Op-Ed

The 9/11 Commission Report: Limits of Hasty Reform

The September 11 commission report is without a doubt one of the most thorough, most important and best studies by any such U.S. independent group in recent decades.

Sen. John F. Kerry, Massachusetts Democrat, and many other members of Congress were right to push for its creation. President Bush was right to give it prompt consideration and offer his own variations on its ideas.

But ironically, the commission report may be weakest in precisely those areas—specifically, intelligence reform—where its suggestions are garnering the most attention.

The president’s proposals help some, but do not solve all the problems and may worsen others. In the coming weeks, therefore, Congress and the Bush administration have a lot of work to do, if whatever reforms ultimately adopted are to do more good than harm.

The commission’s recommendations are far-reaching. But the most important can be summarized as follows:

President Bush’s own ideas, as unveiled Monday, echo the commission in its attention to Congress. But the president would change the concept of a national intelligence director, limiting budgetary powers and other bureaucratic prerogatives while also taking the post out of the White House staff.

These suggestions all have a logic behind them and merit further scrutiny. But several may have more cons than pros.

Before approving them, Congress needs to ask a lot of questions—and also probably revamp some of the ideas. Consider several important counterarguments to the suggestions:

On balance, immediate hearings and some immediate action in response to the September 11 Commission recommendations make sense. However, a little patience is in order before we overhaul the intelligence community. It is always tempting to think bureaucratic reform will solve our fundamental national security problems. But it is rarely that simple.

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