Order Code RL32525
A Joint Committee on Intelligence: Proposals and
Options from the 9/11 Commission and Others
Updated August 25, 2004
Frederick M. Kaiser
Specialist in American National Government
Government and Finance Division
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32525*
RL
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32525*
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A Joint Committee on Intelligence: Proposals and
Options from the 9/11 Commission and Others
Summary
In mid-2004, the U.S. National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the
United States — commonly known as the 9/11 Commission — released a unanimous
report covering a wide range of issues and concerns. As part of this, the panel
concluded that congressional oversight of intelligence was “dysfunctional” and
proposed two distinct solutions. These were: (1) creation of a joint committee on
intelligence (JCI), modeled after the now-defunct Joint Committee on Atomic
Energy (JCAE), with authority to report legislation to each chamber; or (2) enhanced
status and power for the existing House and Senate select committees on intelligence,
for instance, making them permanent standing committees and giving them both
authorization and appropriations authority. Since then, Congress has looked into the
matter, through existing committees and a new Senate bipartisan working group.
Congress’s consideration of a JCI is not new, dating to 1948 and the infancy of
the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Director of Central Intelligence (DCI).
Many similar recommendations have arisen in the meantime, although the lion’s
share were made before intelligence committees were established in the House
(1977) and Senate (1976). But the numerous proposals for a joint committee on
intelligence — with authority to report legislation to the floor of both chambers —
vary meaningfully across a number of dimensions. Significant differences exist in
membership characteristics: number; provision for representation of committees with
overlapping membership and at-large selections; and permanent or term-limited
memberships. Leadership is also affected: chairmanship rotation with each Congress
or each session; and a vice chairman from the other chamber and/or minority party
versus reliance on the usual replacement procedure, with the next in line from the
majority party. Proposed controls over classified information in the committee’s
custody range from secrecy oaths for members to security clearances for them, from
exacting requirements for non-member access to its holdings to less stringent ones,
and from disclosure of classified information by the committee alone or by each
chamber or both together. Finally, staffing requirements, although consistent in
requiring security clearances and agreements, reflect different selection procedures.
Competing pros and cons have accompanied JCI proposals throughout their
history, in part because of practical matters and matters of principle. Differing
viewpoints, for instance, separate advocates and opponents over the benefits and
costs of a bicameral panel, along with its possible impact on relations between the
two chambers as well as between the legislature and executive. One fundamental
divide is about whether a JCI would strengthen or weaken oversight of intelligence,
by comparison to the select intelligence committees as they exist now or with revised
powers and characteristics. The 9/11 Commission did not resolve this division.
This report first describes the current select committees on intelligence and
briefly covers the former Joint Committee on Atomic Energy. It then sets forth
proposed characteristics for a Joint Committee on Intelligence, their differences, and
their pros and cons; it also discusses alternatives for congressional oversight in the
field. This report will be updated as events dictate.

Contents
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
House and Senate Select Committees on Intelligence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Jurisdiction and Authority . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Membership and Leadership . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Secrecy Controls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Joint Committee on Atomic Energy as a Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Proposed Joint Committee on Intelligence Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Methods of Establishment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Jurisdiction and Authority . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Membership . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Terms and Rotation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Leadership . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Secrecy Controls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Staffing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Budget and Funding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Pros and Cons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Pros . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Cons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Alternatives to a Joint Committee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Changing the Select Committees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Concerns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Coordination Between the Two Intelligence Panels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Joint Hearings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Leadership Meetings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Constraints on Coordination . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Interchanges with Other Panels and Members . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Goals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Techniques . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Limitations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Observations on Oversight of Intelligence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Obstacles to Oversight . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Secrecy Constraints . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Appeal of Intelligence Oversight . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Overcoming the Obstacles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Objectives and Goals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
The Joint Committee Approach and Alternatives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19

A Joint Committee on Intelligence:
Proposals and Options from the
9/11 Commission and Others
Introduction
Congress saw the first proposal to create a joint committee on intelligence (JCI)
in 1948.1 It appeared just one year after the establishment of the Cental Intelligence
Agency (CIA) and the Office of Director of Central Intelligence (DCI), both integral
parts of the most far-reaching executive reorganization in United States history.2
Numerous other plans along the same lines have materialized in the meantime,
including one in 2004 from the 9/11 Commission.3 This report reviews the basic
characteristics of proposed joint committees on intelligence, differences among them,
and perceived advantages and disadvantages.4 It also covers the congressional
panels a JCI would replace: namely, the House and Senate select committees on
intelligence, which also provide a base of comparison. Along with this is a brief
review of the former Joint Committee on Atomic Energy (JCAE) — often cited as
an organizational model for a joint intelligence panel, as it has been for the 9/11
Commission — as well as consideration of alternatives or options to a joint
committee on intelligence.5
1 H.Con.Res. 186, 80th Cong., 2nd sess., introduced by Rep. Devitt, April 21, 1948.
2 The monumental National Security Act of 1947 also gave birth to the National Security
Council and National Military Establishment, later re-designated as the Department of
Defense (61 Stat. 496 et seq.).
3 U.S. National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, The 9/11
Commission Report: Final Report
(Washington: GPO, 2004), p. 420. The commission
offered a second option to strengthen oversight: i.e., “a single committee in each house of
Congress, combining authorization and appropriating authorities .... “ (ibid.).
4 Additional coverage of JCI recommendations, characteristics, and perceived advantages
and disadvantages, which are detailed below, are available in: U.S. Congress, House
Committee on Rules, Subcommittee on Rules of the House, House Rule XLVIII, hearing,
101st Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 1990); Frederick M. Kaiser, “A Proposed Joint
Committee on Intelligence: New Wine in an Old Bottle,” Journal of Law and Politics, vol.5,
fall 1988, pp. 127-186; and Independent Task Force, Council on Foreign Relations, Making
Intelligence Smarter: The Future of U.S. Intelligence
(New York: Council on Foreign
Relations, 1996), pp. 32-33.
5 The House and Senate are looking into this matter through their existing committees as well
as a new bipartisan working group in the Senate. Honorable Bill Frist, “Frist, Daschle
Appoint Members to Working Group Evaluating 9/11 Commission Proposals,” press release,
Aug. 25, 2004; and Helen Dewar, “Senate Names Intelligence Panel,” Washington Post,
Aug. 25, 2004, p. A2.

