 2000. Experts from academia, the business world, and the Intelligence Community identified the trends they believed would be most important in shaping the global demographic landscape over the next decade. The format of this paper follows the format of the annotated briefing developed by RAND and other institutions. The top pages are briefing slides that outline and summarize the various elements of the paper. The bottom pages provide the analytic details and supporting evidence.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2001-07
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DCI Persian Gulf War Illnesses Task Force
Document contains twelve select DCI reports on Gulf War illnesses. Included are: "Modeling the Chemical Warfare Agent Release at the Khamisiyah Pit," "Status of the Efforts of the DCI Persian Gulf War Illnesses Task Force," "16 Suspect CW/BW Storage Sites," "Maymunah Munitions Depot," "Update on Potential Mustard Agent Release at Ukhaydir Ammunition Storage Depot," "CIA Support to the US Military During the Persian Gulf War," "Bob Walpole's Statement on Gulf War Task Force," "Creation of Director of Central Intelligence Persian Gulf War Illnesses Task Force," "Status of Director of Central Intelligence Persian Gulf War Illnesses Task Force," "Continuing Support for Gulf War Veterans' Illnesses Research," and "Khamisiyah: A Historical Perspective on Related Intelligence."
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
1997
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CIA Inspector General Report of Investigation: Improper Handling of Classified Information by John M. Deutch
John M. Deutch held the position of Director of Central Intelligence (DCI) from May 10, 1995 until December 14, 1996. Several days after Deutch's official departure as DCI, classified material was discovered on Deutch's government-owned computer, located at his Bethesda, Maryland residence. The computer had been designated for unclassified use only and was connected to a modem. This computer had been used to access [an Internet Service Provider (ISP)], the Internet, [Deutch's bank], and the Department of Defense (DoD). This report of investigation examines Deutch's improper handling of classified information during his tenure as DCI and how CIA addressed this matter. This unclassified report has been prepared from the July 13, 1999 version of the classified Report of Investigation at the request of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. Information in this version is current as of the date of the original report. All classified information contained in the original Report of Investigation has been deleted.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2000-02-18
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Report of Proliferation-Related Acquisition in 1997
The Director of Central Intelligence (DCI) submitted this report in response to a Congressionally directed action in Section 721 of the FY 1997 Intelligence Authorization Act. At the request of the DCI, the DCI Nonproliferation Center (NPC) drafted this report and coordinated it throughout the Intelligence Community. As directed by Section 721, subsection (b) of the Act, it is unclassified. Accordingly, the report does not present the details of the Intelligence Community's assessments of weapons of mass destruction and advanced conventional munitions programs that are available in various classified reports and briefings for the Congress. This report represents only a small part of the extensive interaction between the Intelligence Community and the Congress on nonproliferation issues. This report contains summaries by country of acquisition activities (solicitations, negotiations, contracts, and deliveries) related to weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and advanced conventional weapons (ACW) that occurred from 1 January through 31 December 1997. Countries that already have substantial ACW and WMD programs, such as China and Russia, as well as countries that demonstrated little acquisition activity of concern, are excluded from the report.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
1997
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Intelligence Update: Chemical Warfare Agent Issues During the Persian Gulf War
Since 1993, much attention has been focused on chemical warfare (CW) agents as a potential cause of, or contributor to, Gulf war illnesses (GWI). In spring 1995, the CIA initiated a comprehensive study of intelligence and other information to help determine whether US troops were exposed to any chemical, biological, or radiological agents and to examine intelligence for any potential causative factors of Gulf war illnesses. In February 1997, the Intelligence Community (IC) formed the Persian Gulf War Illnesses Task Force to study and declassify intelligence potentially relevant to veterans' illnesses issues and to expedite sharing of intelligence with the Department of Defense (DoD). In April 1997, the Task Force published a detailed unclassified paper on intelligence related to the Khamisiyah Storage Depot. The Task Force also studied potential releases of nerve agents at Khamisiyah, continued research on potential toxic agent exposure, and produced and declassified numerous other papers related to veterans' issues. This paper addresses the possibility of exposure only to chemicals generally accepted--or treated by Iraq--as chemical warfare agents. This paper reflects the results of our multifaceted investigation into the CW issue, examining information on CW agent releases, Gulf war Iraqi CW deployments, and Iraqi chemical agents and weapons. Results of our studies on biological and radiological agents have been published in separate reports. With the publishing of this paper, the DCI Persian Gulf War Illnesses Task Force has completed its work.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2002-04
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Address by John C. Gannon, Assistant Director of Central Intelligence for Analysis and Production to The National Security Telecommunications and Information Systems Security Committee, April 3, 2001
