After some initial resistance, President-elect Barack Obama ’s picks for his intelligence team appear likely to win Senate confirmation, but a possible plan to merge two White House security councils might not prove as popular.
Obama on Jan. 9 tapped retired Adm. Dennis C. Blair to serve as director of national intelligence and named former lawmaker and White House chief of staff Leon E. Panetta to head the CIA. He also announced that John Brennan would serve as his top adviser for both homeland security and counterterrorism, which could signal that the Homeland Security Council will be merged with the National Security Council.
Obama said Brennan will serve as his homeland security adviser and deputy national security adviser for counterterrorism, White House staff posts that will not require Senate confirmation.
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