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House and Senate Select Committees
on Intelligence
A joint committee on intelligence would replace the current House Permanent
Select Committee on Intelligence, established in 1977, and the Senate Select
Committee on Intelligence, created a year earlier.6 These units emerged after
extensive, detailed congressional and executive investigations revealed widespread
abuses in the intelligence community and concluded that effective congressional
oversight was lacking. The panels were set up to consolidate legislative and
oversight authority over the entire intelligence community, supplanting the
fragmented system at the time, which relied exclusively on disparate standing
committees. Although titled “Select,” the intelligence panels are hybrids of standing
and select committees, adopting characteristics of both types. For instance, the
panels have only temporary membership, as select committees have, because they
are usually short-term constructions; yet each panel holds authority to report
legislation to its own chamber, a power usually reserved to standing committees.
Jurisdiction and Authority
The intelligence committees have broad jurisdiction over the intelligence
community and report authorizations and other legislation for consideration by their
respective chambers. Most of the jurisdiction of the current intelligence committees
is shared. The select committees hold exclusive authorizing and legislative powers
only for the Central Intelligence Agency, Director of Central Intelligence, and
National Foreign Intelligence Program. This leaves the intelligence components in
the Departments of Defense, Homeland Security, and Justice, among other agencies,
to be shared with appropriate standing committees.
The House and Senate intelligence panels have nearly identical jurisdictions for
the intelligence community. The House panel’s domain, however, also encompasses
an area that the Senate’s does not: “tactical intelligence and intelligence-related
activities,” which cover tactical military intelligence. In another departure, the
House select committee has been given authority to “review and study on an
exclusive basis the sources and methods of entities” in the intelligence community.7
Membership and Leadership
6 Development of congressional oversight of intelligence is examined in U.S. Congress,
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Legislative Oversight of Intelligence Activities, S.
Prt. 103-88, 103rd Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 1994); Frederick M. Kaiser,
“Congress and the Intelligence Community,” in Roger Davidson, ed., The Postreform
Congress
(New York: St. Martins Press, 1992), pp. 279-300; Loch K. Johnson,
“Congressional Supervision of America’s Secret Agencies,” in Loch K. Johnson and James
J. Wirtz, eds., Strategic Intelligence (Los Angeles: Roxbury Publishing, 2004), pp. 414-426;
and Mark M. Lowenthal, Intelligence: From Secrets to Policy (Washington: CQ Press,
2000), pp. 133-154.
7 House Rule 3(l), added by H.Res. 5, 107th Cong., Jan. 3, 2001.

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The membership of the committees has been limited in time, staggered, and
connected to the standing committee system and political party system in Congress.
These features, moreover, differ between the two panels. Each select committee, for
instance, reserves seats for members from the chamber’s committees on
Appropriations, Armed Services, Foreign Relations/International Relations, and
Judiciary. But the specifics differ: the Senate requires two persons, a majority and
minority member, from each of these standing committees, while the House calls for
only one member from each standing committee with overlapping jurisdiction.
The two panels also differ in size (20 on the House panel and 17 on the Senate
counterpart, plus two ex officio members on each), tenure, and other membership
features, including partisan composition and leadership arrangements. Since its
inception, the Senate panel has had only one more member from the majority party
than the minority (a nine-to-eight party ratio); and its vice chairman, who takes over
if the chair is unavailable, must come from the minority party. The House select
committee, in contrast, reflected the full chamber party ratio when it was established
in 1977: two-to-one plus one, resulting in a nine-to-four ratio on the panel. In the
meantime, however, the minority party has been given additional seats on the
committee; and the party ratio in the full House has grown nearly equal, as has the
select committee membership ratio (at eleven-to-nine in the 108th Congress).
Secrecy Controls
The committees also have different secrecy arrangements regarding controls
over their classified holdings. Secrecy oaths distinguish the two chambers. All
Members of the House, including, of course, those on the intelligence committee,
must swear or affirm not to disclose classified information, except as authorized by
the rules of the chamber; the current oath is modeled after a previous one which had
been required only for the members of the House Permanent Select Committee on
Intelligence. The Senate does not impose a similar obligation on its Members.8
Non-member access to classified materials also separates the two panels. The
House committee has a more detailed and exacting set of requirements for non-
members than its Senate counterpart.
In addition, the Senate panel is authorized to disclose classified information
publicly on its own (following elaborate procedures in which the President and the
full Senate have an opportunity to act). By comparison, the House select committee
cannot do so, if the President objects to its release; in that case, the House itself
makes the determination by majority vote.
Joint Committee on Atomic Energy as a Model
8 CRS Report RS20748, Protection of Classified Information by Congress, by Frederick M.
Kaiser.

