[2] MSIC's final organizational move came on January 1, 1992 when it became part of the Defense Intelligence Agency.
[5] Between 2014 and the present (2021), the Center employed approximately 350 civilians, 60 military personnel, and, indirectly, hundreds of defense contractors.
[7][6] In 2011, a years-long MSIC dispute with the Air Force's NASIC over which agency held authority over ballistic missile intelligence analysis was settled in favor of MSIC, which became lead integrator of the Defense Intelligence Ballistic Missile Analysis Committee (DIBMAC).
[10] The Center is led by a Director, currently Kimberly "Kim" King,[11] who replaced Mark Clark after his 2019 retirement.
[12][13] It also possesses an anechoic chamber and oversees the Joint Research Analysis and Assessment Center (JRAAC),[12] a state-of-the-art simulation integration facility supporting multi-fidelity scientific and technical analysis of integrated weapons systems in complex environments to determine their capabilities, vulnerabilities, and limitations.