presented the
NIDSM to
James L. Jones, October 20, 2010.
Nomination, 2010 Defense Secretary Robert Gates suggested to President Obama that he nominate Clapper to replace
Dennis C. Blair as Director of National Intelligence, but both Chairman
Dianne Feinstein and Vice-chairman
Kit Bond of the
U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee offered reservations regarding his appointment due to his military background and emphasis on defense-related issues. Lawmakers approved his nomination on August 5, 2010, in a unanimous vote after the
Senate Intelligence Committee backed him with a 15–0 vote. During his testimony for the position, Clapper pledged to advance the DNI's authorities, exert tighter control over programming and budgeting, and provide oversight over the CIA's use of
drones in Pakistan. listen as Defense Secretary Gates addresses the audience, June 4, 2011.
Creating deputy director for intelligence integration position In August 2010, Clapper announced a new position at the DNI called the deputy director of national intelligence for intelligence integration, to integrate the former posts of deputy director for analysis and deputy director for collections into one position.
Robert Cardillo, the deputy director of the
Defense Intelligence Agency, was tapped to fill the new post.
Budget authority over U.S. Intelligence Community After an agreement between Clapper and
Defense Secretary Robert Gates, his office assumed administrative control over the
National Intelligence Program. Previously the NIP was itemized within the Defense Department budget to keep the line item and dollar amount from public view. In late October 2011, Clapper's office disclosed the top line budget as $53.1 billion, which was below the $75 billion figure circulated in 2010, in the belief the budget change would strengthen the DNI's authority. and
DIA chief
Ronald Burgess, September 29, 2011.
Iran and Saudi Arabia, 2012 In January 2012, Clapper said that "some Iranian officials, probably including supreme leader
Ali Khamenei, have changed their calculus and are now more willing to conduct an attack in the United States in response to real or perceived US actions that threaten the regime." Clapper added that Iran was "keeping open the option to develop nuclear weapons." In February 2012, Clapper told the Senate that if
Iran is attacked over its alleged
nuclear weapons program, it could respond by closing the
Strait of Hormuz to ships and launch missiles at regional U.S. forces and allies. Former Defense Intelligence Agency chief Lt. Gen.
Ronald Burgess told senators that Iran is unlikely to initiate or intentionally provoke a conflict. Clapper said it's "technically feasible" that
Tehran could produce a nuclear weapon in one or two years if its leaders decide to build one, "but practically not likely." Both men said they did not believe
Israel had decided to strike Iran back then. In December 2012, Clapper authorized the NSA to expand its "third party" relationship with
Saudi Arabia. The goal was "to facilitate the Saudi government's ability to utilize
SIGINT to locate and track individuals of mutual interest within Saudi Arabia."
Common information technology enterprise and desktop, 2012 Clapper made "intelligence integration" across the
Intelligence Community the primary mission of the ODNI. In 2012 the office announced an initiative to create a common information technology desktop for the entire Intelligence Community, moving away from unconnected agency networks to a common
enterprise model. In late fiscal 2013, the shared IT infrastructure reached operating capability with plans to bring on all intelligence agencies over the next few years.
Testimony to Congress on NSA surveillance, 2013 On March 12, 2013, during a
United States Senate Select Committee on Intelligence hearing, Senator
Ron Wyden quoted NSA director
Keith B. Alexander's keynote speech at the 2012
DEF CON. Alexander had stated that "Our job is foreign intelligence" and that "those who would want to weave the story that we have millions or hundreds of millions of dossiers on people, is absolutely false.... From my perspective, this is absolute nonsense." Wyden then asked Clapper, "Does the NSA collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans?" He responded, "No, sir." Wyden asked, "It does not?" and Clapper said, "Not wittingly. There are cases where they could inadvertently, perhaps, collect, but not wittingly." When
Edward Snowden was asked during a January 26, 2014, television interview in
Moscow on what the decisive moment was or what caused him to whistle-blow, he replied: "Sort of the breaking point was seeing the director of national intelligence, James Clapper, directly lie under oath to Congress. ... Seeing that really meant for me there was no going back."
Responses On June 5, 2013,
The Guardian published the first of the
global surveillance documents leaked by
Edward Snowden, including a top secret court order showing that the NSA had collected phone records from over 120 million
Verizon subscribers. The following day, Clapper acknowledged that the NSA collects telephony
metadata on millions of Americans' telephone calls. This metadata information included originating and terminating telephone number, telephone calling card number,
International Mobile Station Equipment Identity (IMEI) number, time, and duration of phone calls, but did not include the name, address, or financial information of any subscriber. The rationale for this data collection, which was said to be permitted under Section 216 of the
Patriot Act, was that if the NSA discovered a terrorist was called into the U.S. and knew the number the terrorist was calling from, the NSA could look at the phone records to see what U.S. number he was calling to. If that indicated something worth investigating, obtaining caller identities and actually listening to the content of the calls would require a warrant from a U.S. court. On June 7, Clapper was interviewed by
Andrea Mitchell on
NBC. Clapper said that "I responded in what I thought was the most truthful, or least untruthful manner by saying no" when he testified. In Clapper's 2018 memoir, he provides a fuller explanation of the incident: ...because the NSA program under Section 215 was highly classified, Senator Wyden wouldn't or shouldn't have been asking questions that required classified answers on camera....my error had been forgetting about Section 215, but even if I had remembered it, there still would have been no acceptable, unclassified way for me to answer the question in an open hearing. Even my saying, "We'll have to wait for the closed, classified session to discuss this," would have given something away. ...I ought to have sent a classified letter to Senator Wyden explaining my thoughts when I'd answered and that I misunderstood what he was actually asking me about. Yes, I made a mistake – a big one – when I responded, but I did not lie. I answered with truth in what I understood the context of the question to be. On June 11, U.S. Senator
Ron Wyden (D-OR) accused Clapper of not giving a "straight answer," noting that Clapper's office had been provided with the question a day in advance of the hearing and was given the opportunity following Clapper's testimony to amend his response. On June 12, 2013, Representative
Justin Amash became the first congressman to openly accuse Director Clapper of
criminal perjury, calling for his resignation. In a series of
tweets he stated: "It now appears clear that the director of national intelligence, James Clapper, lied under oath to Congress and the American people," and "Perjury is a serious crime ... [and] Clapper should resign immediately," U.S. Senator
Rand Paul (R-KY) said "The director of national intelligence, in March, did directly lie to Congress, which is against the law." Paul later suggested that Clapper might deserve prison time for his testimony. On June 27, 2013, a group of 26 senators sent him a complaint letter opposing the use of a "body of secret law."