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The Joint Committee on Atomic Energy — set up by the Atomic Energy Act of
1946, along with the Atomic Energy Commission (P.L. 79-585) — is often cited as
an appropriate organizational model for a joint committee on intelligence, a reference
the 9/11 Commission also adopted.9 The JCAE, an 18-member panel composed of
an equal number of Members from each house of Congress, held authority to report
legislation to the floor of both chambers, a power unique among joint committees.10
Many reasons have been offered for considering the JCAE as a model. These
include its: favorable record for keeping highly confidential material secret; largely
bipartisan approach to policy-making; considerable unity among its members; close
working relationship with the executive in this secretive and sensitive area;
consolidated jurisdiction for a growing field; explicit, comprehensive oversight
mandate, supported by a then-unprecedented directive that the executive keep the
joint committee “fully and currently informed;” and ability to streamline the
legislative process in general and to act rapidly, if necessary, in particular instances.
Because of these attributes, the joint committee became a formidable
congressional panel. In its prime, JCAE was even considered by some as “probably
the most powerful congressional committee in the history of the nation.”11 Despite
this — or perhaps because of it — the JCAE was abolished in 1977, nearly 30 years
after its birth. It was evidently the victim of a number of reinforcing developments:
concerns in Congress and outside it about JCAE’s close, some thought cozy,
relationship with the executive agency it was overseeing; changing executive branch
conditions, such as the breakup of the Atomic Energy Commission into the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission and the Energy Research and Development Administration,
now the Department of Energy; new rivals in Congress, as the expanding nature of
atomic energy and nuclear power extended into the jurisdictions of a number of
House and Senate standing committees; efforts in the Senate at the time to realign
and consolidate committee jurisdictions and reduce the number of assignments for
each Member; and a relatively high number of vacancies on the JCAE (six of the 18
seats).12
9 For background and further citations on the JCAE, see CRS Report RL32538, 9/11
Commission Recommendations: Joint Committee on Atomic Energy — A Model for
Congressional Oversight?
, by Christopher M. Davis; Harold P. Green and Allen Rosenthal,
Government of the Atom: The Integration of Powers (New York: Atherton Press, 1963); and
Kaiser, “A Proposed Joint Committee on Intelligence,” pp. 138-141.
10 One caveat to the unique status of the JCAE is the Temporary Joint Committee on Deficit
Reduction; it was authorized to report legislation but only on a narrow subject and on a case-
by-case basis. In contrast to the JCAE, this joint panel was a short-term, periodic addition
to Congress, set up by the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Act of 1985. The panel could come
into existence only when legislation on budget sequestration was needed and was
empowered to report only a joint resolution setting forth specified reports from the Directors
of the Office of Management and Budget and the Congressional Budget Office. P.L. 99-177,
99 Stat. 1037, 1100 (1985). This provision apparently was never activated and was not
included in the 1987 revision of GRH.
11 Green and Rosenthal, Government of the Atom, p. 266.
12 Kaiser, “A Proposed Joint Committee on Intelligence,” pp. 140-141.

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Proposed Joint Committee on Intelligence
Characteristics
Recommendations to create a joint committee on intelligence have surfaced
over nearly five decades, most predating the establishment of the two select
committees on intelligence in the mid-1970s. Although many of these suggestions,
including that from the 9/11 Commission, have followed the design of the Joint
Committee on Atomic Energy, not all have; consequently, the specifics in the
blueprints have varied in a number of fundamental ways. Differences extend to: the
range and exclusivity of the panels’ jurisdiction; makeup of their membership;
selection and rotation of chairmen; possibility of and characteristics of a vice
chairmanship; requirements for representation of certain other committees as well
as at-large members; special secrecy requirements for members and staff, including
a secrecy oath and security clearances; staff size, method of selection, and
restrictions on activities; official disclosures of classified information; mechanisms
for investigating suspected unauthorized disclosures of such information; and access
by non-members to the joint committee’s classified holdings. Even suggested
methods of establishment have varied.
Methods of Establishment
A Joint Committee on Intelligence could be created by a concurrent resolution,
a joint resolution, or a regular bill. The Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, for
instance, was established by public law through the regular bill process (i.e., the
Atomic Energy Act of 1946, P.L. 79-580, 60 Stat. 772).
A concurrent resolution has the advantage of requiring only the approval of
Congress, while a joint resolution or regular bill must be signed by the President or
his veto overridden. A joint resolution or a bill, however, may offer certain benefits
over a concurrent resolution. A number of existing provisions in public law,
especially ones dealing with intelligence reporting requirements to Congress,
designates the House and Senate select committees on intelligence as recipients (e.g.,
the intelligence oversight provisions and the reporting requirements for the CIA
Inspector General, codified at 50 U.S.C. 413-415 and 50 U.S.C. 403q, respectively).
A bill or joint resolution, when creating a joint committee, could amend these
statutory provisions, whereas a concurrent resolution could not do so directly. But
a concurrent resolution, although solely a congressional device, could have the same
effect. By changing the rules of both chambers, a concurrent resolution could
recognize that the powers, authority, and jurisdiction of the former select committees
would be transferred to a new joint committee.
Jurisdiction and Authority
A joint intelligence committee could consolidate jurisdiction for the entire
intelligence community, extending to all intelligence entities as well as intelligence
and intelligence-related activities, including significant anticipated activities (i.e.,
covert operations). Legislative authority over intelligence could be shared for all
entities with overlapping jurisdiction; or, as is now the case in the House and Senate,

