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chimx
29th July 2007, 07:24
Who Runs the CIA? Outsiders for Hire.

Red alert: Our national security is being outsourced.

The most intriguing secrets of the "war on terror" have nothing to do with al-Qaeda and its fellow travelers. They're about the mammoth private spying industry that all but runs U.S. intelligence operations today.

Surprised? No wonder. In April, Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell was poised to publicize a year-long examination of outsourcing by U.S. intelligence agencies. But the report was inexplicably delayed -- and suddenly classified a national secret. What McConnell doesn't want you to know is that the private spy industry has succeeded where no foreign government has: It has penetrated the CIA and is running the show.

Over the past five years (some say almost a decade), there has been a revolution in the intelligence community toward wide-scale outsourcing. Private companies now perform key intelligence-agency functions, to the tune, I'm told, of more than $42 billion a year. Intelligence professionals tell me that more than 50 percent of the National Clandestine Service (NCS) -- the heart, brains and soul of the CIA -- has been outsourced to private firms such as Abraxas, Booz Allen Hamilton, Lockheed Martin and Raytheon.

These firms recruit spies, create non-official cover identities and control the movements of CIA case officers. They also provide case officers and watch officers at crisis centers and regional desk officers who control clandestine operations worldwide. As the Los Angeles Times first reported last October, more than half the workforce in two key CIA stations in the fight against terrorism -- Baghdad and Islamabad, Pakistan -- is made up of industrial contractors, or "green badgers," in CIA parlance.

Intelligence insiders say that entire branches of the NCS have been outsourced to private industry. These branches are still managed by U.S. government employees ("blue badgers") who are accountable to the agency's chain of command. But beneath them, insiders say, is a supervisory structure that's controlled entirely by contractors; in some cases, green badgers are managing green badgers from other corporations.

Sensing problems -- and possibly fearing congressional action -- the CIA recently conducted a hasty review of all of its job classifications to determine which perform "essential government functions" that should not be outsourced. But it's highly doubtful that such a short-term exercise can comprehensively identify the proper "blue/green" mix, especially because contractors' work statements have long been carefully formulated to blur the distinction between approvable and debatable functions.

Although the contracting system is Byzantine, there's no question that the private sector delivers high-quality professional intelligence services. Outsourcing has provided solutions to personnel-management problems that have always plagued the CIA's operations side. Rather than tying agents up in the kind of office politics that government employees have to engage in to advance their careers, outsourcing permits them to focus on what they do best, which boosts morale and performance. Privatization also immediately increased the number of trained, experienced agents in the field after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

Even though wide-scale outsourcing may not immediately endanger national security, it's worrisome. The contractors in charge of espionage are still chiefly CIA alumni who have absorbed its public service values. But as the center of gravity shifts from the public sector to the private, more than one independent intelligence firm has developed plans to "raise" succeeding generations of officers within its own training systems. These corporate-grown agents will be inculcated with corporate values and ethics, not those of public service.

And the current piecemeal system has introduced some vulnerabilities. Historically, the system offered members of the intelligence community the kind of stability that ensured that they would keep its secrets. That dynamic is now being eroded. Contracts come and go. So do workforces. The spies of the past came of age professionally in a strong extended family, but the spies of the future will be more like children raised in multiple foster homes -- at risk.

Today, when Booz Allen Hamilton loses a contract to SAIC, people rush from one to the other in a game of musical chairs, with not enough chairs for all the workers who possess both the highest security clearances and expertise in the art of espionage. Some inevitably lose out. Any good counterintelligence officer knows what can happen next. Down-on-their-luck spies begin to do what spies do best: spy. Other companies offer them jobs in exchange for industry secrets. Foreign governments approach them. And some day, terrorists will clue in to this potential workforce.

The director of national intelligence has put our security at risk by classifying the study on outsourcing and keeping the truth about this inadequately planned and managed system out of the light. Much of what has been outsourced makes sense, but much of the structure doesn't, not for the longer term. It's time for the public and Congress to demand the study's release. More important, it's past time for the industry -- an industry conceived of and run by some of the best and brightest the CIA has ever produced -- to come up with the kind of innovative solutions it's legendary for, before the damage goes too deep.

source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...7070601993.html (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07/06/AR2007070601993.html)

xskater11x
29th July 2007, 07:31
I have read about talks within that 9/11 committee to integrate federal investigation departments with corporate investigation firms, and it has seemed to be a subject of much debate, but people fail to realize, it is happening anyway, just not officially. The government uses private industry for access to all sorts of information, they just don't tell anyone, if this is passed, it just saves their asses since once it is past the ex post facto clause and its counterpart could be used in their favor to stop any suits against them related to past investigations.

Nothing Human Is Alien
29th July 2007, 07:47
"Our national security"?

Where did you dig this up at? Or did you write it yourself (just a thought, since you regularly describe the imperialist U.S. government as "us")? :lol:

chimx
29th July 2007, 07:57
Like the title says, its a washington post article.

I forgot to add the link, let me edit it.

Nothing Human Is Alien
29th July 2007, 08:14
Ah, sorry, I clicked in from the front page of the forum and so didn't the subtitle. Honest mistake.

SpikeyRed
29th July 2007, 13:11
This is... slightly scary to say the least and I'm not even a US Citizen :-P
Particularly the idea of 'corporate' CIA Agents.
Don't get me wrong, I'm well aware of the fact that the CIA is just an agent of an imperialist state and blah blah blah all of that stuff, but too put these fuckers under direct, clear as day corporate managment\ownership?

Ahhhh, Fucken capitalism 'ay?

chimx
29th July 2007, 20:37
but too put these fuckers under direct, clear as day corporate managment\ownership?

It doesn't sound like that is the case quite yet. Work is being overseen by real CIA officials, but it sounds like some managerial work is being outsourced as well. They do this so that there is still government accountability somewhere along the line.

Tatarin
30th July 2007, 04:47
Figures. Everything in the US is being privatized, I mean, the very computer system that one votes by is also owned by private companies, and flaws and such are not investigated since those are "intellectual property"...

praxis1966
30th July 2007, 09:02
Yeah, some of the people involved in this outsourced work are Titan Corp. and CACI, two groups of miscreants of Abu Ghraib infamy. What concerns me is not potentiality for security breaches or lack of governmental oversight (like the latter really made a difference to your average Salvadorian during the 80s), but the fact that private corporations are in no way bound by the Geneva Convention. The room for human rights abuses at the hands of these private corporations is so great it's staggering.