Admission of forgetfulness On July 1, 2013, Clapper apologized, telling
Senate Intelligence Committee that "my response was clearly erroneous—for which I apologize." On July 2, Clapper said that he had forgotten about the Patriot Act, which was later clarified that he forgot Section 215 of the act specifically, and therefore had given an "erroneous" answer. On July 2, 2013, journalist
Glenn Greenwald accused the U.S. media of focusing on Edward Snowden instead of focusing on wrongdoing by Clapper and other U.S. officials. Jody Westby of
Forbes argued that due to the revelations, the American public should ask Clapper to resign from office, arguing that "not only did Mr. Clapper give false testimony to Congress, even his June 6 statement was false. We now know—since the companies identified by the
Washington Post have started fessing up—that lots more than telephony metadata has been collected and searched."
Fred Kaplan of
Slate also advocated having Clapper fired, arguing "if President Obama really welcomes an open debate on this subject, James Clapper has disqualified himself from participation in it. He has to go." Andy Greenberg of
Forbes said that NSA officials along with Clapper, in the years 2012 and 2013 "publicly denied–often with carefully hedged words–participating in the kind of snooping on Americans that has since become nearly undeniable."
David Sirota of
Salon said that if the U.S. government fails to treat Clapper and Alexander in the same way as it did
Roger Clemens, "the message from the government would be that lying to Congress about baseball is more of a felony than lying to Congress about Americans' Fourth Amendment rights" and that the “message would declare that when it comes to brazen law-breaking, as long as you are personally connected to the president, you get protection rather than the prosecution you deserve." (left) were both accused of lying under oath to
Congress. On December 19, 2013, seven Republican members of the
House Judiciary Committee called on Attorney General
Eric Holder to investigate Clapper, stating "witnesses cannot be allowed to lie to Congress." In January 2014,
Robert S. Litt, general counsel to the Office of the DNI, stated that Clapper did not lie to Congress, citing the context of the question and the fact that Clapper's staff had answered the question in writing the day before. In May 2015, Litt clarified that Clapper "had absolutely forgotten the existence of" Section 215 of the Patriot Act, and claimed he had been thinking of Section 702 of the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act when he gave the answer. In January 2014, six members of the House of Representatives wrote to President Obama urging him to dismiss Clapper for lying to Congress, stating his statement was "incompatible with the goal of restoring trust" in the intelligence community, but were rebuffed by the White House.
Ban on employee contacts with the media, 2014 In March 2014, Clapper signed a directive that barred employees of the intelligence community from providing "intelligence-related information" to reporters without prior authorization, even to provide unclassified information, making a violation of the directive a "security violation". The order, which purportedly came as a result of congressional urging to crack down on leaks, drew criticism from public watchdogs who claimed that the move would stifle inner-agency criticism and threaten
whistleblowers. The following month he implemented a new pre-publication review policy for the ODNI's current and former employees that prohibits them from citing news reports based on leaks in their unofficial writings. and
Joe Biden meet Clapper,
Rice,
Brennan and other members of the
National Security Council, September 10, 2014.
ACLU v. Clapper In June 2013, the
American Civil Liberties Union and the
New York Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit against several defendants including Clapper challenging the intelligence community's bulk collection of
metadata. The
United States District Court for the Southern District of New York found in December 2013 that the collection did not violate the
Fourth Amendment and dismissed the lawsuit. On May 7, 2015, the
United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled that Section 215 of the Patriot Act did not authorize the bulk collection of metadata, which judge Gerard E. Lynch called a "staggering" amount of information.
OPM hack, 2015 In June 2015, the
United States Office of Personnel Management (OPM) announced that it had been the target of a
data breach targeting the records of as many as 18 million people. Speaking at a forum in Washington, D.C., Clapper warned of the danger posed by a capable adversary such as the Chinese government and said, "You have to kind of salute the Chinese for what they did."
CENTCOM analyst allegations, 2015 In August 2015, fifty
intelligence analysts working for
United States Central Command (CENTCOM) complained to the Pentagon's
Inspector General and the media, alleging that CENTCOM's senior leadership was altering or distorting intelligence reports on the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) to paint a more optimistic picture of the ongoing war against ISIL forces in Iraq and Syria. They were subsequently joined by civilian and
Defense Intelligence Agency analysts working for CENTCOM. Members of the groups began anonymously leaking details of the case to the press in late August. In September 2015,
The Guardian reported that according to an unknown former intelligence official, Clapper was in frequent contact with Brigadier General Steven Grove, who was said to be one of the subjects of the Inspector General's review. In February 2017, the Inspector General of the
United States Department of Defense completed its investigation and cleared the senior leadership of CENTCOM, concluding that "allegations of intelligence being intentionally altered, delayed or suppressed by top CENTCOM officials from mid-2014 to mid-2015 were largely unsubstantiated."
Resignation, 2016 In November 2016, Clapper resigned, effective at the end of President Obama's term in January 2017. ==Post-government life==