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it could be held exclusively for certain components (e.g., CIA and DCI), while being
shared for others.
Membership
A bicameral body requires equal membership from both the Senate and House.
Besides bicameralism, a joint committee on intelligence could be directed to
accommodate three other criteria: bipartisanship, representation of specified
standing committees, and at-large selection of members.
For example, the membership from each chamber could be required to have
representatives from standing committees with overlapping jurisdiction (e.g.,
Appropriations, Armed Services, International Relations/Foreign Relations, and
Judiciary), as both the House and Senate intelligence committees do now. This
selection might include both a majority and a minority party member from each
represented committee. A JCI could also call for a specified number of members
selected at-large, as the Senate intelligence panel does now. As an illustration, an
18-member JCI could include nine Senators and nine Representatives, with five
majority and four minority party members from each chamber. At least one member,
but not more than two, could come from each of the four committees with
overlapping jurisdiction; this option (a maximum of eight from each chamber) would
still allow for one selection at large from each house. By comparison, a larger
committee or a panel requiring only a single member from each of the specified
standing committees would allow for more members to be selected at-large.
Provision could also be made for ex officio members, particularly the majority
and minority party leaders from the Senate and the Speaker and minority leader from
the House.
Terms and Rotation
Membership on the joint committee could have no term limits or be given a
maximum length of service (six or eight years, as the House and Senate Intelligence
Committees have had, or shorter or longer terms). Under term limits, the total time
on the committee might be measured either by continuous service or by non-
continuous service accumulated over a specified number of Congresses (e.g., a total
of eight years over six Congresses). If a JCI had maximum lengths of service, it
could be treated as a temporary assignment, which might not count against other
standing committee assignments in each chamber. By comparison, membership on
the JCI could be permanent.13 If so, it might be treated as if it were a standing
committee in each chamber, counting against other committee assignments.
Member terms could also be staggered, so that new members would arrive with
each new Congress. Staggered terms, however, would mean that a portion of the
13 The 9/11 Commission — referring to both a joint committee on intelligence and a new
standing committee in each house — recommended that “Members should serve indefinitely
on the committees, without set terms, thereby letting them accumulate expertise.” 9/11
Commission, Report, p. 421.

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original membership could not serve the maximum period, at least not as part of the
original composition.
Leadership
The chair, selected at the beginning of each Congress or each session (as some
proposals called for), could alternate between the two chambers and/or political
parties. A vice chairmanship could also be established; this officer would replace the
chair when he or she is absent (as occurs now on the Senate intelligence committee).
The vice chair could be a member of the other body and/or the other political party.
Secrecy Controls
Various types of secrecy controls could be applied to a joint committee on
intelligence to regulate access to its classified holdings by non-committee members,
protect against the unauthorized disclosure of classified information, and allow its
authorized release. Such controls could set requirements for determining access by
non-members; require security clearances, oaths, and/or secrecy agreements for
committee members and staff; and provide for investigation of suspected security
breaches, conducted by the House and Senate ethics committees.
Controls could also spell out procedures for disclosing classified information
to which the President objects, either by a joint committee itself, by the joint
committee in concert with either or both chambers, or by either or both chambers as
the final arbiter. One of five distinct options might be adopted: (1) the joint
committee on intelligence could act alone; (2) the panel could act only after one
house responded to a request from it to release classified information; (3) the JCI
could act only after both houses responded; (4) a single house could disclose the
information; or (5) both chambers would have to agree to do so. Currently,
disclosure procedures differ between the House and Senate intelligence panels. The
House select committee does not have authority to release classified information on
its own. The full House must act to disclose it, at the request of its intelligence
panel, if the President objects to the release. On the Senate side, the select
committee may disclose classified information on its own, after both the President
and full Senate have acted.14 It appears that this procedure has not been used by the
Senate panel.
Staffing
The number of staff on a new JCI would presumably be smaller than the
combined total for both the House and Senate intelligence committees. Hiring could
be accomplished in seven different ways: (1) by the majority party on the full JCI,
(2) by the majority party from each chamber on the committee, (3) by full committee
14 The select committee’s charter provides for three responses from the full Senate to an
intelligence committee request to release classified information, if the President objects to
it. The chamber can: approve the disclosure; disapprove the disclosure; or “refer all or any
portion of the matter back to the committee, in which case the committee shall make the final
determination with respect to the public disclosure of the information in question.” Sec.
8(b)(5), S.Res. 400, 94th Cong., 2nd sess.

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vote, (4) by the majority party and minority party separately, (5) by the chair alone,
(6) by the chair and vice chair/ranking minority member together, or (7) by
individual members (with each legislator selecting a single staff member).
Additionally, staff could be selected by a combination of several compatible ways
(e.g., individual member selections for some plus committee-wide selections for
others). The staff could also be required to meet certain agreed upon criteria set by
the committee, such as fitness for the duties and without regard to party affiliation.15
Staffers could be required to have an appropriate security clearance (for Top
Secret and access to Sensitive Compartmented Information), as is now mandated by
both House and Senate select committees. They could also be directed to sign a
nondisclosure or secrecy agreement not to reveal classified information, again a
requirement for the staff of both intelligence panels.
Budget and Funding
The budget for a joint committee on intelligence would presumably be smaller
than the combined budgets of the House and Senate intelligence panels. Funding
could be shared by both chambers, deriving equally from the contingent funds of the
Senate and House.
Pros and Cons
Differences over the establishment of a joint committee on intelligence tie into
practical matters as well as matters of principle.
Pros16
15 The 9/11 Commission, for instance, recommended that the “staff of this committee should
be nonpartisan and work for the entire committee and not for individual members.” 9/11
Commission, Report, p. 420.
16 Competing views on a joint committee on intelligence are available from Members and
committees of Congress, among other sources. Supportive arguments are included in: U.S.
Congress, Senate Temporary Select Committee to Study the Senate Committee System,
Report (Washington: GPO, 1984), pp. 13-14; Honorable Howard Baker and Honorable
Henry Hyde, statements before the Temporary Select Committee, Senate Resolution 127, To
Study the Senate Committee System
(Washington: GPO, 1984), part I, pp. 5-11 and part 2,
pp. 83-85; Honorable Henry Hyde, statement before the Joint Committee on the
Organization of Congress, Committee Structure, hearings, 103rd Cong., 1st sess. (Washington:
GPO, 1993), pp. 832-841; and Minority, Senate Select Committee on Secret Military
Assistance to Iran and the Nicaraguan Opposition and House Select Committee to
Investigate Covert Arms Transactions with Iran, Report, S.Rept. 100-216 and H.Rept. 100-
(continued...)

