Stored: Office of Intelligence and Analysis (Department of Homeland Security)
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Office of Intelligence and Analysis (Department of Homeland Security)
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This map created from a Cargo query (Purge)
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Mission
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To equip the Homeland Security Enterprise with the timely intelligence and information needed to keep the homeland safe, secure, and resilient. It is the only Intelligence Community element statutorily charged with delivering intelligence to state, local, tribal, territorial, and private sector partners.
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Services
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Intelligence gathering; Threat analysis; Information sharing; Counterterrorism intelligence; Cyber threat analysis
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The Office of Intelligence and Analysis (I&A) is the civilian national intelligence component of the United States Department of Homeland Security and one of two statutory members of the United States Intelligence Community (IC) within DHS, the other being Coast Guard Intelligence. It is the only member of the IC tasked with providing intelligence to state, local, tribal and territorial (SLTT) governments, and private sector entities, and developing national intelligence products from information collected by SLTT entities.[1]
I&A leads the Homeland Security Intelligence Enterprise (HSIE), an activity which includes seven mission centers, more than 75 fusion centers across the United States, and intelligence units from DHS field components.
I&A is led by the under secretary for intelligence and analysis, a Senate-confirmed position that is dual-hatted as the department's chief intelligence officer.[2] Kenneth L. Wainstein assumed the role of Under Secretary of Intelligence and Analysis on June 7, 2022.
Overview
DHS and I&A were established in the wake of the September 11th attacks to address some of the fundamental national security challenges and information sharing gaps identified by the 9/11 Commission. I&A was originally established by the Homeland Security Act of 2002[3] as the Directorate for Information Analysis and Infrastructure Protection. It was not until the Implementing Recommendations of the 9/11 Commission Act of 2007[4] that I&A was formally created as the first federal agency statutorily mandated to share information at the state and local level.
Organizational structure
Principal Deputy Under Secretary for Intelligence and Analysis
- Deputy Under Secretary for Analysis
Counterterrorism Center
Cyber Center
Economic Security Mission Center
Transnational Organized Crime Center
Current and Emerging Threats Center
Field Operations Division
Homeland Identities, Targeting and Exploitation Center
- Deputy Under Secretary for Partnerships
Intelligence Enterprise Standards
Mission Readiness
Chief Information Officer
DHS Intelligence Enterprise
DHS's component intelligence programs include:
References
Template:National Intelligence Agencies
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