The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s primary mission has been changed from “law enforcement” to “national security.”
The change in the mission was noted on the bureau’s fact sheet, as first reported by Foreign Policy. The FBI fact sheet previously stated, “The primary function of the FBI is law enforcement.” But the mission has now been changed to, “The primary function of the FBI is national security.”
It remains unclear when the change in the language was made. Kel McClanahan, a national security lawyer based in Washington, D.C., told Foreign Policy he first noticed the change last month while reviewing a Freedom of Information Act request from the agency.
The institutional change marks the agency’s advances into counterterrorism after the 9/11 attacks. The FBI’s website indicates how the the agency has become a “post 9/11 FBI” and refocused its efforts towards intelligence and national security in the past 12 years. Detailing how the bureau has changed since 9/11, the website states that the nation’s primary domestic counterterrorism agency has “become a more intel-driven and future-focused agency.“
An agency spokesman told Foreign Policy that the FBI has changed its mission to keep up with the times.
“When our mission changed after 9/11, our fact sheet changed to reflect that,” FBI spokesman Paul Bresson told Foreign Policy.









