[United States Government Manual] [June 02, 1998] [Pages 225-236] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov][[Page 225]] DEFENSE AGENCIES Ballistic Missile Defense Organization The Pentagon, Washington, DC 20301-7100 Phone, 703-697-4040 Director Lt. Gen. Lester Lyles, USAF Deputy Director Rear Adm. Richard West, USN Chief of Staff Col. William Smith, USAF [For the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization statement of organization, see the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 32, Part 388] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Ballistic Missile Defense Organization (formerly the Strategic Defense Initiative Organization) was established as a separate agency of the Department of Defense and is Presidentially chartered and mandated by Congress to develop ballistic and cruise missile defense systems that are capable of providing highly effective defense of the United States and a flexible, interoperable family of theater missile defense systems that may be forward deployed to protect elements of the U.S. Armed Forces and allies of the United States. The agency's mission is to manage and direct DOD's Ballistic Missile Defense acquisition programs, which include theater missile defense, and to develop a national missile defense program for the United States. The agency also is responsible for the continuing research and development of follow-on technologies that are relevant for long-term ballistic missile defense. These programs will build a technical foundation for evolutionary growth in future ballistic missile defenses. In developing these programs, the agency utilizes the services of the Military Departments, the Department of Energy, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, private industries, and educational and research institutions. For further information, contact Management Operations, Ballistic Missile Defense Organization, Washington, DC 20301-7100. Phone, 703-693- 1532. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency 3701 North Fairfax Drive, Arlington, VA 22203-1714 Phone, 703-696-2444 Director F.L. Fernandez Deputy Director H. Lee Buchanan III [[Page 226]] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is a separately organized agency within the Department of Defense under a Director appointed by the Secretary of Defense. The Agency, under the authority, direction, and control of the Director of Defense Research and Engineering (DDR&E), engages in advanced basic and applied research and development projects essential to the Department of Defense, and conducts prototype projects that embody technology that may be incorporated into joint programs, programs in support of deployed U.S. forces, selected Military Department programs, or dual-use programs and, on request, assists the Military Departments in their research and development efforts. In this regard, the Agency arranges, manages, and directs the performance of work connected with assigned advanced projects by the Military Departments, other government agencies, individuals, private business entities, and educational or research institutions, as appropriate; recommends through the DDR&E to the Secretary of Defense assignment of advanced projects to the Agency; keeps the DDR&E, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Military Departments, and other Department of Defense agencies informed on significant new developments and technological advances within assigned projects; and performs other such functions as the Secretary of Defense or the DDR&E may assign. For further information, contact the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, 3701 North Fairfax Drive, Arlington, VA 22203-1714. Phone, 703- 696-2444 or 703-526-4170. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Defense Commissary Agency 1300 ``E'' Avenue, Fort Lee, VA 23801-1800 Phone, 804-734-8721. Internet, http://www.deca.mil/. Director Maj. Gen. Richard E. Beale, Jr., USA (Ret.) Executive Director for Operations Crosby H. Johnson Executive Director for Support John F. McGowan ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Defense Commissary Agency was established by direction of the Secretary of Defense on November 9, 1990, and operates under DOD Directive 5105.55. The Agency is responsible for providing an efficient and effective worldwide system of commissaries for reselling groceries and household supplies at low, practical prices (consistent with quality) to members of the Military Services, their families, and other authorized patrons, while maintaining high standards of quality, facilities, products, and service. Commissary savings are a valued part of military pay and benefits. They are also important in recruitment and reenlistment of the all-volunteer force. Sources of Information