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This report posits a potential framework for congressional oversight of intelligence-related programs and activities using the existing committee structure and notification standards for the most sensitive intelligence activities: covert action and clandestine intelligence collection. The framework may assist Congress in assessing the premises justifying each of these activities, their impact on national security, operational viability, funding requirements, and possible long-term or unintended consequences. It accompanies two other CRS In Briefs on covert action and clandestine intelligence activities that address selected definitions (CRS Report R45175, Covert Action and Clandestine Activities of the Intelligence Community: Selected Definitions in Brief, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed]) and congressional notification requirements (CRS Report R45191, Covert Action and Clandestine Activities of the Intelligence Community: Selected Notification Requirements in Brief, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed]).
The formal structure and requirements for congressional oversight of the intelligence community originated with investigations by two congressional committees in the 1970s—in the Senate, chaired by Idaho Senator Frank Church, and in the House, chaired by Representative Otis Pike—that provided a basis for the establishment of today's Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI) and the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI). At its inception, congressional oversight of intelligence focused primarily on two themes: investigation of past abuses and organizational reform of the intelligence community. Those efforts have produced results. For example, the Church and Pike committees' investigations into unlawful and unethical intelligence activities provided a precedent for Congress to institutionalize oversight to ensure intelligence activities upheld the law and American values. Similarly, congressional oversight of intelligence has resulted in reform, such as the Intelligence Reform and Terrorist Prevention Act (IRTPA) of 2004, which provided the statutory basis for implementing recommendations of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States (the "9/11 Commission").
A prominent recommendation of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States was to strengthen intelligence oversight.1 Although congressional oversight of intelligence since the Church and Pike committees had resulted in several periods of reform, Congress had not been able to sustain the momentum it had generated earlier. As the Final Report of the 9/11 Commission put it,
Since the mid-1970s, Congress's oversight of the Intelligence Community (IC) has been a fundamental component of ensuring that the IC's seventeen diverse elements are held accountable for the effectiveness of their programs supporting United States national security. This has been especially true for covert action and clandestine intelligence activities because of their significant risk of compromise and potential long-term impact on U.S. foreign relations. Yet, by their very nature, these and other intelligence programs and activities are classified and shielded from the public. Congressional oversight of intelligence, therefore, is unlike its oversight of more transparent government activities with a broad public following. In the case of the Intelligence Community, congressional oversight is one of the few means by which the public can have confidence that intelligence activities are being conducted effectively, legally, and in line with American values. Covert action is defined in statute (50 U.S.C. §3093(e)) as "an activity or activities of the United States Government to influence political, economic, or military conditions abroad, where it is intended that the role of the United States Government will not be apparent or acknowledged publicly." When informed of covert actions through Presidential findings prior to their execution—as is most often the case—Congress has a number of options: to provide additional unbiased perspective on how these activities can best support U.S. policy objectives; to express reservations about the plan and request changes; or withhold funding. Although Congress does not have the authority to approve or disapprove covert actions, it can have (and has had) influence on the President's decision. The term clandestine describes a methodology for a range of activities wherein both the role of the United States and the activity itself are secret. Clandestine activities can involve traditional intelligence or unconventional military assets. Like covert action, their impact can be strategic even though a specific activity may be tactical in scope. Their secret character suggests the potential harm to sources and methods in the event of an unauthorized or unanticipated public disclosure. Congressional oversight of covert action can be organized around a framework of five issue areas: (1) the activity's statutory parameters, (2) U.S. national security interests, (3) U.S. foreign policy objectives, (4) funding and implementation, and (5) risk assessment. These categories enable Congress to analyze and assess the specific elements of each activity from a strategic point of view. By extension, Congressional oversight of anticipated clandestine intelligence activities that might also shape the political, economic or military environment abroad can apply the same framework and, as with covert action oversight, address the risk of compromise, unintended consequences, and loss of