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Supporters of a joint committee on intelligence argue that it would make for a
more effective and efficient overseer than the current arrangement, which the 9/11
Commission concluded “is now dysfunctional,” because of limitations on the two
select committees. According to its proponents, a single joint committee, housing
fewer members and staff than the two existing ones together, would:
! Strengthen oversight of intelligence for four primary reasons. The
executive would be more open and forthright with a single, small
oversight body than with two with a larger combined membership;
the legislators and staff on the JCI, recognizing that there is no other
authorizing panel to conduct oversight, would attach a greater
importance to this responsibility; a committee composed of
legislators from both chambers could better integrate and take
advantage of congressional expertise and experience in the field; and
a JCI could be established with fewer restraints and restrictions than
the separate select committees now have.
! Improve coordination, cooperation, and comity between the House
and Senate and among other relevant committees (with overlapping
jurisdiction) in both chambers. A joint committee could serve as a
conduit of information and advice and as a facilitator for policy
formulation between the two chambers as well as between the
political parties; a JCI could also encourage mutual respect and trust
between the chambers and parties; this could occur by treating all of
its members equally in committee leadership posts and voting, by
merging the stands of Members of both houses in committee
deliberations and decisions, by taking a joint committee consensus
on legislation, endorsed by Members of both chambers, to the floor
of each house, and by providing an opportunity for House Members
to be involved, if only marginally and informally, in a Senate
function (i.e., confirmation of presidential nominees).
! Streamline the legislative process, because only one committee,
rather than two, would have to consider and report legislative
proposals and authorizations to the floors of both chambers;
members from the same joint committee, moreover, might comprise
all or a majority of the membership of conference committees,
which might be less necessary in the first place because of the
bicameral, bipartisan makeup of a joint committee.
! Respond rapidly to investigate a major development, when
conditions dictated.
! Increase the stature of overseeing and legislating on intelligence
matters and, thus, make serving on an intelligence panel more
attractive and important than on either select committee. This could
result from making the joint committee the equivalent of a standing
16 (...continued)
433, 100th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 1987), p. 583.

CRS-10
committee, by granting it permanency and authority to report
legislation to each chamber and giving the members indefinite
tenure. A JCI with these characteristics would be unique in the
current era, the first of its kind since 1977, and apparently one of
only a few in the history of Congress, also elevating its stature.
! Make for more efficient government. A single panel, versus two,
would probably reduce the amount of time that the Administration
and intelligence officials would spend on Capitol Hill testifying,
briefing, notifying, and meeting with members and panels.
! Improve the protection of classified information in Congress’s
possession. A smaller number of legislators and staff on a joint
committee would have access to it and a single office would be
easier to secure.
! Encourage trust between Congress and the Executive in this
sensitive field. This could occur by reducing the number of panels,
Members, and staff with access to such highly classified information
and by easing the cooperative relationship between the branches by
way of a single committee, instead of two.
! Pinpoint responsibility in Congress for oversight and legislation
affecting intelligence, thereby avoiding any confusion or uncertainty
about it.
! Cut back the total number of committee seats for legislators in the
House and Senate combined, by replacing the two panels with a
single committee with fewer seats; for instance, a new 18-member
joint committee with nine Senators and Representatives would be
half the size of the combined total of 37 on the two select
committees. The replacement would modestly help reduce the
number of legislators holding too many committee assignments
and/or being “spread too thin.” Reducing the number of seats
available for Representatives and Senators would allow them to
concentrate on one less committee assignment.
! Reduce costs, because of fewer staff and a single suite of offices.
Cons17
17 Criticisms and concerns are voiced by: Honorable Dan Glickman, Honorable Larry
Combest, and Honorable Dennis DeConcini, statements before the Joint Committee on the
Organization of Congress, Committee Structure, hearings, 103rd Cong., 1st sess., pp. 64-79
and 406-412; Honorable Larry Combest, Chairman of the House Permanent Select
Committee on Intelligence, “IC21 — The Intelligence Community in the 21st Century, The
Intelligence Community Act of 1996,” Mar. 4, 1996, p. 7; U.S. Congress, House Permanent
Select Committee on Intelligence. IC21: Intelligence Community in the 21st Century (staff
study), committee print, 104th Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 1966), pp. 316-318 and
328; House Select Committee on Committees, Final Report (Washington: GPO, 1980), p.
416; and Majority, Senate and House Select Committees Investigating the Iran-Contra
(continued...)

CRS-11
Critics of proposals for replacing the current House and Senate intelligence
committees with a single joint committee contend that it would weaken oversight and
compromise a fundamental feature of the Congress, namely, two different (and
sometimes competing) bodies. As viewed by its opponents, a JCI would:
! Adversely affect oversight of intelligence. This would occur by
reducing the number of legislators and staff who have an incentive
and opportunity to conduct oversight and by reducing the number of
separate panels, with different characteristics and incentive
structures, to conduct it; in this regard, the number of committees to
which the President reports covert action plans is now only two (the
select committees on intelligence), having been reduced from eight
in 1980, at the request of the executive.
! Undercut the legislative benefits (e.g. longer deliberation time and
different viewpoints) of relying on two committees from separate
and distinctive chambers. This usual situation allows two panels —
each reflecting different chambers, types of constituencies, and
electoral schedules — to examine the same legislation and
authorizations and conduct oversight from different vantage points,
based on their own priorities and demands; the loss of a second view
would be felt not only in the initial committee deliberations but also
in later conference committee action, which might be dominated by
joint committee members.
! Cause a loss in continuity, stability, and experience. This would be
especially evident in joint committee leadership, if the chair (and
ranking member or vice chair) rotated every two years; this in turn
would make membership on the joint committee less desirable than
on other panels; the turnover could also extend to staff, because of
the frequent change in leadership; finally, this loss of stability and
experience could hamper Congress’s ability to influence public
policy and compete with the executive.
! Result in a more acute impact on Congress if a joint committee
develops a close and supportive relationship with the executive
entities it oversees, rather than a neutral and critical one. With a
single panel, Congress would have only one locus for oversight and
checks on the executive, not two; if this happens, the impact on
Congress, on oversight, and on legislation would be more extensive
and significant, because of the absence of a possible balance from
a second committee.
! Operate contrary to the long-term tendency to end reliance on joint
committees, either by abolishing them or not establishing them in
17 (...continued)
Affair, Report, p. 427.

