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Report calls for improvements at FBI to combat terror

FBI must work speed up its efforts to confront increasingly sophisticated terrorists and improve its ability to gather intelligence on global threats

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FBI director James Comey, center, gestures during a news conference at FBI headquarters in Washington, Wednesday, March 25, 2015.

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By Eric Tucker
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The FBI must work speed up its efforts to confront increasingly sophisticated terrorists and improve its ability to gather intelligence on global threats to the nation’s security, according to an outside review released Wednesday.

The report said the FBI has made significant strides since the Sept. 11 terror attacks, including doing a far better job now of sharing information with other law enforcement agencies. But it said there’s still room for improvement, especially at a time of emerging new threats such as the Islamic State and the flow of Westerners joining militant fighters in Syria.

“These threats are not just knocking on the door. They’re in the room,” said former Rep. Timothy Roemer, a member of the original 9/11 commission who helped prepare the new 127-page analysis.

The review was ordered by Congress to assess the FBI’s performance on counterterrorism matters in the last decade, and its authors said they hoped it could serve as a blueprint for improvement over the coming years. It was also intended to gauge the progress the FBI has made in carrying out recommendations the 9/11 commission made in a 2004 report.

It was released as FBI Director James Comey went to Capitol Hill to defend an $8.48 billion budget request that seeks extra funding for cyber investigations, among other changes.

Though largely positive about the FBI’s transformation over the last decade, the report did identify several weaknesses, including a need for better and more integrated intelligence analysis and collection. The FBI’s staff of intelligence analysts should be valued as part of a “professionalized workforce” with specific requirements in training and education, access to better technology and incentives to do more strategic analysis.

Improvements in information sharing have undoubtedly helped prevent “another catastrophic terrorist attack,” but progress in building human intelligence programs lags behind, according to the review.

“This imbalance needs urgently to be addressed to meet growing and increasingly complex national security threats, including from adaptive and increasingly tech-savvy terrorists, more brazen computer hackers, and more technically capable, global cyber syndicates,” the report states.

The report looked at five terror plots and attacks in the last few years, including the 2009 Fort Hood shooting and the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing. It identified lapses in communication and coordination among different offices of the FBI, though the report said it could not say whether law enforcement could have detected the plots earlier had better collaboration existed.

Even though the FBI cultivates confidential sources for intelligence purposes, no human sources provided actionable intelligence to stop or prevent any of the five plots, it found.

In some cases, information that may have been useful — such as a 2012 outburst at a religious center by Boston Marathon bomber Tamerlan Tsarnaev — never made it to the FBI or was not analyzed carefully enough. Intelligence programs in New York and Denver also failed to identify Najibullah Zazi, an Afghan-American cab driver convicted in a thwarted plot to blow up New York City’s subway system, the report said.

“What’s written in there is not a surprise to anybody in the FBI ‘cause we have squeezed those cases trying to understand what could we do better,” Comey said.

The report also said frequent leadership changes slow down the pace of improvement, and that the FBI needs better coordination with the private sector and other agencies to deal with cyber threats.

Comey said he supported most of the conclusions and considered the report affirmation of the FBI’s work over the last decade. But he said he disagreed with the recommendation that the FBI should not have a role in a new White House initiative to counter the radicalization of Americans through community outreach.

“I think there is an important role for the FBI to play,” Comey said.

Copyright 2015 The Associated Press

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