life. This report is accompanied by two related reports: CRS Report R45175, Covert Action and Clandestine Activities of the Intelligence Community: Selected Definitions in Brief, by Michael E. DeVine, and CRS Report R45191, Covert Action and Clandestine Activities of the Intelligence Community: Selected Congressional Notification Requirements in Brief, by Michael E. DeVine. The present structure of congressional oversight of the Intelligence Community (IC) largely resulted from investigations by two congressional committees in the 1970s—in the Senate, chaired by Idaho Senator Frank Church, and in the House, chaired by Representative Otis Pike—that suggested a need for permanent committees in each chamber: today's Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI) and the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI). It is important to note, however, that oversight of intelligence is a function of more than just the two congressional intelligence committees. Ten other committees—the Armed Services, Foreign Affairs/Foreign Relations, Homeland Security, Judiciary, and Appropriations committees of both chambers—exercise oversight responsibility to varying degrees over intelligence programs or IC elements that fall under their jurisdiction. This report posits a potential framework for congressional oversight of intelligence-related programs and activities using the existing committee structure and notification standards for the most sensitive intelligence activities: covert action and clandestine intelligence collection.2 The framework may assist Congress in assessing the premises justifying each of these activities, their impact on national security, operational viability, funding requirements, and possible long-term or unintended consequences. Unlike areas with a broad public following, such as health care, veterans' services, and agriculture, intelligence programs and activities are generally classified, receive little public exposure, and have no natural public constituency. Highly classified covert action and clandestine intelligence programs do not often have visibility outside of Congress. Congressional oversight, therefore, provides one of the few meaningful checks on the President's execution of intelligence policy and programs that may have significant bearing on U.S. foreign relations and national security. Among the recommendations of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States (the "9/11 Commission") were those aimed at strengthening intelligence oversight.3 Since the Church and Pike committees of the 1970s, Congress occasionally has been able to refine its oversight of the IC. However, it has not been able to sustain its early momentum. As the Final Report of the 9/11 Commission put it, "...the oversight function of the Congress has
Summary
Introduction
2
Since 9/11, the Senate especially has made progress toward following through with organizational reform of the oversight process, following through on several of the 9/11 Commission's recommendations. S.Res. 445 (108th Congress) amended Senate rules governing intelligence oversight (S.Res. 400) aimed at increasing the authority of the SSCI relative to the standing committees, promoting bipartisanship, and building expertise.5 However, a number of factors have complicated Congress's efforts to improve oversight. This poses risks to national security when involving the most sensitive aspects of intelligence—covert action and clandestine activities—due to their potential impact on U.S. foreign relations. Since September 11, 2001, a number of factors have complicated Congress's efforts to improve oversight. Greater integration of military operations and intelligence activities has resulted in a blurring of what are known as Title 10 and Title 50 authorities of the United States Code.3 Congress has expressed concern that the Department of Defense (DOD) has overused terms that are not defined in statute, such as traditional military activities and 4
operational preparation of the environment (OPE)4 and that this, in turn, has enabled DOD to circumvent the more stringent oversight requirements of the congressional intelligence committees placed upon activities that may bear close resemblance to covert action or clandestine intelligence collection.
Self-imposed limitations on how Congress conducts intelligence oversight may inhibit effective oversight. The congressional intelligence committees' jurisdiction is limited to intelligence authorizations; the congressional defense committees exercise sole jurisdiction over intelligence appropriations. There is also no traditional public constituency and little public involvement in intelligence matters. Intelligence programs and analytical products are classified and generally removed from the public domain. The eight-year term limits for Members of the House Permanent Committee on Intelligence may present an obstacle to the development of deep expertise.5
Despite these inhibiting factors, congressional oversight of intelligence remains essential to the proper functioning of the government, especially the intelligence community. Highly classified covert action and clandestine intelligence programs do not have visibility outside of Congress, with the exception of occasions that may become public after the fact, usually as a result of a failure. Congressional oversight, therefore, can provide the most meaningful checks on the President's execution of intelligence policy and programs that may have significant bearing on U.S. national security. The President may also benefit from the strategic perspective and advice that Members of Congress can offer.
