In signing the bill last week to restructure the intelligence community and create the job of national intelligence director, President Bush vowed that the government’s new superspy would have real power. “The director will lead a unified intelligence community,” Mr. Bush said, promising that the official would serve as his “principal adviser” on intelligence. But while the president’s signature was the final act in a tumultuous legislative debate, it signaled the start of a new and perhaps equally turbulent period in which the intelligence director will need to assert authority to force the Central Intelligence Agency and 14 other spy agencies to work together.Full Story
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