San Antonio
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The era of the analyst-led, multi-agency โ€œscavenger huntโ€ for intelligence information needs to end, and the National Reconnaissance Office plans to do its part as part of the U.S. intelligence communityโ€™s ongoing transformation,




a top National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) official said during the Oct. 23 panel โ€œStrategic Analysis Transformationโ€ here at the Geoint 2007




Symposium.





Lance Killoran, the NROโ€™s new director for imagery acquisition and operations, used the occasion to provide details of the changes his agency plans to make




. The NRO changes will be part of the U.S. intelligence communityโ€™s effort to streamline its operations and deliver accurate information more quickly to strategic analysts and tactical warfighters.

Killoran
cautioned that NROโ€™s planned reorganization is a โ€œwork in progress,โ€ but he outlined those changes he said have been agreed to under the agencyโ€™s five-month-long




internal transformation process. Underlying the changes, he said, is NROโ€™s determination to focus on intelligence problems โ€“ โ€œWhat is the capability of that weapon system?โ€- rather than on the data within specific categories of intelligence, called โ€œintsโ€ in the intelligence communityโ€™s parlance.

NRO is responsible for two major intelligence information categories: the U.S. signals intelligence and imaging satellites. Until now, NRO has managed these satellites through separate management chains or โ€œtowers.โ€ Critics have contended that these management towers act almost like separate agencies with their own, unique bureaucratic cultures.

โ€œWeโ€™re going to take the sigint mission management organization, and the [imagery intelligence] mission management organization, and weโ€™re going to bring them together in one place,โ€ Killoran said.

The signals intelligence and imaging intelligence satellites and their ground stations around the world will be controlled by one operations organization, Killoran said. โ€œWe no longer will have an operations directorate under [signals intelligence] and one under [imaging intelligence],โ€ Killoran said.

U.S. Air Force Maj. Gen. John T. Sheridan, deputy director of the NRO, said the reorganization is intended to accelerate the agencyโ€™s transition to a sensor-neutral ground infrastructure that emphasizes flexibility. โ€œThe most flexible system is not in space โ€“ itโ€™s on the ground,โ€ he said.



The change means that analysts who have had to navigate through two NRO organizations will now be able to approach one organization with a request to task a satellite to study a certain problem or geographic region.



NRO often refers to its reconnaissance satellites as a constellation, and the change would make good on that description. โ€œWeโ€™re going to try to treat the constellation as a constellation [by having it] attack a problem as a constellation,โ€ Killoran said.

NRO also plans to add Internet-style metadata to its digital information so that analysts can be alerted to possibly related information from other sensors or even human intelligence.

โ€œThere [will be] links to other data that says, โ€˜Oh by the way, either at that locale, or at that time, or relative to that problem that was tasked, there is this other data out there,โ€ Killoran said.

Killoran
said he hopes to end the days when intelligence analysts had to cultivate friends in each different intelligence arena to gain access to information.

โ€œThen what do we do to you?โ€ he said of the intelligence analysts. โ€œWe send you on the ultimate scavenger hunt across all of the systems and agencies to try to pull data thatโ€™s now been distributed out there together relative to your problem. You may or may not be successful. It depends a little bit on your perseverance,โ€ he added.

Killoran
also criticized some of those who operate intelligence tools. He said managers sometimes act as though they own the systems and their products.



โ€œJust because you built a collector, or you operate a collector, or you task a collector, or you analyze the data, or you exploit the data, you do not have a deed of ownership to that data. That data belongs to, if anyone, the taxpayer,โ€ he said.

To get at the ownership problem, NRO plans to bring into being a new Enterprise Integration Division, with a new director to be named โ€œin the not too distant future,โ€ Killoran said.

โ€œWeโ€™ve got to move from a world of onerous data to ownerless data,โ€ he said.