Despite these challenges, congressional oversight remains an important check on policy and decisions of the executive branch, to insure intelligence programs and activities are ethical, legal and properly aligned with U.S. national security and foreign policy objectives. Congressional oversight of covert action can be organized around a framework of five issue areas: (1) the activity's statutory parameters, (2) U.S. national security interests, (3) U.S. foreign policy objectives, (4) funding and implementation, and (5) risk assessment. These categories enable Congress to analyze and assess the specific elements of each activity from a strategic point of view. By extension, Congressional oversight of anticipated clandestine intelligence activities that might also shape the political, economic or military environment abroad can apply the same framework and, as with oversight of covert action, address the risk of compromise, unintended consequences, and loss of life. A logical conceptual framework for oversight of covert action would include its statutory definition; covert action is codified as an activity of the U.S. government DOD to circumvent the more stringent oversight requirements of the congressional intelligence committees.7
6"8 There are a number of exceptions in the statutory definition of covert action. It does not; these include some activities that could use clandestine methodology. Exceptions include activities primarily intended to collect intelligence; traditional counterintelligence activities; traditional military activities, or support to traditional military activities; traditional law enforcement activities, or routine support to law enforcement; and traditional diplomatic activities.7 Effective oversight seems to require that Congress have a solid understanding of these exceptions. Such an understanding, however, is not as straightforward as it may seem at first glance; Congress has voiced concern with DOD's use of9 How these exceptions are defined and applied to actual practice is not always straightforward and can complicate congressional oversight. For example, Congress has expressed concern that DOD too frequently applies the term traditional military activities in particular to describe operations that might otherwise be hard to distinguish fromin many respects resemble covert action.8 From a strategic perspective, oversight requires a solid grasp of the U.S. national security interests and foreign policy objectives that each administration details in national security strategy and accompanying documentation. A national security strategy also helps define assumptions about the international environment which drive policy decisions.
Section 3093(a) of Title 50, U.S. Code provides the definition and statutory requirements for covert action and specifies that a presidential finding must determine that the covert action "is necessary to support identifiable foreign policy objectives of the United States and is important to the national security objectives of the United States."
Oversight also requires a solid grasp of the U.S. national security interests and foreign policy objectives that each administration details its National Security Strategy, National Defense Strategy, and other strategy and policy documents. Covert action statutorily must support "identifiable foreign policy interests of the United States."12 Although not required by statute, it would be logical for clandestine intelligence (and military) activities that do not constitute covert action but have in common a high risk of compromise of sources and methods, a high impact on U.S. foreign relations, and a potential for the loss of life also to support identifiable (clearly articulated, documented) foreign policy objectives expressly. Moreover, congressional overseers may wish to identify or have expressly identified for them, the executive branch's assumptions about the international environment since these assumptions influence policy that in turn, influences decisions on covert action and clandestine activities. Congress has no statutory prerogative to veto covert action when informed through a presidential finding. However10 This is important insofar as it results in different committees being informed of the activity and different standards for the timeliness of notification.11
put itwrote,
If the committees do not support a particular operation or have concerns about aspects of it, an administration would have to think twice about proceeding with it as planned. If it is disclosed or ends in disaster, the administration will want to have had Congress on board. If it is going to last more than a year, the committees' support will be needed for continued funding. The committees are also likely to be better indicators of how the public would react if the program were disclosed than the administration's in-house pundits.9
As congressional oversight committees and Congress assess each impending covert action from a strategic point of view, Congress may wish to organize its review using the following five issue areas:
By extension, oversight of anticipated clandestine intelligence activities that might also shape the political, economic, or military environment abroad can apply the same framework, and, like oversight of covert action, address the risk of compromise, unintended consequences, and loss of life.
Section 3093(a)(5) of Title 50, U. S. Code specifies that "a finding [for a covert action] may not authorize any action that would violate the Constitution or any statute of the United States." Congressional oversight efforts may have the goal of ensuring, then, ensures a covert action does not violate the law, to include any domestic law enacted to fulfill the terms of a nonselfnon-self-executing treaty.1014
Congressional oversight of covert action is generally recognized to be especially important to ensuring proper checks and balances, particularly under circumstances in which it is likely that no one outside of a small number of authorized intelligence professionals will know anything about the covert action or clandestine activity.1418 Yet, the 9/11 Commission observed,
Congress had a distinct tendency to push questions of emerging national security threats off its own plate, leaving them for others to consider. Congress asked outside commissions to do the work that arguably was at the heart of its own oversight responsibilities.15
Oversight, in accordance with notification requirements of Title 50, enables Congress to provide a timely check on the development of a covert action or clandestine intelligence activity that might have serious flaws. Maintaining necessarily tight security surrounding planning for sensitive intelligence activities may present a challenge, because the few individuals outside the intelligence community with access may offer only limited perspective, overlook essential details, and too easily accept premises that might not bear up against broader scrutiny.1620
Section 3093(a) of Title 50, U. S. Code specifies "[T]he President may not authorize the conduct of a covert action by departments, agencies, or entities of the United States Government unless the President determines such an action is necessary to support identifiable foreign policy objectives of the United States and is important to the national security of the United States."
