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Under another provision, the DNI would conduct personnel assessments across the intelligence community, to see if each agency had the manpower it needed for the job at hand. Clapper's memo objects to that, too, and objects to a provision requiring the DNI to ensure that all agencies, including those run by the Pentagon, operate in an energy-efficient way. White House spokesman Tommy Vietor said Wednesday that the memo does not represent Clapper's total thinking about the role of the DNI. It was simply a bureaucratic exercise by Clapper's staff that represents a narrow response to a request about how draft legislation would affect the authorities of the defense secretary, Vietor said. The chairwoman of the Intelligence Committee, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., has already voiced misgivings over Clapper as intelligence director and says she would ask for his views on the bill's provisions "and whether he believes a stronger DNI would weaken the authorities of the secretary of defense." Feinstein says her first priority is passing the intelligence authorization act. Meanwhile, Clapper is scheduled to meet senators privately before the end of the week.
[Associated
Press;
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