STEPS FOR IMPROVING THE QUALITY OF INTELLIGENCE

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP95M00249R000801120018-1
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
December 27, 2016
Document Release Date: 
November 16, 2011
Sequence Number: 
18
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 14, 1981
Content Type: 
MISC
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PDF icon CIA-RDP95M00249R000801120018-1.pdf211.54 KB
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Declassified and Approved For Release 2011/11/16: CIA-RDP95M00249R000801120018-1 14 December 1981 1. Rotations to Policy Agencies: Effective immediately, a minimum of a one-year rotational tour in a policy agency or non-intelligence consumer of CIA analysis will be required of all NFAC division chiefs. Analysts and branch chiefs hoping to become division chiefs will not be considered for promotion to supergrade or division chief positions without such experience. Division chiefs already in place without this experience will not be promoted without obtaining it. The DCI, DDCI and D/NFAC will undertake on a high priority basis to obtain agreement on the part of NSC, State, Defense, Commerce, Treasury and other agencies as appropriate to host middle level NFAC managers and analysts on a reimbursable basis for one-year tours. (At the outset, there will need to be a number of exceptions to this policy, especially in view of the fact that so few division chiefs or prospective division chiefs now have such experience. I would expect to begin the program with four to six rotations each year. In each succeeding year, there would be fewer exceptions/exemptions. Office chiefs and deputy office chiefs also will be encouraged to have such a rotational tour.) 2. Research Programs: All NFAC research programs will be evaluated in January. As part of the evaluation, each office will be expected to provide a report on research underway in other parts of the Intelligence Community on the subjects described in their research programs.-They also will be asked to identify whether research on similar subjects is underway outside the U. S. Government and, if so, where it is being done and whether NFAC has been in contact to determine the value of the outside work. The research program for each office will be evaluated in terms of relevance to the needs of the President and the National Security Council and self-initiated projects that will alert policymakers to issues that have not yet come before them but are likely to pose problems ahead. Building block research on important areas also will be identified and protected. Other projects likely will be pruned. 3. Promotions: Each NFAC office will be required beginning immediately to develop and maintain a production file on each analyst. This production file will circulate to members of career service panels when an analyst is being considered for evaluation, ranking and/or promotion. Evaluation of this production will be the primary element in consideration for promotion and in each analyst's annual evaluation. Evaluation of this material will be based on the quality of the work and on progress in developing analytical and writing skills. Quality, not quantity, will be the basis of evaluation. For example, an analyst who has prepared 30 or 40 PDB or NID items in the course of a year will not necessarily be evaluated higher than an analyst who has prepared one or two first-rate major research projects. Indeed, the latter may rank higher. Analysts and managers, working together, will put together a production file for each analyst for calendar year 1981, which will serve as the basis of the production file. These files will be maintained at the division level. Declassified and Approved For Release 2011/11/16: CIA-RDP95M00249R000801120018-1 11 STEPS FOR IMPROVING THE OF INTELLIGENCE Declassified and Approved For Release 2011/11/16: CIA-RDP95M00249R000801120018-1 4. Evaluation: An NFAC Production Evaluation Staff will be established. Consisting of four or five professionals, including at least one or two outsiders, this Staff will be charged with reviewing specific NFAC products, categories of production (e.g. current intelligence publications), office publications, and so forth. Their reports, accompanied by continents from the head of the component producing the evaluated material, will be forwarded to D/NFAC. Evaluations will consider relevance, timeliness, quality of writing and presentation, innovativeness, imagination, and, above all, accuracy. 5. Training: Beginning in 1982, NFAC-analysts will be expected to refresh their substantive knowledge and broaden their perspective through outside training. This may be a local university, courses sponsored by local institutes or think-tanks, or other arrangements to be approved by office chiefs. NFAC will pay the cost of this training and analysts will be allowed time off both to take courses and for course preparation. This will not exceed six hours per week. Each analyst will take academic courses for credit and the grade will be recorded in his personnel file for consideration at the time of eval- uation. At least one three-hour course will be required every two I three] years. 6. Instability, Terrorism and Insurgency: A Center for Instability, Terrorism and Insurgency will be established, probably in Pte 9f = ce-ef.!&tin The existing terrorism unit will be incorporated in this Center. The Center will reestablish the core group for the study of instability that formerly existed in the Office of Geographic and Societal Research. A small staff also will be created to work on the general problem of insurgency. Those in charge of each of the three elements will chair Directorate-wide working groups to ensure constant interchange between those examining the problems in a general sense and those analyzing them on a region- specific basis. 7. Publications Format: Current Intelligence publications will henceforth present information in two parts. Each story will begin with a recitation of the facts as we know them. After the reader has been informed of the facts, each piece will have a "comment" section, which will contain NFAC's analysis of the factual information just presented. Too often there is confusion in the reader's mind between what is fact and what is analysis. Also, too often the present format allows the recitation of facts to pass for analysis and disguises the dearth of the latter in a piece. There will be more emphasis on including in each item analysis of real value to the reader. 8. Co to serve as fro fo cu Comm i t Intel 1, an i.nte develop m gfeater sh Netermina or is essentfial. petitiv on funct fence Com al part atofL L unit Role of ommunity or, ns, 0 direc n z~ ation. ed by/the DC nrty Staff-- pant in Comm pity-wide ks both the cr thermore, its quality o/its and DDCI,,/ will ity proauct vices on the ms, identi g of ri search/orog of areas i,hich c ternal jnipro here they ap opria,tely belo on efforts and ,part of the IC ation of gaps,4 d the clout ]e de NE C's ed to the n 1l remain couge the jaff, to ipclude coverage, ibility mmunity r NFA own work. arily duplicative Declassified and Approved For Release 2011/11/16: CIA-RDP95M00249R000801120018-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2011/11/16: CIA-RDP95M00249R000801120018-1 . Change of Name: loll I- L-the-+m Fie Directorate will once again become the Directorate of Intelligence, and will be known, as in the past, as the DDI. 10. Outside Contacts: Each office will be required to develop an aggressive program of contacts, conferences and seminars on important subjects. Subjects of these meetings should correlate closely with each office's research program and should be intended to inform those in the office associated with such projects of the views of experts outside CIA and the Intelligence Community. A schedule of such conferences and seminars will be prepared on an annual basis and will parallel the research program, although some exceptions will be allowed. Similarly each office will be expected to develop a roster of outside contacts and consul- tants who will be asked regularly to review drafts and provide critical commentary. 11. Quality Control: The accuracy, relevance and timeliness of each NFAC product is the primary responsibility of the branch, division and office chief. Until further notice, all draft Intelligence Assessments,. research papers, Con- gressional briefings prepared for DCI/DDCI use, and typescript memoranda prepared for circulation to policy agencies will be provided to D/NFAC before publication or dispatch. Those which are time urgent shall be so marked, with the deadline clearly indicated. Each draft should bear the name and initials of the approving branch, division and office chiefs--those who bear responsibility for its quality. 3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2011/11/16: CIA-RDP95M00249R000801120018-1