FACTBOX: Obama names intelligence leadership team
(Reuters) - U.S. President-elect Barack Obama named Leon Panetta, a former White House chief of staff, to head the CIA and retired Adm. Dennis Blair to oversee all U.S. spy agencies as director of national intelligence.
Here are the people Obama has chosen for top appointments in his administration after he takes office on Jan 20. Most remain subject to Senate confirmation.
SECRETARY OF STATE
* New York Sen. Hillary Clinton, 61, Obama's former Democratic Party rival for the White House, was named to the top diplomatic post, an appointment seen as part of Obama's effort to rebuild the United States' reputation abroad. Aides have said Obama admires Clinton's work ethic and also believes the former first lady's star power would boost his vision of improving America's global standing.
SECRETARY OF DEFENSE
* Current Defense Secretary Robert Gates, 65, named by President George W. Bush in late 2006, is considered a moderate voice on the Republican's national security team and embodies an important signal of continuity. Obama had said early on he would include Republicans in his Cabinet and Gates has been lauded by members of both parties since taking over the Pentagon from Donald Rumsfeld.
TREASURY SECRETARY
* Timothy Geithner, 47, president of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, is Obama's choice for the Treasury Department, making him Obama's point person in dealing with the economic crisis. Geithner has helped lead efforts to stabilize financial markets and argued that banks crucial to the global financial system should operate under a unified regulatory framework.
HOMELAND SECURITY
* Janet Napolitano, 51, the Democratic governor of Arizona, was named to head the U.S. Homeland Security Department, a sprawling agency formed to bolster civil defense following the September 11 attacks.
NATIONAL ECONOMIC COUNCIL
* Lawrence Summers, 54, has been chosen to head the council. He was treasury secretary for the final 1-1/2 years of the Clinton administration and has been a senior adviser to Obama for several months, helping guide his response to the financial meltdown.
NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISER
* Retired Marine Gen. James Jones, 65, the former NATO commander, was named by Obama to be his national security adviser. Jones is widely respected by both Democrats and Republicans and has avoided aligning himself with either party, but is known to have been a strong critic of the Bush administration's handling of the Iraq war.
CIA DIRECTOR
* Former White House chief of staff Leon Panetta, 70, has been nominated to head the CIA. Panetta, best known for imposing order on President Bill Clinton's White House during his 1994-1997 stint as chief of staff, has relatively little experience in national security matters. But his choice could appease some liberal activists who have said Obama's other picks for national security posts are too hawkish. Continued...