CRS-12
the first place.18 A JCI, if authorized to report legislation to the
floor of both houses, would be unique currently; it would be the only
such empowered joint committee since 1977 (when the JCAE was
abolished), and one of the few in the history of the Congress; a joint
committee on intelligence would also raise the prospect of similar
panels for other policy areas, including homeland security, which
have wide-ranging jurisdictions that cross a number of executive
agencies and programs along with congressional committee
jurisdictions.
! Harbor uncertainty regarding confirmation of presidential nominees.
It might be unclear whether House Members should play any role at
all in the process or, if so, perhaps only at certain stages (e.g. initial
meetings and interviews, background investigations, formal
hearings).
! Artificially make the political parties equal or nearly so. This could
occur, even though the differences in party ratios in each chamber
could be substantial, as they have been in the past.
! Artificially make the two chambers equal on the joint committee.
The number of Members from each chamber would be the same,
even though the House is more than four times larger than the
Senate; because of this situation, Representatives would have
proportionately fewer opportunities to serve on a joint committee
than Senators.
! Cut back the possibility of serving on an intelligence panel for all
Members of Congress, especially if there are no term limits on JCI
membership. This reduction in numbers would, in turn, reduce the
diversity and representational characteristics of the membership
compared to two separate committees.
! Bring about a change in the different jurisdictions that the current
select committees now hold. The House panel having a broader
jurisdiction than its Senate counterpart.
! Not necessarily improve protection of classified information over
the current two select committees. Their controls over it are
exacting and their reputations in this regard are good; a JCI could
also require new procedures for the public release of classified
intelligence information held by the joint committee; this would
raise the prospect of (and cause disagreement over) whether the
18 The 9/11 Commission (p. 421), for instance, did not advocate a joint committee for
homeland security. Instead, it called for consolidating jurisdiction in a permanent standing
committee in each chamber. For additional discussion on such a transformation, see CRS
Report RS21901, House Select Committee on Homeland Security: Possible Questions Raised
If the Panel Were to Be Reconstituted as a Standing Committee
, by Judy Schneider.

CRS-13
joint committee alone could do so, whether one chamber could do
so, or whether both houses must act together as the final arbiter.
! Add confusion and conflict over investigations of suspected
unauthorized disclosures of classified information. This could arise,
for instance, if the ethics committee from one chamber conducted
investigations which involved Members of the other body, even if
only tangentially and in an initial inquiry.
! Raise practical difficulties in setting meeting schedules, times, and
locations for panel members from two different chambers of
Congress.
Alternatives to a Joint Committee
There are other options which might increase and improve congressional
oversight of intelligence. These changes, both formal and informal, tie into the
structure of the current select committees on intelligence, the relationship between
them, and the relationship between each one and other committees and Members in
its house.
Changing the Select Committees
Most direct and immediate among the options would be ways to enhance the
status, stature, and resources of the existing select committees on intelligence or
replace them with standing committees.19 This might be accomplished through
several avenues:
! grant the current select committees status as standing committees,
along with indefinite tenure for their membership, to reduce
turnover; increase experience, stability, and continuity; and make
membership on the panel more attractive;
! expand their authority, giving them power to report appropriations
as well as authorizations and to hold subpoena authority on their
own;
! add professional staff, especially in fields where the panels might
require new or expanded expertise and skills; and
19 The 9/11 Commission emphasized the need for “substantial change” in congressional
oversight, either by establishing a joint committee or by creating “a single committee in each
house of Congress, combining authorization and appropriating authorities .... “ Each panel
would be a standing committee and hold subpoena authority. The membership would be
relatively small and serve without term limits. Its composition would be nearly equal
between the parties, with the majority having only one more member than the minority, and
representing four panels with overlapping jurisdiction (i.e., Armed Services, Judiciary,
Foreign Affairs, and the Defense Appropriations Subcommittee) with one seat each on the
new committee. 9/11 Commission, Report, p. 420-421.