Employment General employment inquiries should be addressed to Defense Supply Center Richmond, Attn: DSCR-HS, 8000 Jefferson Davis Highway, Richmond, VA 23297-5100. Phone, 804-279-6393. Procurement and Small Business Activities For information, contact the Director, Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization, Headquarters, Defense Commissary Agency, 1300 ``E'' Avenue, Fort Lee, VA 23801-1800. Phone, 804-734-8740. Publication How To Do Business with DeCA is available free of charge from the Director, Small and Disadvantaged [[Page 227]] Business Utilization, at the address above. For further information, contact the Chief, Safety, Security, and Administration, 1300 ``E'' Avenue, Fort Lee, VA 23801-1800. Phone, 804- 734-8808. Internet, http://www.deca.mil/. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Defense Contract Audit Agency Suite 2135, 8725 John J. Kingman Road, Fort Belvoir, VA 22060-6219 Phone, 703-767-3200 Director William H. Reed Deputy Director Michael J. Thibault ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Defense Contract Audit Agency was established in 1965 and operates under Department of Defense Directive 5105.36. The Agency performs all necessary contract audit functions for the Department of Defense and provides accounting and financial advisory services to all Defense components responsible for procurement and contract administration. These services are provided in connection with the negotiation, administration, and settlement of contracts and subcontracts. They include evaluating the acceptability of costs claimed or proposed by contractors and reviewing the efficiency and economy of contractor operations. Other Government agencies may request the Agency's services under appropriate arrangements. The Agency manages its operations through 5 regional offices responsible for approximately 108 field audit offices throughout the United States and overseas. Each region is responsible for the contract auditing function in its assigned area. Regional Offices--Defense Contract Audit Agency ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Region Address Director Telephone ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CENTRAL...................... Suite 300, 106 Decker Ct., C.T. Cherry...................... 214-650-4831 Irving, TX 75062-2795. EASTERN...................... Suite 300, 2400 Lake Park Dr., Richard R. Buhre................. 770-319-4400 Smyrna, GA 30080-7644. MID-ATLANTIC................. Suite 1000, 615 Chestnut St., Barbara C. Reilly................ 215-597-7451 Philadelphia, PA 19106-4498. NORTHEASTERN................. 83 Hartwell Ave., Lexington, Francis Summers, Jr.............. 617-377-9710 MA 02173-3163. WESTERN...................... Suite 300, 16700 Valley View Robert W. Matter................. 714-228-7001 Ave., La Mirada, CA 90638- 5830. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- For further information, contact the Executive Officer, Defense Contract Audit Agency, Suite 2135, 8725 John J. Kingman Road, Fort Belvoir, VA 22060-6219. Phone, 703-767-3265. Information regarding employment may be obtained from the regional offices. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Defense Finance and Accounting Service Room 425, Crystal Mall 3, Arlington, VA 22240-5291 Phone, 703-607-2616 Director Gary W. Amlin [[Page 228]] Deputy Director Brig. Gen. Roger W. Scearce, USA ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Defense Finance and Accounting Service was established by direction of the Secretary of Defense on November 26, 1990, and operates under DOD Directive 5118.5. The Service is responsible for making all payments, including payroll and contracts, and for maintaining all finance and accounting records for the Department of Defense. The Service is responsible for preparing annual financial statements for DOD in accordance with the Chief Financial Officers Act of 1990. The Service is also responsible for the consolidation, standardization, upgrading, and integration of finance and accounting requirements, functions, processes, operations, and systems in the Department. For further information, contact the Public Affairs Office, Room 416, Crystal Mall 3, Arlington, VA 22240-5291. Phone, 703-607-2821. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Defense Information Systems Agency 701 South Courthouse Road, Arlington, VA 22204-2199 Phone, 703-607-6900 Director Lt. Gen. David J. Kelley, USA Vice Director Maj. Gen. John W. Meincke, USAF Chief of Staff Col. A. Frank Whitehead, USA ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA), originally established as the Defense Communications Agency, is a combat support agency of the Department of Defense. The Agency is organized into a headquarters and field activities acting for the Director in assigned areas of responsibility. The field organizations include the White House Communications Agency, Joint Interoperability and Engineering Organization, DISA Western Hemisphere, Joint Interoperability Test Command, Defense Information Technology Contracting Organization, Defense Technical Information Center, and the Joint Spectrum Center. The Agency is responsible for planning, developing, and supporting command, control, communications, and information systems that serve the needs of the National Command Authorities under all conditions of peace and war. It manages the Defense Information Infrastructure (DII) and is responsible for the DOD telecommunications and information processing facilities. It provides guidance and support on technical and operational C\3\ and information systems issues affecting the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the Military Departments, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the combatant commands, and the defense agencies. It ensures the interoperability of DII, theater and tactical command and control systems, North Atlantic Treaty Organization and/or allied C\3\ systems, and those national and/or international commercial systems that affect the DISA mission. It supports national security emergency preparedness telecommunications functions of the National Communications System (NCS), [[Page 229]] as prescribed by Executive Order 12472 of April 3, 1984. For further information, contact the Public Affairs Office, Defense Information Systems Agency, 701 South Courthouse Road, Arlington, VA 22204-2199. Phone, 703-607-6900. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Defense Intelligence Agency The Pentagon, Washington, DC 20340-7400 Phone, 703-695-0071. Internet, http://www.dia.mil/. Director Lt. Gen. Patrick M. Hughes, USA Deputy Director Jeremy C. Clark Chief of Staff Barbara A. Duckworth ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) was established by DOD Directive 5105.21, effective October 1, 1961, under provisions of the National Security Act of 1947, as amended (50 U.S.C. 401 et seq.). The Defense Intelligence Agency is a combat support agency committed to the provision of timely, objective, and cogent military intelligence to the warfighters--soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines--and to the decisionmakers and policymakers of DOD and the Federal Government. To accomplish its assigned mission, DIA produces military intelligence for national foreign intelligence and counterintelligence products; coordinates all DOD intelligence collection requirements; operates the Central Measurement and Signals Intelligence (MASINT) Office; manages the Defense Human Intelligence (HUMINT) Service and the Defense Attache System; and provides foreign intelligence and counterintelligence support to the Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The Director of DIA coordinates the Defense General Intelligence and Applications Program, an element of the DOD Joint Military Intelligence Program, and manages the General Defense Intelligence Program within the National Foreign Intelligence Program. For further information, contact the Public Affairs Office, Defense Intelligence Agency, Washington, DC 20340. Phone, 703-695-0071. Internet, http://www.dia.mil/. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Defense Legal Services Agency The Pentagon, Washington, DC 20301-1600 Phone, 703-695-3341 Director (General Counsel, Department of Judith A. Miller Defense) Principal Deputy Director (Principal Deputy Douglas A. Dworkin General Counsel) [[Page 230]] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Defense Legal Services Agency was established August 12, 1981. It is currently chartered under DOD Directive 5145.4. The Agency is under the authority, direction, and control of the General Counsel of the Department of Defense, who also serves as its Director. The Agency provides legal advice and services for Defense agencies and DOD field activities. It also provides technical support and assistance for development of the Department's legislative program; coordinates positions on legislation and Presidential Executive orders; provides a centralized legislative and congressional document reference and distribution point for the Department; and maintains the Department's historical legislative files. In addition, the Agency includes the Defense Office of Hearings and Appeals program and the DOD Standards of Conduct Office. For further information, contact the Administrative Officer, Defense Legal Services Agency, The Pentagon, Washington, DC 20301-1600. Phone, 703-697-8343. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Defense Logistics Agency Suite 2533, 8725 John J. Kingman Road, Fort Belvoir, VA 22060-6221 Phone, 703-767-6666 Director Lt. Gen. H.T. Glisson, USA Principal Deputy Director Rear Adm. E.R. Chamberlin, USN ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) was established by the Secretary of Defense and operates under Department of Defense Directive 5105.22. It supports both the logistics requirement of the Military Services and their acquisition of weapons and other materiel. Support begins with joint planning with the Services for parts for a new weapons system, extends through production, and concludes with the disposal of material which is obsolete, worn out, or no longer needed. The Agency provides logistics support, contract administration services, and technical services to all branches of the military and to a number of Federal agencies. Within the Agency's Defense Logistics Support Command (DLSC), professional logisticians buy and manage a vast number and variety of items used by all of the Military Services and some civilian agencies. The Military Services determine their requirements for supplies and materiel and establish their priorities. Agency supply centers consolidate the Services' requirements and procure the supplies in sufficient quantities to meet the Services' projected needs, critical to maintaining the readiness of our forces. The Agency manages supplies in eight commodity areas: fuel, food, clothing, construction material, electronic supplies, general supplies, industrial supplies, and medical supplies. The DLSC also manages the distribution function for the Agency through the Defense Distribution Center. Distribution is defined as all actions involving the receipt of new procurements, redistributions, and field returns; storage of materiel, including care of materiel and supplies in storage; the issuance of materiel; consolidation and containerization of materiel; preservation, packaging, packing, and marking; physical inventory; quality control; traffic management; other transportation services, unit materiel fielding, and set assembly/ disassembly; and transshipment and minor repair. The Agency's Defense Contract Management Command (DCMC) administers contracts awarded to industry by the Military Services, DLA, the National Aeronautics and Space [[Page 231]] Administration, other Federal agencies, and foreign governments. The DCMC is responsible for ensuring that procured materiel is of satisfactory quality and is delivered when and where needed. Services of the DCMC include but are not limited to establishing overhead rates, approving progress payments, negotiations, property management, quality assurance, manufacturing, engineering, law, safety, small business assistance, and contractor employment compliance. These duties are performed at or near contractor plants through a complex of offices which vary in size, depending on workload and the concentration of Government contractors in the area. Other Logistics Support Services The Defense Logistics Information Service is the Department of Defense's consolidated site for managing all supply cataloging functions. As such, it manages the Federal Supply Catalog System, which lists a National Stock Number and description of over 6 million items. This catalog system is used throughout the Federal Government. The Center also maintains a data bank of information used to design, purchase, transport, store, transfer, and dispose of Government supplies. The Defense National Stockpile of strategic and critical materials is maintained to reduce the Nation's dependence upon foreign sources of supply for such materials in times of national emergency. The Defense National Stockpile Center is authorized to procure and dispose of materials as needed. The Defense Reutilization and Marketing Service provides for the redistribution and disposal of DOD equipment and supplies no longer needed by the original user. Assets are matched against requirements of the Military Services and Federal agencies and transferred as needed. When equipment becomes surplus, it is offered to the General Services Administration and State agencies, after which it is offered for sale to the public. The Service is a worldwide organization with offices on many major military installations. Primary Level Field Activities--Defense Logistics Agency ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Activity Commander ------------------------------------------------------------------------ DEFENSE SUPPLY CENTERS: Defense Supply Center, Brig. Gen. P.L. Bielowicz, USAF Columbus. Defense Supply Center, Rear Adm. D.H. Stone, USN Richmond. Defense Industrial Supply N. Ranalli Center. Defense Supply Center, Brig. Gen. H.L. Proctor, USA Philadelphia. Defense Energy Support Center Col. J.T. Thomas, USA, Acting DEFENSE DISTRIBUTION CENTER: Defense Distribution Center.. Brig. Gen. K.L. Privratsky, USA DEFENSE SERVICE CENTERS: Defense Logistics Information Col. R. Haglund, USMC Service. Defense Reutilization and Col. R.E. Mansfield, USAF Marketing Service. Defense National Stockpile R.H. Connelly Center. DEFENSE CONTRACT MANAGEMENT DISTRICTS: East......................... Col. W.A. MacKinlay, USA West......................... Col. L.S. Johnson, USAF International................ Capt. D.L. Wright, SC, USN ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Sources of Information DOD Surplus Sales Program Questions concerning this program or placement on the Department of Defense bidders list should be addressed to DOD Surplus Sales, International Sales Office, 74 Washington Avenue North, Battle Creek, MI 49017-3092. Phone, 800-468-8289. Employment For the Washington, DC, metropolitan area, inquiries and applications should be addressed to Defense Logistics Agency, Attn: DASC-R, Suite 2533, 8725 John J. Kingman Road, Fort Belvoir, VA 22060- 6221. Phone, 703-767-7100. Schools interested in participating in the Agency's job recruitment program should direct inquiries to the Defense Logistics Agency, Attn: CAHS, Suite 2533, 8725 John J. Kingman Road, Fort Belvoir, VA 22060- 6221. [[Page 232]] Environment For information concerning the Agency's program, contact the Defense Logistics Agency, Attn: CAAE, Suite 2533, 8725 John J. Kingman Road, Fort Belvoir, VA 22060-6221. Phone, 703-767-6303. Procurement and Small Business Activities For information, contact the Director, Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization, Defense Logistics Agency, Attn: DDAS, Suite 2533, 8725 John J. Kingman Road, Fort Belvoir, VA 22060-6221. Phone, 703-767-1650. For further information, contact the Defense Logistics Agency, Suite 2533, 8725 John J. Kingman Road, Fort Belvoir, VA 22060-6221. Phone, 703-767-6666. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Defense Security Assistance Agency The Pentagon, Washington, DC 22202 Phone, 703-604-6513 Director Lt. Gen. Michael S. Davison, USA Deputy Director H. Diehl McKalip ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Defense Security Assistance Agency was established on September 1, 1971. It is currently chartered under DOD Directive 5105.38. The Agency directs, administers, and supervises the execution of approved security assistance plans and programs, such as military assistance, international military education and training, and foreign military sales. In so doing, it works closely with the U.S. Security Assistance offices worldwide. For further information, contact the Defense Security Assistance Agency, The Pentagon, Washington, DC 22202. Phone, 703-604-6513. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Defense Security Service 1340 Braddock Place, Alexandria, VA 22314-1651 Phone, 703-325-9471 Director Steven T. Schanzer Deputy Director for Policy Rene Davis-Harding Chief Operating Officer Judith M. Hughes Comptroller Delores I. Moeller ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Defense Security Service (formerly the Defense Investigative Service) was established by the Secretary of Defense in the Defense Reform Initiative dated November 1997. The Service is chartered by Department of Defense Directive 5105.42. The Service provides a full range of security support services for the Department of Defense, other Federal Government agencies, defense contractors, and other authorized recipients. It is responsible for all personnel security investigations for [[Page 233]] Department components and, when authorized, investigations for other U.S. Government activities. These include investigation of allegations of subversive affiliations, adverse suitability information, or any other situation that requires resolution to complete the personnel security investigation. The Service is also responsible for industrial security management; automated systems security; polygraph research, education, training, and examinations; and security research, education, and training. Regional Offices--Defense Investigative Service ------------------------------------------------------------------------ City Director ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Alexandria, VA 22331-1000 Raphael G. Syah, Acting Cherry Hill, NJ 08034-1908 Joseph T. Cashin, Acting Irving, TX 75062 James S. Rogner Long Beach, CA 90807-4013 William H. Williams Smyrna, GA 30080-7606 Patricia F. Dodson, Acting ------------------------------------------------------------------------ For further information, contact the Office of Congressional and Public Affairs, Defense Security Service, 1340 Braddock Place, Alexandria, VA 22314-1651. Phone, 703-325-6059. