Bush Goes Private to Spy on You
by Tim Shorrock, CorpWatch
www.alternet.org, December 6,
2007
The Bush administration is launching
a new government agency that will rely heavily on private security
contractors to conduct surveillance in the U.S..
A new intelligence institution to be inaugurated
soon by the Bush administration will allow government spying agencies
to conduct broad surveillance and reconnaissance inside the United
States for the first time. Under a proposal being reviewed by
Congress, a National Applications Office (NAO) will be established
to coordinate how the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and
domestic law enforcement and rescue agencies use imagery and communications
intelligence picked up by U.S. spy satellites. If the plan goes
forward, the NAO will create the legal mechanism for an unprecedented
degree of domestic intelligence gathering that would make the
United States one of the world's most closely monitored nations.
Until now, domestic use of electronic intelligence from spy satellites
was limited to scientific agencies with no responsibility for
national security or law enforcement.
The intelligence-sharing system to be
managed by the NAO will rely heavily on private contractors, including
Boeing, BAE Systems, L-3 Communications and Science Applications
International Corporation (SAIC). These companies already provide
technology and personnel to U.S. agencies involved in foreign
intelligence, and the NAO greatly expands their markets. Indeed,
at an intelligence conference in San Antonio, Texas, last month,
the titans of the industry were actively lobbying intelligence
officials to buy products specifically designed for domestic surveillance.
The NAO was created under a plan tentatively
approved in May 2007 by Director of National Intelligence Michael
McConnell. Specifically, the NAO will oversee how classified information
collected by the National Security Agency (NSA), the National
Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) and other key agencies is
used within the United States during natural disasters, terrorist
attacks and other events affecting national security. The most
critical intelligence will be supplied by the NSA and the NGA,
which are often referred to by U.S. officials as the "eyes"
and "ears" of the intelligence community.
The NSA, through a global network of listening
posts, surveillance planes, and satellites, captures signals from
phone calls, email and internet traffic, and translates and analyzes
them for U.S. military and national intelligence officials.
The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency
(NGA), which was formally inaugurated in 2003, provides overhead
imagery and mapping tools that allow intelligence and military
analysts to monitor events from the skies and space. The NSA and
the NGA have a close relationship with the supersecret National
Reconnaissance Agency (NRO), which builds and maintains the U.S.
fleet of spy satellites and operates the ground stations where
the NSA's signals and the NGA's imagery are processed and analyzed.
By law, their collection efforts are supposed to be confined to
foreign countries and battlefields.
The National Applications Office was conceived
in 2005 by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence
(ODNI), which Congress created in 2004 to oversee the 16 agencies
that make up the U.S. intelligence community. The ODNI, concerned
that the legal framework for U.S. intelligence operations had
not been updated for the global "war on terror," turned
to Booz Allen Hamilton of McLean, Va., one of the largest contractors
in the spy business. The company was tasked with studying how
intelligence from spy satellites and photoreconnaissance planes
could be better used domestically to track potential threats to
security within the United States. The Booz Allen study was completed
in May of that year and has since become the basis for the NAO
oversight plan. In May 2007, McConnell, the former executive vice
president of Booz Allen, signed off on the creation of the NAO
as the principal body to oversee the merging of foreign and domestic
intelligence collection operations.
The NAO is "an idea whose time has
arrived," Charles Allen, a top U.S. intelligence official,
told the Wall Street Journal in August 2007 after it broke
the news of the NAO's creation. Allen, the DHS's chief intelligence
officer, will head the new program. The announcement came just
days after President George W. Bush signed a new law approved
by Congress to expand the ability of the NSA to eavesdrop, without
warrants, on telephone calls, email and faxes passing through
telecommunications hubs in the United States when the government
suspects agents of a foreign power may be involved. "These
[intelligence] systems are already used to help us respond to
crises," Allen later told the Washington Post. "We
anticipate that we can also use them to protect Americans by preventing
the entry of dangerous people and goods into the country, and
by helping us examine critical infrastructure for vulnerabilities."
