By Cheryl Pellerin
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON – The new director of the Defense Intelligence
Agency is approaching his dream job with eyes wide open, valuing people over
technology and expecting a future that holds more intense demands for
intelligence.
Army Lt. Gen. Michael T. Flynn became DIA
director July 24, as well as commander of the collocated joint functional
component command for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance that is
part of U.S. Strategic Command.
“If there’s a dream job for me, this is
it,” Flynn said during an interview with American Forces Press Service.
His vision for the agency, the director
added, “is to operationalize the capabilities that DIA brings to bear, for the
defense community and specifically in support of our combatant commanders --
[the] commanders and organizations that are spread throughout the globe in
support of our nation’s defense.”
DIA personnel are deployed in 139
countries around the world, with more than 500 serving combat forces in
Afghanistan.
“People don’t always know that some of
the men and women who are out there are even from DIA,” Flynn said. “They show
up and they live and breathe with the units they’re [supporting], doing an
intelligence analysis mission and helping commanders understand what’s
happening in their environment.”
The general began his own career as a
paratrooper with the 82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg, N.C. He has served
in command and staff positions, with multiple tours in Iraq and Afghanistan,
including as director of intelligence for U.S. Central Command and director of
intelligence for the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan.
DIA, Flynn said, “has an enormous
responsibility for defense in general and certainly for providing intelligence
support to our war-fighting forces. It did quite a bit for me personally and
certainly for the units that I was a part of over the last … couple of
decades.”
In an open letter to the men and women
of DIA, the director said DIA’s analysis must be timely, responsive and
relevant to the needs of customers that include the military services, and
increasingly international, domestic and private-sector partners.
“We must strengthen our human
intelligence collection against strategic defense targets growing more
difficult to penetrate, while fully incorporating counterintelligence. We must
continue to integrate science and technology to enhance our operations,” he
wrote.
Flynn is a graduate of, among other
institutions, the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College and School of
Advanced Military Studies, whose graduates are informally known as Jedi
Knights, a reference to lightsaber-wielding members of the Jedi order featured
in “Star Wars” films.
He’s also earned an honorary doctorate
from the Institute of World Politics and three master’s degrees, including a
Master of Business Administration degree in telecommunications. But people are
his real focus.
“The best technology to invest in is the
technology between the ears,” he said. “Regardless of what we have in terms of
technology, we have to invest in the people … so we’re leading technology and
technology is not pulling us along.”
Such an investment, Flynn added, has
everything to do with innovation -- allowing people to take risks in thinking
and in trying new ways to present information, to bring ideas forward, and to
allow people freedom of action to try new things.
An innovator himself, Flynn is known in
the intelligence community as one of three authors in January 2010 of a report
published by the Center for a New American Security that was critical of
intelligence in Afghanistan.
“Fixing Intel: A Blueprint for Making
Intelligence Relevant in Afghanistan” by Flynn, who at the time was the senior
intelligence officer in Afghanistan, Marine Corps Capt. Matt Pottinger, and DIA
senior executive Paul D. Batchelor, was based on discussions with hundreds of
people inside and outside the intel community.
The report recommended sweeping changes
for the intel community, including moving from a focus on the enemy to a focus
on the people and culture of Afghanistan, or any country where U.S. forces are
deployed.
In the lead-up to writing the report,
Flynn said, “what I began to realize is that we’re not seeing the … trees [for]
the forest. We’re missing something here.”
What was missing for the intel community,
he said, was a focus on the total environment rather than the threat alone.
“There was not a sound understanding of
what the environment was like, so I think that in our cultural awareness, our
language capabilities, our insight and training … prior to forces entering in
this case Afghanistan, we were missing something in a big way,” Flynn said.
“The fact that we have brought laser
focus to that issue has made us smarter, more aware, more tuned in” to a
process that is also relevant to the pivotal events occurring now in North
Africa, Syria, Yemen and in several African countries.
The intelligence community has also
matured in other ways, Flynn said, and has come to see in itself a much greater
role operationally.
The operational community sees this
integration of intelligence and operations in a way that’s much different now
from 10 years ago, Flynn said. As DIA goes forward, it will look hard at its
integration with the operational community and with the combatant commanders,
the general added.
“Intelligence at the edge is better than
intelligence at the center. … We have to be in the field, [and] we’re already
taking a hard look at how … we place ourselves in a much more operational
footprint globally to be more responsive, to be more agile, to be more flexible
in the kinds of needs that our nation [will have] here in the coming decade,”
he said.
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