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Defense Special Weapons Agency Alexandria, VA 22310-3398 Phone, 703-325-7095 Director Maj. Gen. Gary L. Curtin, USAF Deputy Director George W. Ullrich Chief of Staff Col. Arthur T. Hopkins, USAF ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Defense Special Weapons Agency (DSWA) is the oldest defense agency, having evolved from the Manhattan Project of World War II. Known variously over the years as the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project, the Defense Atomic Support Agency, and the Defense Nuclear Agency, DSWA is currently chartered under DOD Directive 5105.31. The Agency is designated to be the DOD center of expertise for nuclear and special weapons effects, and operates under the authority, direction, and control of the Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Nuclear and Chemical and Biological Defense Programs (ATSD(NCB)). The Agency supports the ATSD(NCB) in all nuclear weapons stockpile stewardship matters, including the annual nuclear weapons stockpile certification and the nuclear weapons dual revalidation program with the Department of Energy. As part of its stockpile stewardship mission, DSWA tracks the location and status of all U.S. nuclear weapons. Agency personnel also conduct weapons effects research, training, and operational unit inspections to ensure the safety, security, and reliability of the nuclear weapons stockpile. Furthermore, DSWA provides planning assistance to combatant commanders and support in case of a nuclear weapons accident or incident. Through the use of simulators, computer models, and non-nuclear field tests, the Agency supports the military services and combatant commanders by verifying that essential military systems can operate in hostile nuclear environments. It also supports the targeting community through the development of automated analysis and planning tools to ensure the effective employment of both nuclear and conventional weapons across the spectrum of potential targets. One area of specific interest has been the effectiveness of conventional weapons against hardened and deeply buried targets and facilities that may be used to produce or store weapons of mass destruction. [[Page 234]] For the Secretary of Defense, the Agency conducts the Cooperative Threat Reduction Program, which provides support to the states of the former Soviet Union as they comply with a variety of recent arms control treaties. The Agency also carries out the arms control treaty verification technology and counterproliferation technology programs for the Department of Defense. For the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, DSWA provides field support in the form of vulnerability assessments for the force protection program. Other unique responsibilities include operating the Defense Nuclear Weapons School, supporting the Nuclear Test Personnel Review and the Radiation Experimentation Center, and providing base support at Johnston Atoll, one of the U.S. Army's chemical weapons storage and destruction sites. Sources of Information Employment Inquiries should be directed as follows: Headquarters--Defense Special Weapons Agency, Attn: MPCH, 6801 Telegraph Road, Alexandria, VA 22310-2298. Phone, 703-325-7593. Field Command--Attn: FCRIC, 1680 Texas Street SE., Kirtland Air Force Base, NM 87117-5669. Phone, 505-846-8671. Procurement and Small Business Activities Contact the Defense Special Weapons Agency, Attn: AM, 6801 Telegraph Road, Alexandria, VA 22310- 3398. Phone, 703-325-5021. For further information, contact the Public Affairs Office, Defense Special Weapons Agency, 6801 Telegraph Road, Alexandria, VA 22310-3398. Phone, 703-325-7095. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ National Imagery and Mapping Agency 4600 Sangamore Road, Bethesda, MD 20816-5003 Phone, 301-227-7400. Internet, http://www.nima.mil/. Director Maj. Gen. James C. King, USA, Acting Deputy Director Leo Hazlewood Deputy Director, Operations Roberta E. Lenczowski Deputy Director, Systems and William M. Mularie Technology Deputy Director, Corporate Affairs W. Douglas Smith Chief of Staff Lt. Col. John Biggs, USA ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The National Imagery and Mapping Agency (NIMA) was established as a separate agency of the Department of Defense on October 1, 1996, by DOD Directive 5105.60 pursuant to the National Imagery and Mapping Agency Act of 1996 (10 U.S.C. 441 et seq.). The successor agency of both the Defense Mapping Agency and the Central Imagery Office, NIMA also incorporates imagery exploitation and dissemination functions transferred from other DOD offices and from the Central Intelligence Agency. It serves under the authority, direction, and control of the Secretary of Defense, with the advice of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and in accordance with policies and priorities established by the Director of Central Intelligence. The Assistant Secretary of Defense for