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Related: Senior CIA official under investigation, resigns
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| At a press briefing at the Pentagon, Rumsfeld says there is no "power play taking place in Washington" (Photo: Xinhua/Reuters) | WASHINGTON, May 9 (Xinhua) -- U.S. Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on Tuesday expressed support for the nomination of
Michael Hayden, a Air Force general, as the new Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) chief, but denied the Pentagon was trying to expand control over the
intelligence community.
At a press briefing at the Pentagon, Rumsfeld said
there was no "power play taking place in Washington, and termed Hayden,
currently the principal deputy director of National Intelligence, as "an
intelligence professional."
He said Hayden had had assignment after assignment
after assignment in the intelligence business, and the general was "very good at
it."
President George W. Bush named Hayden to head the CIA
on Monday, to succeed Porter Goss, who resigned last Friday after having served
less than two years in the position.
Rumsfeld acknowledged that he disagreed with Hayden
in 2004 on whether the National Security Agency (NSA) should remain within the
Pentagon or be moved under control the proposed Office of Director of National
Intelligence. Hayden served as head of the NSA from 1999 before he was appointed
deputy director of National Intelligence in April last year.
Hayden favored putting the NSA under the control of
the director of National Intelligence, while Rumsfeld opposed it. The NSA
eventually remained in the Pentagon.
To put an active duty general in charge of the CIA
has generated criticism from some members of Congress, who have said the move
could jeopardize the spy agency's independence and allow the Pentagon to expand
its control of the U.S. intelligence community. Enditem
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(Photo: Xinhua/Reuters) | |