ON A CLOUDLESS September afternoon, I stopped by 1 Police Plaza in Lower Manhattan to see Rebecca Ulam Weiner, an enigmatic figure who occupies one of the most consequential and improbable perches in America’s national security hierarchy. As the NYPD’s deputy commissioner of intelligence and counterterrorism, her chief mission is to “counter terrorism and mitigate targeted violence, fight crime, and protect people, places, and events in New York City.” And that’s not the half of it.
As part of her sprawling portfolio, the 47-year-old mother of two relies on a mind-boggling suite of assets that Americans might otherwise assume are controlled by the CIA, FBI, DHS, Secret Service, or other agencies. Weiner has access to a legion of intelligence analysts, counterassault and dignitary-protection teams, a flotilla of boats, radiation-sniffng and…