Whatever direction the cyber threat takes, the United States Government will be confronting an increasingly interconnected world in the years ahead. This is the core message of Global Trends 2015. Our country will have to develop, in response, greater communications and collaboration across the agencies of our own Government, with other governments, and with the corporate world. Interagency cooperation will be essential to understanding the cyber threat, as well as other transnational threats that will occur, and to responding effectively with interdisciplinary strategies. Consequence management of a major attack on a critical US infrastructure would involve virtually all agencies of the Federal Government, State, and local governments, foreign governments, law enforcement, the military, the medical community, and the media. This dramatic story has no definite ending today. Clearly, the Intelligence Community has a major challenge ahead to serve the American people.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2001-04
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Terrorist CBRN: Materials and Effects
This pamphlet contains a summary of typical agents and chemical, biological, radiological, or nuclear (CBRN) devices available to al-Qa'ida and other terrorist groups. It is not intended to be a summary of the overall threat from al-Qa'ida's CBRN program. Chemical agents covered include cyanides, mustard agents, nerve agents (sarin, tabun, and VX), and toxic industrial chemicals. Biological agents covered include anthrax, botulinum toxin, and ricin. Radiological and nuclear agents covered include radiological dispersal agents (RDD) (dirty bombs, unshielded devices) and improvised nuclear devices (IND) (implosion and gun assembled). This pamphlet also includes a list of additional online resources. A version without graphics is also available at /homesec/docs/cia/CBRN-threat-wo.pdf.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2003-05
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Central Intelligence Agency Intelligence Activities: Procedures Approved by the Attorney General Pursuant to Executive Order 12333
"Timely, accurate, and insightful information about the activities, capabilities, plans, and intentions of foreign powers, organizations, and persons, and their agents, is essential to informed decision making in the areas of national security, national defense, and foreign relations. Collection of such information is a priority objective that the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) shall pursue in a vigorous, innovative, and responsible manner that is consistent with the Constitution and applicable law and respectful of the principles upon which the United States was founded. Set forth below are Procedures that, in addition to and consistent with applicable laws, are intended to achieve the proper balance between the acquisition of essential information and protection of individual interests. The United States Government, including the CIA, has a solemn obligation to protect fully the legal rights of all United States persons, including freedoms, civil liberties, and privacy rights guaranteed by federal law, including in the conduct of intelligence activities. [...] These Procedures reflect the requirements of the National Security Act of 1947, as amended, the CIA Act of 1949, as amended, other applicable laws, and Executive Order 12333, as amended."
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2017-01-10
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[Executive Summary of Joint FBI-CIA Report on Extent of Saudi Government Support for Terrorism]
"Since the 11 September 2001 attacks, the United States Intelligence Community (USIC) has been working to assess Saudi Arabia's ties to terrorism, including the 2001 terrorist acts, in order to address questions arising about the country's support for organizations that may have provided support for previous al-Qa'ida attakcs. [...] Recent cooperation between Saudi intelligence and the USIC is largely driven by the Saudi royal family's recognition of the domestic threat posed to it by al-Qa'ida following several bombings by group inside Saudi Arabia, starting in May 2003."
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2005-09-01
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CIA Diversity and Inclusion Strategy
"CIA's success in achieving its national security mission depends on its ability to create a diverse and inclusive environment where all perspectives are heard, respected, and valued. By ensuring that every CIA officer is able to bring a full range of views and talents to our mission--through greater workforce mobility and flexibility, inclusive practices, and diversity--this Agency will be increasingly capable of closing persistent intelligence gaps and provide unique insight and support to its customers. To meet increasingly global and complex challenges, CIA must attract, develop, and retain a diverse workforce that we will leverage to enhance mission success. This three-year strategy defines a comprehensive approach to diversity and inclusion at a critical time for CIA, as we work to implement the Agency's modernization efforts and stand up the new Talent Center of Excellence. Advised by the Executive Diversity and Inclusion Council, CIA's Chief Diversity and Inclusion Officer (CDIO) will serve as the executive agent for this strategy. The CDIO, working closely with Agency's senior leadership, will ensure that we hold ourselves accountable for making progress against these important initiatives. This strategy is aligned with CIA's Strategic Direction for Talent and builds upon several Agency initiatives, including the Diversity in Leadership Study (DLS), the Director's Advisory Group (DAG), Agency Modernization Task Force (AMTF) and the re-launching of Employee Resource Groups as Agency Resource Groups (ARGs). It focuses on three key goals, which are in alignment with federal government and Intelligence Community guidance: Weaving Diversity and Inclusion throughout the Talent Cycle, Becoming an Employer of Choice, and Increasing Diversity of Leadership."