Donald Kerr, a former NRO director who
is now the No. 2 at ODNI, recently explained to reporters that
the intelligence community was no longer discussing whether or
not to spy on U.S. citizens: "Our job now is to engage in
a productive debate, which focuses on privacy as a component of
appropriate levels of security and public safety,'' Kerr said.
''I think all of us have to really take stock of what we already
are willing to give up, in terms of anonymity, but [also] what
safeguards we want in place to be sure that giving that doesn't
empty our bank account or do something equally bad elsewhere.''
What will the NAO do?
The plan for the NAO builds on a domestic
security infrastructure that has been in place for at least seven
years. After the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the NSA
was granted new powers to monitor domestic communications without
obtaining warrants from a secret foreign intelligence court established
by Congress in 1978 (that warrantless program ended in January
2007 but was allowed to continue, with some changes, under legislation
passed by Congress in August 2007).
Moreover, intelligence and reconnaissance
agencies that were historically confined to spying on foreign
countries have been used extensively on the home front since 2001.
In the hours after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in New York, for
example, the Bush administration called on the NGA to capture
imagery from lower Manhattan and the Pentagon to help in the rescue
and recovery efforts. In 2002, when two deranged snipers terrified
the citizens of Washington and its Maryland and Virginia suburbs
with a string of fatal shootings, the Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI) asked the NGA to provide detailed images of freeway interchanges
and other locations to help spot the pair.
The NGA was also used extensively during
Hurricane Katrina, when the agency provided overhead imagery --
some of it supplied by U-2 photoreconnaissance aircraft -- to
federal and state rescue operations. The data, which included
mapping of flooded areas in Louisiana and Mississippi, allowed
residents of the stricken areas to see the extent of damage to
their homes and helped first-responders locate contaminated areas
as well as schools, churches and hospitals that might be used
in the rescue. More recently, during the October 2007 California
wildfires, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) asked
the NGA to analyze overhead imagery of the fire zones and determine
the areas of maximum intensity and damage. In every situation
that the NGA is used domestically, it must receive a formal request
from a lead domestic agency, according to agency spokesperson
David Burpee. That agency is usually FEMA, which is a unit of
DHS.
At first blush, the idea of a U.S. intelligence
agency serving the public by providing imagery to aid in disaster
recovery sounds like a positive development, especially when compared
to the Bush administration's misuse of the NSA and the Pentagon's
Counter-Intelligence Field Activity (CIFA) to spy on American
citizens. But the notion of using spy satellites and aircraft
for domestic purposes becomes problematic from a civil liberties
standpoint when the full capabilities of agencies like the NGA
and the NSA are considered.
Imagine, for example, that U.S. intelligence
officials have determined, through NSA telephone intercepts, that
a group of worshipers at a mosque in Oakland, Calif., has communicated
with an Islamic charity in Saudi Arabia. This is the same group
that the FBI and the U.S. Department of the Treasury believe is
linked to an organization unfriendly to the United States.
Imagine further that the FBI, as a lead
agency, asks and receives permission to monitor that mosque and
the people inside using high-resolution imagery obtained from
the NGA. Using other technologies, such as overhead traffic cameras
in place in many cities, that mosque could be placed under surveillance
for months, and -- through cell phone intercepts and overhead
imagery -- its suspected worshipers carefully tracked in real
time as they moved almost anywhere in the country.
The NAO, under the plan approved by ODNI's
McConnell, would determine the rules that will guide the DHS and
other lead federal agencies when they want to use imagery and
signals intelligence in situations like this, as well as during
natural disasters. If the organization is established as planned,
U.S. domestic agencies will have a vast array of technology at
their disposal. In addition to the powerful mapping and signals
tools provided by the NGA and the NSA, domestic agencies will
also have access to measures and signatures intelligence (MASINT)
managed by the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), the principal
spying agency used by the secretary of defense and the Joint Chiefs
of Staff.
(MASINT is a highly classified form of
intelligence that uses infrared sensors and other technologies
to "sniff" the atmosphere for certain chemicals and
electromagnetic activity, and "see" beneath bridges
and forest canopies. Using its tools, analysts can detect signs
that a nuclear power plant is producing plutonium, determine from
truck exhaust what types of vehicles are in a convoy, and detect
people and weapons hidden from the view of satellites or photoreconnaissance
aircraft.)