Congress can provide another level of review to ensure important details for successfully implementing the activity are not overlooked. Moreover, Congress's constitutional responsibility for appropriating funds extends to its oversight of sensitive intelligence activities like covert action.2125 As former CIA Director and former Member of Congress Leon Panetta once remarked, "I do believe in the responsibility of the Congress not only to oversee our operations but to share in the responsibility of making sure that we have the resources and capability to help protect this country."2226
"The executive branch is chiefly concerned with achieving the objectives of the president, whatever they might be. Because of this, it is sometimes tempted to downplay the risk and accentuate the gain."2327 Congress's relative distance from conceiving and planning the activity may enable it to provide more dispassionate risk assessment and more accuratetempered analysis of likely outcomes.
Iterative oversight of covert action or clandestine intelligence collection is required under the law and has proven effective. It allows Congress periodically to review changes in conditions on the ground that may suggest different outcomesStatute requires the President update Congress with notifications of changes in conditions from those described in the original notification of a covert action. Congressional oversight consequently extends to periodically reviewing changes in the operational environment on the ground that may suggest a different outcome, a change in strategy, a shift in U.S. interests, or the development of unintended consequences. Along these lines, §3093(d)(1) and (2) of Title 50 U. S. Code includes the following provision:
The President shall ensure that the congressional intelligence committees, or, if applicable, [the Gang of Eight],2428 are notified in writing of any significant change in a previously approved covert action, or any significant undertaking pursuant to a previously approved finding, in the same manner as findings are reported pursuant to subsection (c).
In determining whether an activity constitutes a significant undertaking for these purposes, the President shall consider whether the activity-
Former CIA Inspector General L. Britt Snider has suggested that congressional oversightCongress, in carrying out its oversight responsibility, might be vulnerable to failure to review the premises and conditions for the covert action that may have changed, perhaps significantly, subsequent to the initial notification. The risk, as articulated by Snider is that "If members are satisfied with what they hear from administration witnesses [during the initial notification], not only will they acquiesce in the implementation of the operation, they are apt to devote less attention to it down the road." 2529 To guard against this outcome, this provision of the covert action statute underscores the importance of being alert to the possible tactical, political, and environment changes that warrant continued oversight to ensure the activity continues to be in the U.S. national interest.
Author Contact Information
Footnotes1.
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See, for example, James Clapper, interview with Representative James Himes, After Words with James Clapper, C-SPAN, May 21, 2018, at https://www.c-span.org/video/?c4732869/oversight-us-intelligence-community: "The Intelligence Community needs oversight. Unfortunately, our history is replete with abuses over time…So we need…an independent, autonomous oversight. Is what we're doing legal, ethical, moral and in accordance with American standards and values? And that, to me, should be the main purpose of those [intelligence] committees…What sometimes happens…It kind of devolves into micromanagement, where essentially people want to do the job of seniors in the Intelligence Community for them. And that's not good either because I think you have a tendency to lose sight of the big things, the important things: Is what the Community is doing legal, moral, and ethical?" See also, Mark Hosenball and Jonathan Landay, "U.S. Spy Agencies Fight Congress over Plan for Probe of Covert Russian Influence Campaign," Reuters, December 2, 2016, at https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-intelligence-russia-idUSKBN13R2GB. 2.