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
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Year One Executive Report: Building a Foundation
"CIA Director John Brennan commissioned the Diversity in Leadership Study (DLS) in 2014 to explore why minority officers were not rising to the Agency's senior leadership ranks at a rate comparable to non-minority officers. The Study, published in June 2015, provides a rigorous roadmap to improve the diversity of the Agency's leadership and build a more inclusive culture. The Implementation Team accomplished its first-year objectives, specifically by raising awareness about the Study, demonstrating progress in key areas through collaboration with institutional stakeholders and workforce Action Teams, and by developing baseline measures to monitor progress. Year Two of implementation will focus on tackling the complex challenges, and years three and beyond will center on institutionalizing progress to solidify the diversity of CIA's leadership and the inclusiveness of its culture."
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2016-10-31
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CIA Information Report: Soviet Naval Arsenals [September 7, 1954]
This one page CIA information report titled "Soviet Naval Arsenals" was declassified June 14, 2017. The report discusses the two observations of a reliable local observer of two soviet naval stockpiles in Moscow and Yaroslavl Oblasts.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
1954-09-07
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National Strategy for Combating Terrorism
"The struggle against international terrorism is different from any other war in our history. We will not triumph solely or even primarily through military might. We must fight terrorist networks, and all those who support their efforts to spread fear around the world, using every instrument of national power - diplomatic, economic, law enforcement, financial, information, intelligence, and military. Progress will come through the persistent accumulation of successes - some seen, some unseen. And we will always remain vigilant against new terrorist threats. Our goal will be reached when Americans and other civilized people around the world can lead their lives free of fear from terrorist attacks. There will be no quick or easy end to this conflict. At the same time, the United States, will not allow itself to be held hostage by terrorists. Combating terrorism and securing the U.S. homeland from future attacks are our top priorities. But they will not be our only priorities. This strategy supports the National Security Strategy of the United States. As the National Security Strategy highlights, we live in an age with tremendous opportunities to foster a world consistent with interests and values embraced by the United States and freedom-loving people around the world. And we will seize these opportunities."
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2003-02
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Mexico: The New Wave of Illegal Migration
This document, titled "Mexico: The New Wave of Illegal Migration," is a declassified examination by the Central Intelligence Agency on illegal migration patterns of immigrants from Mexico to the United States in the early 1980's. The document includes: Key Judgements, Dynamics of Illegal Migration, Characteristics of the Mexican Migrant, Benefits and Costs of Migration, and Mexican Government Perspectives. Furthermore, the document contains figures and tables illustrating various aspects of Mexican illegal migration.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2013-04-30
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Director's Advisory Group Implementation: Year Three Report to the Workforce
"In Year Three of implementation (June 2015 to June 2016), the DAG Implementation (DAG/I) staff continued to advance the ten recommendations from the February 2013 Final Report. [...] DAG/I maintained its approach to address the recommendations through a combination of: Working groups and project teams, with participation from Agency officers and subject matter experts across disciplines, concentrated on advancing the recommendations through discrete initiatives and deliverables. Learning events focused on educating the workforce on topics from the DAG Report, such as leadership, sponsorship, and workplace flexibility. Strategic outreach and communication across the Agency, aimed at sharing information and collecting feedback on current DAG initiatives, as well as disseminating and raising awareness of existing DAG products and resources. As a result of this approach, DAG Year Three has culminated in a set of specific products, proposals, and actions including."
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2016-07
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Studies In Intelligence. Volume 57, Number 3
This is an unclassified issue from the CIA publication, Studies In Intelligence. This issue includes the following articles: "'Analysis of WMD Proliferation,' The Need for Greater Multidisciplinary Sociotechnical Analysis: The Bioweapons Case"; "'The Less Apparent Component,' Tacit Knowledge as a Factor in the Proliferation of WMD: The Example of Nuclear Weapons"; "The Way of the Knife: The CIA, a Secret Army, and a War at the Ends of the Earth"; "Hiding in Plain Sight: Felix A. Sommerfeld, Spymaster in Mexico, 1908 to 1914"; and "Intelligence Officer's Bookshelf."
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
Vogel, Kathleen M., 1970-; Dennis, Michael Aaron; Benbow, Mark . . .
