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Congressional Research Service
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Updated  January 6, 2025


Defense Primer: National and Defense Intelligence


The Intelligence Community  (IC) is responsible for
providing insight into actual or potential threats to the U.S.
homeland,  the American people, and national interests at
home  and abroad. It aims to do so through the production of
timely, non-political products and services to help inform
tactical and strategic decision-makers. Consumers of
intelligence include the President, the National Security
Council (NSC),  executive branch departments and agencies,
the military, Congress, and the law enforcement
community.

The IC is composed  of 18 elements (50 U.S.C. §3003(4)),
two of which are independent, and 16 of which are
component  organizations of six separate departments of the
federal government. These elements receive appropriated
intelligence funding from the National Intelligence Program
(NIP). The nine DOD  IC elements  also receive funding
from the Military Intelligence Program (MIP). For more on
intelligence funding see, CRS In Focus IF10524, Defense
Primer: Budgetingfor  National and Defense Intelligence,
by Michael E. DeVine.


               Statutory IC Elements
DOD   Elements:
*    Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA)
*    National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA)
*    National Reconnaissance Office (NRO)
*    National Security Agency (NSA)
*    U.S. Naval Intelligence (N2)
*    U.S. Marine Corps Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance
     Enterprise (MCISR-E)
*    U.S. Army Intelligence (G2)
*    U.S. Air Force Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance
     (AF/A2)
*    U.S. Space Force Intelligence (S-2)
Non-DOD   Elements:
*    Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI)
*    Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
*    Department of State (DOS) intelligence component: Bureau of
     Intelligence and Research (INR)
*    Department ofjustice (DOJ) intelligence components: the Drug
     Enforcement Administration's Office of National Security
     Intelligence (DEA/ONSI) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation's
     Intelligence Branch (FBI/IB)
*    Department of Homeland Security (DHS) intelligence components:
     Office of Intelligence and Analysis (I&A) and U.S. Coast Guard
     Intelligence (CG-2)
*    Department of Energy (DOE) intelligence component: Office of
     Intelligence and Counter-Intelligence (OICI)
*    Department of the Treasury intelligence component: Office of
     Intelligence and Analysis (OIA)


Source: 50 U.S. Code §3003(4); ODNI.


National and Defense Inte                ence
National intelligence addresses the strategic requirements
of national security policymakers such as the President and
the Secretaries of Defense and State. National intelligence
programs  and activities are funded through the NIP budget
appropriations, which are a consolidation of appropriations
for the ODNI, CIA, general defense, and national
cryptologic, reconnaissance, geospatial, and other
specialized intelligence programs. The NIP, therefore,
provides funding for not only the ODNI, CIA, and IC
elements of the Departments of Homeland  Security,
Energy, the Treasury, Justice, and State, but also,
substantially, for the strategic-level programs and activities
of the intelligence agencies within DOD, particularly the
NSA,  NGA,  DIA,  and NRO.

Defense intelligence comprises the intelligence
organizations and capabilities of the military services, Joint
Staff, combatant commands,  and the four DOD  intelligence
agencies: the NSA, NGA,  DIA,  and NRO.  Defense
intelligence addresses strategic and tactical requirements; it
supports military strategy, planning, and operations,
providing products and services on foreign military
capabilities, plans and intentions, orders-of-battle,
disposition of forces, and the political, social, and economic
factors influencing the environment in areas of actual or
potential military operations.

National and defense intelligence are not discrete
enterprises. The 18 organizational elements, regardless of
whether they may  primarily focus on national or defense
intelligence activities, are required to collaborate closely to
address intelligence gaps and disseminate timely products
to appropriately cleared personnel across the government.
IC elements are expected to leverage international partners
on issues of mutual concern to complement the organic
national and defense intelligence activities funded through
the NIP and MIP.

   O Does What?
Executive Order (EO)  12333, codified in 50 U.S.C. §3001,
establishes general duties and responsibilities for each
element of the IC. Other laws, executive orders, and policy
issuances may establish additional duties and
responsibilities for particular IC elements.

*  DIA  is a DOD  combat  support agency that collects,
   analyzes, and disseminates foreign military intelligence
   to policymakers and the military. DIA serves as the
   nation's primary manager  and producer of foreign
   military intelligence. It manages the production of
   intelligence for the Secretary of Defense, the Joint
   Chiefs of Staff, and the combatant commands.

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