Command, Control, Communications, and Intelligence exercises overall supervision over NIMA, which is designated as a combat support agency and as an element of the intelligence community. The Agency is responsible for providing timely, relevant, and accurate [[Page 235]] imagery, imagery intelligence, and geospatial information in support of the national security objectives of the United States. Its creation represents a fundamental step toward achieving the Department of Defense vision of dominant battlespace awareness. By exploiting the tremendous potential of enhanced collection systems, digital processing technology, and the prospective expansion in commercial imagery, NIMA works to guarantee customers the information edge. Headquartered in Bethesda, MD, NIMA operates major facilities in northern Virginia, Washington, DC, Bethesda, MD, and St. Louis, MO, as well as support and liaison offices worldwide. For further information, contact the National Imagery and Mapping Agency, 4600 Sangamore Road, Bethesda, MD 20816-5003. Phone, 800-826- 0342 (Customer Help Line), or 301-227-3105 (Public Liaison Office). Internet, http://www.nima.mil/. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ National Security Agency/Central Security Service Fort George G. Meade, MD 20755-6000 Phone, 301-688-6524. Internet, http://www.nsa.gov/. Director Lt. Gen. Kenneth A. Minihan, USAF Deputy Director Barbara A. McNamara ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The National Security Agency was established by Presidential directive in 1952 as a separately organized agency within the Department of Defense. In this directive, the President designated the Secretary of Defense as Executive Agent for the signals intelligence and communications security activities of the Government. In 1972, the Central Security Service was established, also in accordance with a Presidential memorandum, to provide a more unified cryptologic organization within the Department of Defense, with control over the signals intelligence activities of the military services. As the U.S. cryptologic organization, NSA/CSS employs the Nation's premier codemakers and codebreakers. It ensures an informed, alert, and secure environment for U.S. warfighters and American policymakers. The cryptologic resources of NSA/CSS, foreign signals intelligence (SIGINT) and information systems security (INFOSEC), unite to provide U.S. policymakers with intelligence information derived from America's adversaries while protecting U.S. signals and information systems from exploitation by those same adversaries. Executive Order 12333 of December 4, 1981, describes in more detail the responsibilities of the National Security Agency. For further information, contact the Public Affairs Office, National Security Agency/Central Security Service, Fort Meade, MD 20755-6000. Phone, 301-688-6524. Internet, http://www.nsa.gov/. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [[Page 236]] On-Site Inspection Agency Washington, DC 20041-0498 Phone, 703-810-4326 Director Brig. Gen. John C. Reppert, USA Principal Deputy Director Joerg H. Menzel ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The On-Site Inspection Agency (OSIA) was established as a separate Department of Defense agency on January 26, 1988, to implement the 13- year inspection regime of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty. The Agency's mission has since expanded to include implementation of on-site inspection and escort requirements of the nuclear testing treaties, including the Threshold Test Ban Treaty (TTBT) and the Peaceful Nuclear Explosions Treaty (PNET); the Conventional Armed Forces in Europe (CFE) Treaty; the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START); the Vienna Document of 1994; the Open Skies (OS) Treaty; the Chemical Weapons (CW) Agreements; and the Dayton peace accords for multilateral inspection activities in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Agency acts as the Defense Department's executive agent to the United Nations Special Commission on Iraq. OSIA also serves as the executive agent for the Defense Treaty Inspection Readiness Program (DTIRP) and provides support to the Cooperative Threat Reduction (CTR) Program for their denuclearization and dismantlement programs. The Agency is manned by military personnel from all of the armed services, as well as civilian technical experts and support personnel. It maintains liaison with various Government agencies interested in arms control and draws its three civilian deputy directors from the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, State Department, and Federal Bureau of Investigation. For further information, contact the Public Affairs Office, On-Site Inspection Agency, P.O. Box 17498, Washington, DC 20041-0498. Phone, 703-810-4326.