CRS-14
! increase use of the Government Accountability Office, formerly the
General Accounting Office, and other congressional support
agencies, to augment the staff capabilities of the current committees
or their successors.20
Concerns. This set of changes, producing a restructured intelligence
committee in each chamber, might also generate concerns and criticisms. A standing
committee — smaller than the existing select committees in each chamber, with
representation from four standing committees with overlapping membership and
indefinite tenure for its members — would substantially reduce: the number of
Members in each chamber serving on such a panel at any one time; the number of
at-large seats available; the number of vacancies available over time; and, thus, the
likelihood of a Member finding a seat on the committee. These changes in tandem
could also lead to fewer former members from the committee, thus, reducing the
ability of the full chamber and non-members to be knowledgeable about how the
intelligence community operates and intelligence policy; and it could result in a
decline of the ability to question if not challenge the committee. Arguably, this
could result in a more likely prospect of a closed system, making it easier for the
intelligence panels to dominate the agenda and debate in their respective chambers
and in the full Congress.
A second set of cautions might surround the proposed new authority,
particularly, adding appropriations to its authorizing control and independent
subpoena power. Such subpoena authority, which could cover either or both
materials and individual testimony, would be held (and used) without needing
approval in each instance by the chamber. This might be seen as infringing on an
important full-chamber power and removing a check on this particular committee,
which would be already subject to fewer constraints than the current select
committees have.
The addition of appropriations approval would apparently produce a unique
situation in the contemporary Congress and a rarity in its entire history. Enhanced
by this new power, the panel might be perceived as too powerful. It would hold two
impressive and reinforcing authorities and would no longer be subject to a check and
competition from a significant outside source (i.e., the Appropriations Committee in
its chamber). At the same time, the change would remove an important part of the
20 Most significantly, GAO is limited in its independent authority to audit and investigate the
CIA, which apparently is off-limits to the Office because of provisions in public law and
congressional rules. The CIA, however, is the only intelligence component which makes
such an across-the-board claim. See U.S. General Accounting Office, Central Intelligence
Agency: Observations on GAO Access to Information on CIA Programs and Activities
,
statement by Henry J. Hinton, GAO-01-975T (Washington: GAO, 2001); U.S. House
Government Reform Subcommittees on Government Efficiency and on National Security,
Is the CIA’s Refusal to Cooperate with Congressional Inquiries a Threat to Effective
Oversight of the Federal Government
, hearings, 107th Cong., 1st sess (Washington: GPO,
2001); Frederick M. Kaiser, “GAO Versus the CIA: Uphill Battles Against an Overpowering
Force,” International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence, vol. 15 (2002), pp.
330-389; and CRS Report RL30349, GAO: Government Accountability Office and General
Accounting Office
, by Frederick M. Kaiser.

CRS-15
Appropriations Committee’s jurisdiction; and it might encourage other authorizing
committees to request the same treatment, that is, control over appropriations along
with authorizations. Although the appropriations and authorization processes are
parallel to one another, they are not identical and not always reinforcing or
complementary to one another. The augmented authority could result in
substantially more work for the intelligence committee, with the need to “scrub” the
intelligence budget twice each year. The potential increase in the panel’s workload
could have two adverse ramifications: (1) short-change either or both the
appropriations and authorization processes or (2) reduce its time for other legislative
and oversight efforts.
Coordination Between the Two Intelligence Panels
Such changes would affect the intelligence committees’ individual structure and
powers. Others could be designed to increase coordination and shared responsibility
between the two panels — so as to avoid duplication, encourage cooperation,
develop working relationships across chambers, enhance understanding, and share
expertise, information, and knowledge — while at the same time, maintaining the
distinct characteristics of each panel. These might include joint hearings and cross-
committee leadership meetings, which may already exist on a regular basis.
Joint Hearings. One option along these lines is to schedule joint hearings for
relatively routine and regular matters, such as the initial annual authorization
briefings from the Executive. Another opportunity for a joint session would occur
when the inspectors general in the intelligence community, especially at the CIA,
submit their semiannual reports to Congress. These shared enterprises could allow
the combined membership to receive the same information and data as each panel
would individually, establish working relationships among the two groups of
members, encourage cross-fertilization among them, and reduce duplication for the
Executive. Of course, followup hearings could be handled separately by the two
panels and may even be stimulated by such joint efforts. The shared experience over
the initial budget submission could also help to avoid duplication of effort over some
modest matters, while helping to set priorities for more significant ones.
Joint hearings could also be conducted into critical events, as they were with the
select intelligence committees combined inquiry into 9/11 attacks.21 Another
example of an inquiry with panels from both chambers was the Iran-contra affair, an
investigation conducted by two temporary committees working together and issuing
a joint report.22
21 U.S. Congress, Senate Select Committee on Intelligence and House Permanent Select
Committee on Intelligence, Joint Inquiry into Intelligence Community Activities Before and
After the Terrorist Attacks of September 11, 2001
, S.Rept. 107-351 and H.Rept. 107-792,
107th Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 2002).
22 U.S. Congress, Senate Select Committee on Secret Military Assistance to Iran and the
Nicaraguan Opposition, and House Select Committee to Investigate Covert Arms
Transactions with Iran, Report on the Iran-Contra Affair, S.Rept. 100-216 and H.Rept. 100-
433, 100th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 1987).

CRS-16
Leadership Meetings. Another means of encouraging inter-chamber
cooperation is for the leadership of the two panels to meet regularly, to discuss
issues, concerns, and priorities (recognizing, of course, the practical and political
limitations on such exchanges). These efforts might include only the full committee
chairs or might extend to subcommittee heads, and majority and minority members.
These sessions could be supplemented by meetings of senior staff on both panels, at
the direction of the leadership. Whatever the arrangement, a number of different
opportunities exist to enhance awareness of common concerns and cooperation in
examining them between the two panels.
Constraints on Coordination. Coordination between two panels from
different chambers may encounter practical and political problems. Scheduling
meetings and hearings, especially if a large number of members are involved, for
instance, runs into several hindrances. These include different priorities and meeting
arrangements for each committee; competing chamber and committee responsibilities
for members, especially Senators, each of whom serve on more committees than
Representatives; and different electoral and campaign requirements, which affect the
demands on Members and the time they spend in the Capital. In addition, rival
political affiliations and policy stands, along with competition between the chambers
for influence over public policy, might make cooperative ventures few and far-
between.
Interchanges with Other Panels and Members
Besides increasing the powers of each panel and their cooperative ventures,
another approach might be considered: ease the exchange of information with non-
committee members and allow for more oversight by other committees. Along these
lines, the 9/11 Commission wrote that the “new committee or committees should conduct
studies of the activities of the intelligence agencies and report problems relating to the
development and use of intelligence to all members of the House and Senate.”23
Goals. This change could reduce the challenge of intelligence oversight on the
select committees, bring different viewpoints be bear on intelligence matters, expand
the knowledge of Members not on the panels, and allow for their informed judgments
on intelligence policy and programs as well as on committee activities and
operations. Strict controls over the classified information would have to be
maintained. But the current committee rules — which on the House side are more
stringent than on any other committee — might be modified to accommodate
additional sources for review and oversight; such a revision could begin with a
comparison to access controls by other panels, particularly the committees with
overlapping membership. In addition, House and Senate chamber rules authorizing
secret or closed sessions might be used more often to allow for an open exchange of
information from the intelligence committees to all the Members. Along with this,
committee members might be allowed to present “declassified” versions of sensitive
or otherwise classified reports to their colleagues, in secret sessions or not.
Techniques. Several potential techniques to expand non-committee
involvement and non-member information are:
23 9/11 Commission, Report, p. 420.

