|
Incomplete Intelligence Bill
by Rep. Joe Pitts
Called
upon to comment upon the recently passed intelligence bill, Pennsylvania
Congressman Joe Pitts characterized the National Intelligence Reform
Act of 2004 as “good, but incomplete." The legislation,
modeled after recommendations made by the 9/11 Commission, overhauled
the U.S. intelligence community. Congressman Pitts voted against
the bill even as it passed the House of Representatives.
"The
purpose of this bill was to enact the 9/11 Commission's most important
recommendations," said Congressman Pitts. "The House version
did just that, and I voted for it. This House-Senate compromise,
however, leaves the job half done. I voted against it because I
just don't feel it's right to leave a job this important unfinished.
What's in the bill is good, but the bill is incomplete."
Both
the House and Senate passed competing versions of this legislation
earlier this year. Negotiations over the bill stalled over two sticking
points: access to intelligence for military commanders on the battlefield
and the ability of illegal immigrants to obtain legal drivers licenses.
The
House bill included a provision clarifying that the establishment
of a Director of National Intelligence should not be construed to
preempt the ability of soldiers on the battlefield to access real-time
intelligence. The House bill also included provisions that prevented
illegal immigrants from obtaining drivers' licenses and put in place
stricter asylum standards, problems identified by the 9/11 Commission
as glaring weaknesses in our nation's defenses.
"I'm
pleased that the final product protected the access soldiers have
to the information they need to win. But the Senate seems intent
on ignoring some key points the Commission addressed - the ability
of terrorists to get into the country, obtain identification, and
abuse asylum rules in order to stay here. The 19 9/11 hijackers
had 63 legally obtained drivers' licenses among them. Mohammed Atta
got a speeding ticket two weeks before he crashed a plane in the
World Trade Center and was due in court shortly after the attacks.
He had a legal driver's license!
"Because
Senate negotiators won out on this provision the bill is much weaker.
It's our responsibility to finish the job. We will work to make
sure the House does so. But I'm concerned the Senate will never
address these important issues. That's just wrong and I hope the
American people tell them that."
Text
of press release from the office of Rep. Joe Pitts.
Email
the Editor |