Aspin–Brown Commission
The Aspin–Brown Commission, more properly known as the Commission on the Roles and Capabilities of the US Intelligence Community, was commissioned by the United States Congress after the National Security Act of 1992 failed to be passed. The Commission produced a report in 1996. In the year 2000, the U.S. Senator David L. Boren, Democrat of Oklahoma, wrote in the foreword to Robert D. Steele's book On Intelligence: Spies and Secrecy in an Open World that these reforms had not yet been implemented by any of the Directors of Central Intelligence who had an opportunity to do so. The commission was successively chaired by Les Aspin and Secretary of Defense Harold Brown.
References
- Report of the Commission
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- National Security Act of 1947 (1947)
- Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (1978)
- National Intelligence Reorganization and Reform Act (1978)
- Patriot Act (2001)
- Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act (2004)
- Protect America Act of 2007
- The First Hoover Commission
- The Second Hoover Commission (1953)
- The Rockefeller Commission (1975)
- Aspin–Brown Commission (1995)
- U.S. Commission on National Security/21st Century (2001)
- Weapons of Mass Destruction Commission (2005)
- The Church Committee (1976)
- The Pike Committee (1976)
- Iran–Contra Investigation (1987)
- Eberstadt Report (1947)
- The Dulles–Jackson–Correa Report (1949)
- The Doolittle Report (1954)
- The Bruce–Lovett Report (1956)
- The Taylor Report (1961)
- The Kirkpatrick Report (1961)
- The Schlesinger Report (1971)
- Clifford–Cline Proposals (1976)
- Boren–McCurdy proposals (1992)
- IC21 (1996)
- 9/11 Commission Report (2004)
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