CRS-17
! ensure that relevant information is appropriately and expeditiously
shared with committees with overlapping membership;
! give greater allowance for other committees to conduct oversight of
intelligence components, activities, and programs, including
standing committees without overlapping membership;24
! ease access for non-members to intelligence committee holdings, by
reducing the exacting requirements over the availability of the
classified;
! encourage the intelligence committees, on their own initiative, to
share information as appropriate with the full membership of their
house; and
! make more information available to non-members by securing
declassification of certain intelligence reports or by providing
classified and declassified versions of IC reports (for the committees
and for the general membership, respectively); the agencies proper
or their inspectors general (charged with preventing and detecting
waste, fraud, and abuse) could do either or both, possibly at the
request or directive of the intelligence committees.
Limitations. Interchanges between the intelligence committees, on the one
hand, and other panels and Members, on the other, might be limited for several
reasons. Concerns about the unauthorized disclosures of classified information
might be raised as the possibility of leaks rises, because of the increased number of
individuals with access to sensitive information. Along with this, intelligence
agencies would likely be reluctant to respond to congressional requests for sensitive
and classified information, even from the intelligence committees, if the agencies
anticipate that all or some of it will be disclosed outside the sequestered intelligence
committee rooms, possibly to the floors of both houses.
Another possibility, which might retard information-sharing by the intelligence
committees, could be a concern about a reduction in their control over the
intelligence agenda and debate. As more Members and panels became familiar with
the relevant information and policies, more questions might arise relating to the
committees’ policy positions. This development might be seen as weakening the
committees, a condition that might reduce their (and, in turn, Congress’s) influence
over intelligence agencies and policies in dealings with the Executive.
Observations on Oversight of Intelligence
Obstacles to Oversight
24 See especially House Subcommittees on Efficiency and on National Security, CIA Refusal,
2001.

CRS-18
Congressional oversight of intelligence meets obstacles that are not usually
present in other areas.
Secrecy Constraints. The most significant constraint is the high degree and
pervasiveness of secrecy surrounding intelligence policy, information, activities,
operations, resources, and personnel. For Congress, this means that the legislature,
its committees, and its Members are circumscribed in a number of ways: what they
know; who receives the information and how; who provides it and in what form and
detail; what can be shared with other Members and panels and how; and what non-
governmental outside sources can contribute to legislators’ knowledge, to what
degree, and in what ways.
The secrecy imperative also results in a system that is often closed to outsiders
— not just the general public but also Representatives and Senators who are not
members of the select committees on intelligence. This requirement is evident in the
restrictions on access to and disclosure of classified information in the panels’
custody as well as on restraints covering what the select committee members
themselves can discuss. The access restrictions slow down or stop access by non-
members; the demanding procedures may also deter requests in the first place, thus,
having a “chilling effect” on some non-members. As noted above, other secrecy
controls extend to the Government Accountability Office, Congress’s chief audit and
investigative agency.
The impact and implications of secrecy are extensive and arguably burdensome.
The 9/11 Commission summarized the effects this way: “Secrecy stifles oversight,
accountability, and information sharing.”25
Appeal of Intelligence Oversight. Along with this is the apparently limited
appeal of overseeing intelligence and making intelligence policy, including
authorizing the budget. Congressional efforts here remain largely hidden and have
only marginal direct effects on Members’ constituencies and their districts or states.26
Overcoming the Obstacles
Objectives and Goals. The upshot of these limitations on Congress’s
oversight of intelligence is that it is significantly more difficult than in other fields;
and the usual incentives for Members to serve on certain committees and conduct
oversight appear to be more modest or non-existent for intelligence.
Steps have been advanced to increase Congress’s capacity to overcome these
hurdles. Prospects along this line include increasing the appeal of serving on an
intelligence panel; enhancing the expertise and knowledge of the members, both on
and off the panels, and staff; reinforcing the shared responsibilities between the
intelligence committees, on the one hand, and the panels with overlapping
memberships, on the other; changing the relationship between the two chambers on
intelligence matters, which could occur through a joint committee or through
25 9/11 Commission, Report, p. 24.
26 Ibid., pp. 420-421.

CRS-19
increased contacts between the existing committees; and developing a connection
between Congress and the Executive that lends itself to more effective oversight.
The Joint Committee Approach and Alternatives. Growing out of this
are a number of recommendations to strengthen oversight of intelligence, which have
arisen since the genesis of the modern intelligence community nearly sixty years ago.
Recent ones have come in 2004, from the 9/11 Commission, which proposed two
separate alternatives: an intelligence committee in each house with enhanced powers
or a joint committee on intelligence. Over the years, however, the drafts for a JCI
have differed in important respects: membership, leadership, jurisdiction, authority,
staffing, and controls over classified information, among other matters. In addition,
rationales for a JCI have met with competing objections and concerns. Finally,
various other options — including modifying the powers and procedures of the
House and Senate intelligence committees — continue to play a role in considering
changes for congressional oversight of intelligence.