Created by contractors
The study group that established policies
for the NAO was jointly funded by the ODNI and the U.S. Geological
Survey (USGS), one of only two domestic U.S. agencies that is
currently allowed, under rules set in the 1970s, to use classified
intelligence from spy satellites. (The other is NASA, the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration.) The group was chaired by
Keith Hall, a Booz Allen vice president who manages his firm's
extensive contracts with the NGA and previously served as the
director of the NRO.
Other members of the group included seven
former intelligence officers working for Booz Allen, as well as
retired Army Lt. Gen. Patrick M. Hughes, the former director of
the DIA and vice president of homeland security for L-3 Communications,
a key NSA contractor; and Thomas W. Conroy, the vice president
of national security programs for Northrop Grumman, which has
extensive contracts with the NSA and the NGA and throughout the
intelligence community.
From the start, the study group was heavily
weighted toward companies with a stake in both foreign and domestic
intelligence. Not surprisingly, its contractor-advisers called
for a major expansion in the domestic use of the spy satellites
that they sell to the government. Since the end of the Cold War
and particularly since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, they said,
the "threats to the nation have changed, and there is a growing
interest in making available the special capabilities of the intelligence
community to all parts of the government, to include homeland
security and law enforcement entities and on a higher priority
basis."
Contractors are not new to the U.S. spy
world. Since the creation of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
and the modern intelligence system in 1947, the private sector
has been tapped to design and build the technology that facilitates
electronic surveillance. Lockheed, for example, built the U-2,
the famous surveillance plane that flew scores of spy missions
over the Soviet Union and Cuba. During the 1960s, Lockheed was
a prime contractor for the Corona system of spy satellites that
greatly expanded the CIA's abilities to photograph secret military
installations from space. IBM, Cray Computers and other companies
built the supercomputers that allowed the NSA to sift through
data from millions of telephone calls and analyze them for intelligence
that was passed on to national leaders.
Spending on contracts has increased exponentially
in recent years along with intelligence budgets, and the NSA,
the NGA and other agencies have turned to the private sector for
the latest computer and communications technologies and for intelligence
analysts. For example, today about half of staff at the NSA and
NGA are private contractors. At the DIA, 70 percent of the workers
are contractors. But the most privatized agency of all is the
NRO, where a whopping 90 percent of the work force receive paychecks
from corporations. All told the U.S. intelligence agencies spend
some 70 percent of their estimated $60 billion annual budget on
contracts with private companies, according to documents this
reporter obtained in June 2007 from the ODNI.
The plans to increase domestic spying
are estimated to be worth billions of dollars in new business
for the intelligence contractors. The market potential was on
display in October at GEOINT 2007, the annual conference sponsored
by the U.S. Geospatial Intelligence Foundation (USGIF), a nonprofit
organization funded by the largest contractors for the NGA. During
the conference, which took place in October at the spacious Henry
B. Gonzalez Convention Center in downtown San Antonio, many companies
were displaying spying and surveillance tools that had been used
in Afghanistan and Iraq and were now being rebranded for potential
domestic use.
BAE Systems Inc.
On the first day of the conference, three
employees of BAE Systems Inc. who had just returned from a three-week
tour of Iraq and Afghanistan with the NGA demonstrated a new software
package called SOCET GXP. (BAE Systems Inc. is the U.S. subsidiary
of the U.K.-based BAE, the third-largest military contractor in
the world.)
GXP uses Google Earth software as a basis
for creating three-dimensional maps that U.S. commanders and soldiers
use to conduct intelligence and reconnaissance missions. Eric
Bruce, one of the BAE employees back from the Middle East, said
his team trained U.S. forces to use the GXP software "to
study routes for known terrorist sites" as well as to locate
opium fields. "Terrorists use opium to fund their war,"
he said. Bruce also said his team received help from Iraqi citizens
in locating targets. "Many of the locals can't read maps,
so they tell the analysts, 'there is a mosque next to a hill,'"
he explained.
Bruce said BAE's new package is designed
for defense forces and intelligence agencies but can also be used
for homeland security and by highway departments and airports.