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For an examination of options for reforming congressional oversight of the IC, see CRS Report R45421, Congressional Oversight of Intelligence: Background and Selected Options for Further Reform, by Michael E. DeVine. |
National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, The 9/11 Commission Report (Washington, DC: GPO, 2004). p. 419. |
The 9/11 Commission Report. pp. 105-106. |
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The HPSCI has taken more limited steps than the SSCI in implementing oversight reform measures. For example, term limits for Members of the House Permanent Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI), originally intended to prevent co-optation by the intelligence community (IC), may actually present an obstacle to the development of deep expertise. See CRS Report R45421, Congressional Oversight of Intelligence: Background and Selected Options for Further Reform, by Michael E. DeVine. |
See Andru E. Wall, "Demystifying the Title 10-Title 50 Debate: Distinguishing Military Operations, Intelligence Activities and Covert Action," Harvard National Security Journal, December 2, 2011, |
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DOD defines operational preparation of the environment (OPE) as the "conduct of activities in likely or potential areas of operations to prepare and shape the operational environment," with operational environment defined as a "composite of the conditions, circumstances, and influences that affect the employment of capabilities and bear on the decisions of the commander." Joint Publication 3-05, "Special Operations," a doctrine issuance of the Joint Staff, describes preparation of the environment as an "umbrella term for operations and activities conducted by selectively trained special operations forces to develop an environment for potential future special operations," with "close-target reconnaissance … reception, staging, onward movement, and integration ... of forces ... [and] infrastructure development" cited as examples of such activities. See Joint Staff, "DOD Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms," June 2017 revision, available at http://www.dtic.mil/doctrine/new_pubs/dictionary.pdf. See also Joint Staff, "Special Operations," Joint Publication 3-05, July 16, 2014, available at http://www.dtic.mil/doctrine/new_pubs/jp3_05.pdf, and Joint Staff, "Joint Operations," Joint Publication 3-0, January 17, 2017, available at http://www.dtic.mil/doctrine/new_pubs/jp3_0_20170117.pdf. |
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5. |
House Rule X clause 11(4): "(A) Except as permitted by subdivision (B), a Member, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner, other than the Speaker or the Minority Leader, may not serve as a member of the select committee during more than four Congresses in a period of six successive Congresses (disregarding for this purpose any service for less than a full session in a Congress). (B) In the case of a Member, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner appointed to serve as the chair or the ranking minority member of the select committee, tenure on the select committee shall not be limited." |
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50 U.S.C. §3093 (e). |
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Ibid. |
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See U.S. Congress, House of Representatives, Intelligence Authorization Act, Fiscal Year 1991, conference report to accompany H.R. 1455, 102nd Cong., 1st sess., July 25, 1991, H.Rept. 102-166, pp. 29-30: It is the intent of the conferees that 'traditional military activities' include activities by military personnel under the direction and control of a United States military commander (whether or not the U.S. sponsorship of such activities is apparent or later to be acknowledged) preceding and related to hostilities which are either anticipated (meaning approval has been given by the National Command Authorities for the activities and or operational planning for hostilities) to involve U.S. military forces, or where such hostilities involving United States military forces are ongoing, and, where the fact of the U.S. role in the overall operation is apparent or to be acknowledged publicly. In this regard, the conferees intend to draw a line between activities that are and are not under the direction and control of the military commander. Activities that are not under the direction and control of a military commander should not be considered as "traditional military activities."[emphasis added]. |
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For more on the statutory requirements for the executive branch to notify Congress of covert action and selected other sensitive intelligence and military activities, see CRS Report R45191, Covert Action and Clandestine Activities of the Intelligence Community: Selected Congressional Notification Requirements in Brief, by Michael E. DeVine. 12.
