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The hearing will also be a chance for the new House Intelligence Committee chairman, Republican Mike Rogers of Michigan, to lay out his own priorities. Rogers and the top Democrat, Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger of Maryland, have said they'll work to tighten oversight of the intelligence community. Rogers is a former FBI agent who won credit throughout the intelligence community by visiting far-flung CIA and defense intelligence posts in war zones like Afghanistan. He is credited with championing the expanded use of armed drones by the CIA to target militants in Pakistan's lawless tribal regions. On Wednesday, the offices of Rogers and Ruppersberger announced their committee had voted unanimously to allow a handful of House appropriations committee members and staff to attend classified briefings and hearings so they're better informed about the programs they're voting to fund. Both lawmakers also hope to pass a bill this year to pay the intelligence budget. The last such bill, caught in a tug of war between Congress and Bush and Obama officials, took six years to become law. At the top of Rogers' own agenda is a review of the reforms made over the past 10 years to address the intelligence failures that led to the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, according to a copy of his opening remarks, obtained by The Associated Press. Rogers says he'll work to extend the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, saying he wants to extend it and "work toward making its tools permanent parts of our arsenal." Rogers also calls for legislation to address the legal morass of militant detainee issues, including clarifying who can detain a suspect, where they can be held and how they can be questioned. "We need a system for intelligence exploitation and long-term detention that is flexible and can endure changing circumstances and court challenges, no matter where a detainee is picked up in the world," Rogers says in the prepared remarks. Rogers says the 25 percent recidivism rate among those released from the U.S. Navy's detention facility for terrorist suspects at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, is disturbing. "And those are just the ones we know about," he says, implying that the actual figure might be much higher.
[Associated
Press;
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