Earlier versions of the software were sold to the U.S. Army's
Topographic Engineering Center, where it has been used to collect
data on more than 12,000 square kilometers of Iraq, primarily
in urban centers and over supply routes.
Another new BAE tool displayed in San
Antonio was a program called GOSHAWK, which stands for "Geospatial
Operations for a Secure Homeland -- Awareness, Workflow, Knowledge."
It was pitched by BAE as a tool to help law enforcement and state
and local emergency agencies prepare for, and respond to, "natural
disasters and terrorist and criminal incidents." Under the
GOSHAWK program, BAE supplies "agencies and corporations"
with data providers and information technology specialists "capable
of turning geospatial information into the knowledge needed for
quick decisions." A typical operation might involve acquiring
data from satellites, aircraft and sensors in ground vehicles,
and integrating those data to support an emergency or security
operations center. One of the program's special attributes, the
company says, is its ability to "differentiate levels of
classification," meaning that it can deduce when data are
classified and meant only for use by analysts with security clearances.
These two products were just a sampling
of what BAE, a major player in the U.S. intelligence market, had
to offer. BAE's services to U.S. intelligence -- including the
CIA and the National Counter-Terrorism Center -- are provided
through a special unit called the Global Analysis Business Unit.
It is located in McLean, Va., a stone's throw from the CIA. The
unit is headed by John Gannon, a 25-year veteran of the CIA who
reached the agency's highest analytical ranks as deputy director
of intelligence and chairman of the National Intelligence Council.
Today, as a private sector contractor for the intelligence community,
Gannon manages a staff of more than 800 analysts with security
clearances.
A brochure for the Global Analysis unit
distributed at GEOINT 2007 explains BAE's role and, in the process,
underscores the degree of outsourcing in U.S. intelligence. "The
demand for experienced, skilled and cleared analysts -- and for
the best systems to manage them -- has never been greater across
the Intelligence and Defense Communities, in the field and among
federal, state and local agencies responsible for national and
homeland security," BAE says. The mission of the Global Analysis
unit, it says, "is to provide policymakers, warfighters and
law enforcement officials with analysts to help them understand
the complex intelligence threats they face, and work force management
programs to improve the skills and expertise of analysts."
At the bottom of the brochure is a series
of photographs illustrating BAE's broad reach: a group of analysts
monitoring a bank of computers; three employees studying a map
of Europe, the Middle East and the Horn of Africa; the outlines
of two related social networks that have been mapped out to show
how their members are linked; a bearded man, apparently from the
Middle East and presumably a terrorist; the fiery image of a car
bomb after it exploded in Iraq; and four white radar domes (known
as radomes) of the type used by the NSA to monitor global communications
from dozens of bases and facilities around the world.
The brochure may look and sound like typical
corporate public relations. But amid BAE's spy talk were two phrases
strategically placed by the company to alert intelligence officials
that BAE has an active presence inside the United States. The
tip-off words were "federal, state and local agencies,"
"law enforcement officials" and "homeland security."
By including them, BAE was broadcasting that it is not simply
a contractor for agencies involved in foreign intelligence but
has an active presence as a supplier to domestic security agencies,
a category that includes the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
and the FBI, as well as local and state police forces stretching
from Maine to Hawaii.
ManTech, Boeing, Harris and L-3
ManTech International, an important NSA
contractor based in Fairfax, Va., has perfected the art of creating
multiagency software programs for both foreign and domestic intelligence.
After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, it developed a classified program
for the Defense Intelligence Agency called the Joint Regional
Information Exchange System. DIA used it to combine classified
and unclassified intelligence on terrorist threats on a single
desktop. ManTech then tweaked that software for the Department
of Homeland Security and sold it to DHS for its Homeland Security
Information Network. According to literature ManTech distributed
at GEOINT, that software will "significantly strengthen the
exchange of real-time threat information used to combat terrorism."
ManTech, the brochure added, "also provides extensive, advanced
information technology support to the National Security Agency"
and other agencies.