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50 U.S.C. §3093(a). |
L. Britt Snider, The Agency and the Hill: CIA's Relationship with Congress, 1946-2004, CIA Center for the Study of Intelligence, p. 311, posted May 9, 2008, at https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/books-and-monographs/agency-and-the-hill/The%20Agency%20and%20the%20Hill_Book_1May2008.pdf. See also Mark M. Lowenthal, Intelligence: From Secrets to Policy (Los Angeles: CQ Press, 2015), p. 234. |
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Caroline D. Krass, "Covert Action v. Traditional Military Activities," Prehearing Questions for the Record for Ms | |||||
During the Iran Contra Affair, the Reagan Administration, by using funds obtained from the sale of arms to Iran for the purchase of military aid for the Nicaraguan Contras, violated the Boland Amendments to the Continuing Appropriations Act of 1983 (P.L. 97-377). There were three Boland Amendments, which were directed at preventing the provision of military assistance to Contra rebels who were fighting to overthrow the Sandinista government. The first Boland Amendment specified that "[n]one of the funds provided in this act may be used by the Central Intelligence Agency or the Department of Defense to furnish military equipment, military training or advice, or other support for military activities, to any group or individual, not part of a county's armed forces, for the purpose of overthrowing the Government of Nicaragua or provoking a military exchange between Nicaragua and Honduras." P.L. 97-377, FY1983 Continuing Appropriations Act (96 Stat. 1830) §793. |
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See Joint Publication 3-12(R), Cyberspace Operations, February 5, 2013. See also Department of Defense Law of War Manual (Washington, DC: DOD Office of the General Counsel, December 2016), pp. 50-65. DOD policy on the conduct of hostilities, to include cyberspace operations, requires the U.S. Armed Forces adhere to the principles of the law of war, in particular, last resort, military necessity, prevention of unnecessary suffering, proportionality, and distinction. |
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"Where covert action is concerned, the two intelligence committees have, since their inception, provided the only significant check and balance outside the executive branch. The appropriations committees occasionally weigh in on the funding levels for these programs, but the intelligence committees are where the policy issues are weighed and adjudicated." L. Britt Snider, The Agency and the Hill: CIA's Relationship with Congress, 1946-2004, CIA Center for the Study of Intelligence, p. 310. Posted May 9, 2008, at https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/books-and-monographs/agency-and-the-hill/The%20Agency%20and%20the%20Hill_Book_1May2008.pdf. See also Cohen, p. 240. |
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The 9/11 Commission Report, p. 107. |
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"...hard-to-detect CIA operations against suspect individuals tend to develop an organizational momentum that carries them well beyond legal and diplomatic limits—and beyond executive and congressional controls." Stephen R. Weissman, "Accountability for CIA's Cover Acts," POLITICO, August 26, 2010. |
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See §3093(a)(4), Title 50, U. S. Code: "Each finding shall specify whether it is contemplated that any third party which is not an element of, or a contractor or contract agent of, the United States Government, or is not otherwise subject to United States Government policies and regulations, will be used to fund or otherwise participate in any significant way in the covert action concerned, or be used to undertake the covert action concerned on behalf of the United States." |
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Conforming to "American values" is a subjective standard denoting each Member's understanding of what their constituents can tolerate in the conduct of covert action and other sensitive intelligence activities. |
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L. Britt Snider, The Agency and the Hill: CIA's Relationship with Congress, 1946-2004, CIA Center for the Study of Intelligence, posted May 9, 2008, at https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/books-and-monographs/agency-and-the-hill/The%20Agency%20and%20the%20Hill_Book_1May2008.pdf. |
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For example, a short-term perspective of the benefits of CIA's covert action that instigated the 1953 coup in Iran that overthrew the democratically elected government of Mohammad Mossadegh, failed to allow for plausible long-term scenarios that might have suggested an alternative policy. |
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William S. Cohen, "Congressional Oversight of Covert Actions," International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence. vol. 2, no. 2 (1988), pp. 239-240. |
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Amy B. Zegart, "The Domestic Politics of Irrational Intelligence Oversight," Political Science Quarterly, vol. 126, no. 1 (Spring 2011), p. 5. |
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Snider, p. 307. |
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Section 3093(c)(2) of Title 50, U.S. Code, provides for limited notification to eight Members of Congress, colloquially known as the "Group of Eight": "If the President determines that it is essential to limit access to the finding to meet extraordinary circumstances affecting vital interests of the United States, the finding may be reported to the chairmen and ranking minority members of the congressional intelligence committees, the Speaker and minority leader of the House of Representatives, the majority and minority leaders of the Senate, and such other member or members of the congressional leadership as may be included by the President." |
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L. Britt Snider, The Agency and the Hill: CIA's Relationship with Congress, 1946-2004, CIA Center for the Study of Intelligence, p. 307, posted May 9, 2008, at https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/books-and-monographs/agency-and-the-hill/The%20Agency%20and%20the%20Hill_Book_1May2008.pdf. |