Houston Chronicle

CIA’s new recruitmen­t website works to diversify spy agency

- By Deb Riechmann

WASHINGTON — WANTED: Spies from all background­s and walks of life.

Striving to further diversify its ranks, the CIA launched a new website Monday to find top-tier candidates who will bring a broader range of life experience­s to the nation’s premier intelligen­ce agency

The days of all American spies being white male graduates from Ivy League schools are long gone. The CIA director is a woman, and women head all five of the agency’s branches, including the directorat­es of science and technology, operations and digital innovation.

But while the CIA has been diversifyi­ng for years, intelligen­ce agencies still lag the federal workforce in minority representa­tion. With thousands of job applicants annually, the CIA wants to do more to ensure its workforce reflects national demographi­cs.

The revamped website has links for browsing CIA jobs complete with starting salaries and requiremen­ts, sections on working at the agency, and a streamline­d applicatio­n process.

“We’ve come a longway since I applied by simply mailing a letter marked ‘CIA, Washington, D.C.,’” said CIA Director Gina Haspel, who joined the agency in 1985. She said in a statement that she hopes the newwebsite piques the interest of talented Americans

and gives them a sense of the “dynamic environmen­t that awaits them here.”

Haspel has made recruitmen­t a priority since she becamethe first female director in May 2018. Since then, the CIA has started advertisin­g on streaming services, launched an Instagram account and an online “onion site,” a feature thatmakes both the informatio­n provider and the person accessing informatio­n more difficult to trace.

Last year, the CIA designated its first executive for Hispanic engagement, Ilka Rodriguez-Diaz, a veteran of more than three decades with the agency. She first joined after attending a CIA job fair in New Jersey.

“The CIA had never been on my radar,” she wrote in an op-ed in The Miami Herald after getting the job in October. “I didn’t think I fit the ‘profile.’ After all, the spies I saw on TV were male Anglo-Saxon Ivy Leaguers, not Latinas from New Jersey. Still, I went to my expert life coach, my mother, for advice. She said, ‘No pierdes nada con ir.’ (What have you got to lose in going?) So, I went to the job fair. The rest, as they say, is history.”

Across the more than a dozen U.S. spy agencies, including the CIA, 61 percent of intelligen­ce profession­als in fiscal 2019 were men compared with 39 percent women, according to an annual demographi­cs report compiled by the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce.

In fiscal 2019, the intelligen­ce community saw an incrementa­l increase in the number of minority profession­als — 26.5 percent, up from 26.2 percent. But that’s still lower than 37 percent in the federal workforce as a whole and 37.4 percent in the civilian labor force, the report said.

The largest minority or ethnic group at all the intelligen­ce agencies, including the CIA, was Black or African American at 12 percent followed by Hispanic at 7 percent and Asian at 4 percent. Persons with disabiliti­es represent1­1.5 percent of the workforce at all the U.S. intelligen­ce agencies — up a point from the year before.

“Even with all the challenges 2020 posed, it was a standout recruitmen­t year for CIA. Our incoming class is the third largest in a decade and represents the most diverse talent pool, including personswit­h disabiliti­es, since 2010,” said CIA spokespers­on Nicole de Haay.

 ?? Evan Vucci / Associated Press ?? Central Intelligen­ce Agency chief Gina Haspel is pushing hard for agents with a broader range of life experience­s.
Evan Vucci / Associated Press Central Intelligen­ce Agency chief Gina Haspel is pushing hard for agents with a broader range of life experience­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States