In a nearby booth, Chicago-based Boeing,
the world's second largest defense contractor, was displaying
its "information sharing environment" software, which
is designed to meet the Office of the Director of National Intelligence's
new requirements on agencies to stop buying "stovepiped"
systems that can't talk to each other. The ODNI wants to focus
on products that will allow the NGA and other agencies to easily
share their classified imagery with the CIA and other sectors
of the community. "To ensure freedom in the world, the United
States continues to address the challenges introduced by terrorism,"
a Boeing handout said. Its new software, the company said, will
allow information to be "shared efficiently and uninterrupted
across intelligence agencies, first responders, military and world
allies." Boeing has a reason for publishing boastful material
like this: In 2005, it lost a major contract with the NRO to build
a new generation of imaging satellites after ringing up billions
of dollars in cost overruns. The New York Times recently
called the Boeing project "the most spectacular and expensive
failure in the 50-year history of American spy satellite projects."
Boeing's geospatial intelligence offerings
are provided through its Space and Intelligence Systems unit,
which also holds contracts with the NSA. It allows agencies and
military units to map global shorelines and create detailed maps
of cities and battlefields, complete with digital elevation data
that allow users to construct three-dimensional maps. (In an intriguing
aside, one Boeing intelligence brochure lists among its "specialized
organizations" Jeppesen Government and Military Services.
According to a 2006 account by New Yorker reporter Jane
Mayer, Jeppesen provided logistical and navigational assistance,
including flight plans and clearance to fly over other countries,
to the CIA for its "extraordinary rendition" program.)
Although less known as an intelligence
contractor than BAE and Boeing, the Harris Corp. has become a
major force in providing contracted electronic, satellite and
information technology services to the intelligence community,
including the NSA and the NRO. In 2007, according to its most
recent annual report, the $4.2 billion company, based in Melbourne,
Fla., won several new classified contracts. NSA awarded one of
them for software to be used by NSA analysts in the agency's "Rapidly
Deployable Integrated Command and Control System," which
is used by the NSA to transmit "actionable intelligence"
to soldiers and commanders in the field. Harris also supplies
geospatial and imagery products to the NGA. At GEOINT, Harris
displayed a new product that allows agencies to analyze live video
and audio data imported from UAVs. It was developed, said Fred
Poole, a Harris market development manager, "with input from
intelligence analysts who were looking for a video and audio analysis
tool that would allow them to perform 'intelligence fusion'"
-- combining information from several agencies into a single picture
of an ongoing operation.
For many of the contractors at GEOINT,
the highlight of the symposium was an "interoperability demonstration"
that allowed vendors to show how their products would work in
a domestic crisis.
One scenario involved Cuba as a rogue
nation supplying spent nuclear fuel to terrorists bent on creating
havoc in the United States. Implausible as it was, the plot, which
involved maritime transportation and ports, allowed the companies
to display software that was likely already in use by the Department
of Homeland Security and Naval Intelligence. The "plot"
involved the discovery by U.S. intelligence of a Cuban ship carrying
spent nuclear fuel heading for the U.S. Gulf Coast; an analysis
of the social networks of Cuban officials involved with the illicit
cargo; and the tracking and interception of the cargo as it departed
from Cuba and moved across the Caribbean to Corpus Christi, Texas,
a major port on the Gulf Coast. The agencies involved included
the NGA, the NSA, Naval Intelligence and the Marines, and some
of the key contractors working for those agencies. It illustrated
how sophisticated the U.S. domestic surveillance system has become
in the six years since the 9/11 attacks.
L-3 Communications, which is based in
New York City, was a natural for the exercise: As mentioned earlier,
retired Army Lt. Gen. Patrick M. Hughes, its vice president of
homeland security, was a member of the Booz Allen Hamilton study
group that advised the Bush administration to expand the domestic
use of military spy satellites. At GEOINT, L-3 displayed a new
program called "multi-INT visualization environment"
that combines imagery and signals intelligence data that can be
laid over photographs and maps. One example shown during the interoperability
demonstration showed how such data would be incorporated into
a map of Florida and the waters surrounding Cuba. With L-3 a major
player at the NSA, this demonstration software is likely seeing
much use as the NSA and the NGA expand their information-sharing
relationship.