2013-09
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Studies in Intelligence: Unclassified Extracts from Classified Studies [Vol. 60, No. 4, 2016]
The unclassified extracts from 'Studies in Intelligence' Volume 60, Number 4 include the following articles on Intelligence in the Public Media: "'The Field of Fight, How We Can Win the Global War Against Radical Islam and Its Allies'" and "'The Pivot: The Future of American Statecraft in Asia;'" "'Spying Through a Glass Darkly: American Espionage Against the Soviet Union, 1945-1946;'" "'The Angel: The Egyptian Spy Who Saved Israel;'" "'Spies in the Congo: America's Atomic Mission in World War II;'" "'The Bletchley Girls -- War, Secrecy, Love, and Loss: The Women of Bletchley Park Tell Their Story;'" and "Intelligence Officer's Bookshelf."
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2016-12
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Studies in Intelligence: Unclassified Extracts [June 2017]
The unclassified extracts from 'Studies in Intelligence' Volume 61, Number 2 include the following articles on Intelligence in the Public Media: "Why Spy Now?: The Psychology of Leaking and Espionage in the Digital Age" and "Why Spy?: The Psychology of Espionage" by Dr. Ursula M. Wilder; "Intelligence in Defense of the Homeland: The Office of Naval Intelligence in World War I: Diverse Threats, Divergent Responses" by Dr. Eric Setzekorn; and "Cold War Spy Fiction in Russian Popular Culture: From Suspicion to Acceptance via Seventeen Moments of Spring" by Erik Jens. The volume also includes 10 Literature reviews.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2017-06
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Studies in Intelligence: Unclassified Extracts [December 2017]
The December 2017 unclassified extracts from "Studies in Intelligence" includes sections on Historical Perspectives, Intelligence Today and Tomorrow, and Intelligence in Public Media and Literature. Some of the articles included are: "Cooperation in the Libya WMD [weapons of mass destruction] Case" by William Tobey; "A Guide to the Application of Energy Data for Intelligence Analysis" by Dr. Brenda Shaffer; and "A Call for More Humility in Intelligence Analysis" by John S. Mohr. This issue also features several book reviews, and includes an "Intelligence Officer's Bookshelf", compiled and reviewed by Hayden Peake.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2017-12
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November 2017 Release of Abbottabad Compound Material
"In an effort to further enhance public understanding of al-Qa'ida, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) on 1 November 2017 released additional materials recovered in the 2 May 2011 raid on Usama Bin Ladin's compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. With the release of these materials, the information remaining in the collection that has not been released publicly includes materials that are protected by copyright; sensitive such that their release would directly damage efforts to keep the nation secure; pornography; malware; blank, corrupted, and duplicate files. The entire collection has been available to the US Intelligence Community and Department of Defense organizations for years. [...] CIA's 1 November 2017 release includes additional al-Qa'ida letters, videos, audio files, and communications, as well as routine family correspondence. As a result, it builds on the ODNI (Office of the Director of National Intelligence) releases that provided material relevant to understanding the plans and workings of terrorist organizations. [...] In addition to the computer files and digital media recovered in the May 2011 raid on Usama Bin Ladin's compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, CIA recovered Bin Ladin's journal. As part of the 1 November 2017 release, CIA made available photographs of the journal, which includes an entry the day before Bin Ladin's death."
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2017-11
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Change and Continuity: The National Intelligence Council, 2009-2014
"Government institutions change in response to the times. And so it was at the National Intelligence Council (NIC) during the five years (2009-- 14) I had the privilege to serve as its chairman. Those changes related to the unfolding impact of the 2004 Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act (IRTPA) that reorganized the Intelligence Community and created the director of national intelligence (DNI)."
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
Kojm, Christopher A.
2015-06
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Central Intelligence Agency Fleet Alternative Fuel Use and Vehicle Acquisition Report
In this report, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) summarizes their actions and performance "to develop methods to increase the Alternative Fuel Vehicle (AFV) percentage in its qualifying fleet and enhance its qualifying fleet's alternative fuel usage. This represents the CIA's report covering fiscal year (FY) 2008. This report covers the CIA's alternative fuel use and vehicle acquisition compliance pursuant to the requirements of the Energy Policy Act (EPAct) of 1992 (Public Law 102-486), as amended by the Energy Conservation Reauthorization Act of 1998 (Public Law 105-388) and Executive Order (E.O.) 13423, Strengthening Federal Environmental, Energy and Transportation Management, signed on 24 January 2007." This document includes several tables about meeting EPAct and E.O. 13423 requirements and acquisitions.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
2009