Mercenaries Corporate Outsourcing Intelligence gathering Clandestine Operations Active Duty Military Army Navy Air Force Marines Coast Guard Reserves Veterans

Last updated: Tuesday, July 29, 2008
Mercenaries at work
In 2006 ... the cost of America's spying and surveillance activities outsourced to contractors reached $42 billion, or about 70% of the estimated $60 billion the government spends each year on foreign and domestic intelligence ... [The] number of contract employees now exceeds [the CIA's] full-time workforce of 17,500 ... Contractors make up more than half the workforce of the CIA's National Clandestine Service (formerly the Directorate of Operations), which conducts covert operations and recruits spies abroad ...Several inferences can be drawn from Shorrock's shocking expose. One is that if a foreign espionage service wanted to penetrate American military and governmental secrets, its easiest path would not be to gain access to any official US agencies, but simply to get its agents jobs at any of the large intelligence-oriented private companies on which the government has become remarkably dependent. These include Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC), with headquarters in San Diego, California, which typically pays its 42,000 employees higher salaries than if they worked at similar jobs in the government; Booz Allen Hamilton, one of the nation's oldest intelligence and clandestine-operations contractors, which, until January 2007, was the employer of Mike McConnell, the current director of national intelligence and the first private contractor to be named to lead the entire intelligence community; and CACI International, which, under two contracts for "information technology services," ended up supplying some two dozen interrogators to the Army at Iraq's already infamous Abu Ghraib prison in 2003. According to Major General Anthony Taguba, who investigated the Abu Ghraib torture and abuse scandal, four of CACI's interrogators were "either directly or indirectly responsible" for torturing prisoners. (Shorrock, p. 281)
To feed the NSA's insatiable demand for data and information technology, the industrial base of contractors seeking to do business with the agency grew from 144 companies in 2001 to more than 5,400 in 2006 ... At the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), the agency in charge of launching and maintaining the nation's photo-reconnaissance and eavesdropping satellites, almost the entire workforce is composed of contract employees working for [private] companies ... With an estimated $8 billion annual budget, the largest in the IC [intelligence community], contractors control about $7 billion worth of business at the NRO, giving the spy satellite industry the distinction of being the most privatized part of the intelligence community ...
If there's one generalization to be made about the NSA's outsourced IT [information technology] programs, it is this: they haven't worked very well, and some have been spectacular failures ... In 2006, the NSA was unable to analyze much of the information it was collecting ... As a result, more than 90% of the information it was gathering was being discarded without being translated into a coherent and understandable format; only about 5% was translated from its digital form into text and then routed to the right division for analysis.
The key phrase in the new counterterrorism lexicon is 'public-private partnerships' ... In reality, 'partnerships' are a convenient cover for the perpetuation of corporate interests. (pp 6, 13-14, 16, 214-15, 365)
As David Bromwich, a political critic and Yale professor of literature, observed in the New York Review of Books:
The separate bookkeeping and accountability devised for Blackwater, DynCorp, Triple Canopy, and similar outfits was part of a careful displacement of oversight from Congress to the vice-president and the stewards of his policies in various departments and agencies. To have much of the work parceled out to private companies who are unaccountable to army rules or military justice, meant, among its other advantages, that the cost of the war could be concealed beyond all detection.Euphemisms are words intended to deceive. The United States is already close to drowning in them, particularly new words and terms devised, or brought to bear, to justify the American invasion of Iraq - coinages Bromwich highlights like "regime change", "enhanced interrogation techniques", "the global war on terrorism", "the birth pangs of a new Middle East", a "slight uptick in violence", "bringing torture within the law", "simulated drowning", and, of course, "collateral damage", meaning the slaughter of unarmed civilians by American troops and aircraft followed - rarely - by perfunctory apologies.
Bill Clinton ... picked up the cudgel where the conservative Ronald Reagan left off and ... took it deep into services once considered inherently governmental, including high-risk military operations and intelligence functions once reserved only for government agencies. By the end of [Clinton's first] term, more than 100,000 Pentagon jobs had been transferred to companies in the private sector - among them thousands of jobs in intelligence ... By the end of [his second] term in 2001, the administration had cut 360,000 jobs from the federal payroll and the government was spending 44% more on contractors than it had in 1993. (pp 73, 86)These activities were greatly abetted by the fact that the Republicans had gained control of the House of Representatives in 1994 for the first time in 43 years. One liberal journalist described "outsourcing as a virtual joint venture between [House Majority Leader Newt] Gingrich and Clinton". The right-wing Heritage Foundation aptly labeled Clinton's 1996 budget as the "boldest privatization agenda put forth by any president to date". (p 87)
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