Over the past two years, for example,
the NGA has deployed dozens of employees and contractors to Iraq
to support the "surge" of U.S. troops. The NGA teams
provide imagery and full-motion video -- much of it beamed to
the ground from Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) -- that help U.S.
commanders and soldiers track and destroy insurgents fighting
the U.S. occupation. And since 2004, under a memorandum of understanding
with the NSA, the NGA has begun to incorporate signals intelligence
into its imagery products. The blending technique allows U.S.
military units to track and find targets by picking up signals
from their cell phones, follow the suspects in real time using
overhead video, and direct fighter planes and artillery units
to the exact location of the targets, and blow them to smithereens.
That's exactly how U.S. Special Forces
tracked and killed Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the alleged leader of
Al Qaeda in Iraq, the NGA's director, Navy Vice Adm. Robert Murrett,
said in 2006. Later, Murrett told reporters during GEOINT 2007,
the NSA and the NGA have cooperated in similar fashion in several
other fronts of the "war on terror," including in the
Horn of Africa, where the U.S. military has attacked Al Qaeda
units in Somalia, and in the Philippines, where U.S. forces are
helping the government put down the Muslim insurgent group Abu
Sayyaf. "When the NGA and the NSA work together, one plus
one equals five," said Murrett.
Civil liberty worries
For U.S. citizens, however, the combination
of NGA imagery and NSA signals intelligence in a domestic situation
could threaten important constitutional safeguards against unwarranted
searches and seizures. Kate Martin, the director of the Center
for National Security Studies, a nonprofit advocacy organization,
has likened the NAO plan to "Big Brother in the Sky."
The Bush administration, she told the Washington Post,
is "laying the bricks one at a time for a police state."
Some Congress members, too, are concerned.
"The enormity of the NAO's capabilities and the intended
use of the imagery received through these satellites for domestic
homeland security purposes, and the unintended consequences that
may arise, have heightened concerns among the general public,
including reputable civil rights and civil liberties organizations,"
Bennie G. Thompson, a Democratic member of Congress from Mississippi
and the chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, wrote
in a September letter to Secretary of Homeland Security Michael
Chertoff. Thompson and other lawmakers reacted with anger after
reports of the NAO and the domestic spying plan were first revealed
by the Wall Street Journal in August. "There was no
briefing, no hearing, and no phone call from anyone on your staff
to any member of this committee of why, how or when satellite
imagery would be shared with police and sheriffs' officers nationwide,"
Thompson complained to Chertoff.
At a hastily organized hearing in September,
Thompson and others demanded that the opening of the NAO be delayed
until further studies were conducted on its legal basis and questions
about civil liberties were answered. They also demanded biweekly
updates from Chertoff on the activities and progress of the new
organization. Others pointed out the potential danger of allowing
U.S. military satellites to be used domestically. "It will
terrify you if you really understand the capabilities of satellites,"
warned Jane Harman, a Democratic member of Congress from California,
who represents a coastal area of Los Angeles, where many of the
nation's satellites are built. As Harman well knows, military
spy satellites are far more flexible, offer greater resolution,
and have considerably more power to observe human activity than
commercial satellites. "Even if this program is well-designed
and executed, someone somewhere else could hijack it," Harman
said during the hearing.
The NAO was supposed to open for business
on Oct. 1, 2007. But the congressional complaints have led the
ODNI and DHS to delay their plans. The NAO "has no intention
to begin operations until we address your questions," Charles
Allen of DHS explained in a letter to Thompson. In an address
at the GEOINT conference in San Antonio, Allen said that the ODNI
is working with DHS and the Departments of Justice and Interior
to draft the charter for the new organization, which he said will
face "layers of review" once it is established.
Yet, given the Bush administration's record
of using U.S. intelligence agencies to spy on U.S. citizens, it
is difficult to take such promises at face value. Moreover, the
extensive corporate role in foreign and domestic intelligence
means that the private sector has a great deal to gain in the
new plan for intelligence sharing. Because most private contracts
with intelligence agencies are classified, however, the public
will have little knowledge of this role. Before Congress signs
off on the NAO, it should create a better oversight system that
would allow the House of Representatives and the Senate to monitor
the new organization and to examine how BAE, Boeing, Harris and
its fellow corporations stand to profit from this unprecedented
expansion of America's domestic intelligence system.
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