For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
May 8, 2006
President Nominates General Michael Hayden as Director of the Central Intelligence Agency
The Oval Office
Fact Sheet: General Michael V. Hayden: the Right Leader for the CIA
9:31 A.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Good morning. Today I'm pleased to nominate General Mike Hayden as the next Director of the Central Intelligence Agency. Mike Hayden is supremely qualified for this position. I've come to know him well as our nation's first Deputy Director of National Intelligence. In that position, he's worked closely with our Director of National
Intelligence, John Negroponte, to reform America's intelligence
capabilities to meet the threats of a new century.
Mike has more than 20 years of experience in the intelligence field. He
served for six years as Director of the National Security Agency, and thus
brings vast experience leading a major intelligence agency to his new
assignment. He also served as Commander of the Air Intelligence Agency, as Director of the Joint Command and Control Warfare Center, and as Deputy Chief of Staff of the United States and U.N. Forces in Korea.
He's held senior positions at the Pentagon, the U.S. European Command, the National Security Council, and served behind the Iron Curtain in our
embassy in Bulgaria during the Cold War.
Mike knows our intelligence community from the ground up. He has been both a provider and a consumer of intelligence. He's overseen the development of both human and technological intelligence. He has demonstrated an ability to adapt our intelligence services to the new challenges of the war on terror. He's the right man to lead the CIA at this critical moment in our nation's history.
It's my honor to welcome Mike's wife, Jeanine, and their family to the Oval
Office. I want to thank them for their willingness to support Mike Hayden
in his long service to the United States.
With the agreement of the Senate, Mike will succeed a great patriot in
Director Porter Goss. Under Porter's leadership, the CIA launched a
five-year plan to strengthen the agency's human intelligence capabilities.
This plan involves increasing the number of operatives and sources in the
field, and building up the agency's analytical capabilities, so the
hardworking men and women of the CIA have the resources they need to
penetrate closed societies and secretive organizations.
Porter also played a vital role in shaping the new relationship between the
CIA and the new Director of National Intelligence. And this process
benefited greatly from the decades-long friendship between him and Director
Negroponte.
Porter took on a critical job at a critical moment in our nation's history.
He instilled a sense of professionalism in the CIA and maintained the high
standards of this vital agency at a time of transition and transformation.
Throughout his public life, Porter Goss has been a man of accomplishment
and integrity, and America appreciates his service.
I'm confident that Mike Hayden will continue the reforms that Porter has
put in place and provide outstanding leadership to meet the challenges and
threats of a dangerous new century. Mike Hayden was unanimously confirmed
by the Senate last year for his current post, and I call on the Senate to
confirm him promptly as the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency.
The work of the CIA has never been more important to the security of the
American people. America faces determined enemies who struck our nation on
September the 11th, 2001, and who intend to attack our country again. To
stop them we must have the best possible intelligence. The men and women
of the CIA are working around the clock and around the world, in dangerous
conditions to gain information that is vital to securing our nation. I
appreciate their dedicated service. And so does Mike Hayden.
In Mike Hayden, the men and women of the CIA will have a strong leader who
will support them. He will ensure they have the resources they need to do
their jobs. He will enforce the secrecy and accountability that are
critical to the security of the American people.
Mike, I appreciate your many years of service to our country. We're
grateful that you've agreed to step forward and serve once again. Thank
you very much.
GENERAL HAYDEN: Mr. President, thank you for those kind words and for the
confidence that you and Ambassador Negroponte have shown to me in
nominating me for this position. There's probably no post more important
in preserving our security and our values as a people than the head of the
Central Intelligence Agency.
When I returned from Korea in 1999 to take the position at NSA, I was
befriended most of all by two people -- George Tenet, who was then DCI, and
Porter Goss, then Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee. Both of
these men befriended me and mentored me and supported me. And I will
always be in their debt, especially now that I find that I've been
nominated to be their successor. If I'm confirmed, I know that I will be
standing on their shoulders.
In the confirmation process, I look forward to meeting with members of the
Congress, better understanding their concerns and working with them to move
the American intelligence community forward. This is simply too important
not to get absolutely right.
To the men and women of the Central Intelligence Agency, if I'm confirmed,
I would be honored to join you and work with so many good friends. Your
achievements are frequently under-appreciated and hidden from the public
eye, but you know what you do to protect the republic.
And finally, to my wife, Jeanine, and the other members of my family, thank
you yet again for agreeing to continue your sacrifices. I can never repay
you enough.
Thank you.
THE PRESIDENT: Congratulations, Mike. Thank you very much. Appreciate
it.
Thank you all.
END 9:38 A.M. EDT
|