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A hidden world, growing beyond control
Monday, July 19, 2010; 4:50 PM
The top-secret world the government
created in response to the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, has become so
large, so unwieldy and so secretive that no one knows how much money it costs,
how many people it employs, how many programs exist within it or exactly how
many agencies do the same work.
These are some of the findings of a
two-year investigation by The Washington Post that discovered what amounts to
an alternative geography of the United States, a Top Secret America hidden from
public view and lacking in thorough oversight. After nine years of
unprecedented spending and growth, the result is that the system put in place
to keep the United States safe is so massive that its effectiveness is
impossible to determine.
The investigation's other findings
include:
* Some 1,271 government
organizations and 1,931 private companies work on programs related to
counterterrorism, homeland security and intelligence in about 10,000 locations
across the United States.
* An estimated 854,000 people,
nearly 1.5 times as many people as live in Washington, D.C., hold top-secret
security clearances.
* In Washington and the surrounding
area, 33 building complexes for top-secret intelligence work are under
construction or have been built since September 2001. Together they occupy the
equivalent of almost three Pentagons or 22 U.S. Capitol buildings - about 17
million square feet of space.
* Many security and intelligence
agencies do the same work, creating redundancy and waste. For example, 51
federal organizations and military commands, operating in 15 U.S. cities, track
the flow of money to and from terrorist networks.
* Analysts who make sense of
documents and conversations obtained by foreign and domestic spying share their
judgment by publishing 50,000 intelligence reports each year - a volume so
large that many are routinely ignored.
These are not academic issues; lack
of focus, not lack of resources, was at the heart of the Fort Hood shooting
that left 13 dead, as well as the Christmas Day bomb attempt thwarted not by
the thousands of analysts employed to find lone terrorists but by an alert
airline passenger who saw smoke coming from his seatmate.
They are also issues that greatly
concern some of the people in charge of the nation's security.
"There has been so much growth
since 9/11 that getting your arms around that - not just for the CIA, for the secretary of defense - is a challenge,"
Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said in an interview with The Post last week.
In the Department of Defense, where more than two-thirds of the intelligence programs
reside, only a handful of senior officials - called Super Users - have the
ability to even know about all the department's activities. But as two of the
Super Users indicated in interviews, there is simply no way they can keep up
with the nation's most sensitive work.
"I'm not going to live long
enough to be briefed on everything" was how one Super User put it. The
other recounted that for his initial briefing, he was escorted into a tiny,
dark room, seated at a small table and told he couldn't take notes. Program
after program began flashing on a screen, he said, until he yelled
''Stop!" in frustration.
"I wasn't remembering any of
it," he said.
Underscoring the seriousness of
these issues are the conclusions of retired Army Lt. Gen. John R. Vines, who
was asked last year to review the method for tracking the Defense Department's
most sensitive programs. Vines, who once commanded 145,000 troops in Iraq and
is familiar with complex problems, was stunned by what he discovered.
"I'm not aware of any agency
with the authority, responsibility or a process in place to coordinate all
these interagency and commercial activities," he said in an interview.
"The complexity of this system defies description."
The result, he added, is that it's
impossible to tell whether the country is safer because of all this spending
and all these activities. "Because it lacks a synchronizing process, it
inevitably results in message dissonance, reduced effectiveness and
waste," Vines said. "We consequently can't effectively assess whether
it is making us more safe."
The Post's investigation is based on
government documents and contracts, job descriptions, property records,
corporate and social networking Web sites, additional records, and hundreds of
interviews with intelligence, military and corporate officials and former
officials. Most requested anonymity either because they are prohibited from
speaking publicly or because, they said, they feared retaliation at work for
describing their concerns.
The Post's online database of
government organizations and private companies was built entirely on public
records. The investigation focused on top-secret work because the amount
classified at the secret level is too large to accurately track.
Today's article describes the government's
role in this expanding enterprise. Tuesday's article describes the government's
dependence on private contractors. Wednesday's is a portrait of one Top Secret
America community. On the Web, an extensive, searchable database built by The
Post about Top Secret America is available at
washingtonpost.com/topsecretamerica.
Defense Secretary Gates, in his
interview with The Post, said that he does not believe the system has become
too big to manage but that getting precise data is sometimes difficult.
Singling out the growth of intelligence units in the Defense Department, he
said he intends to review those programs for waste. "Nine years after
9/11, it makes a lot of sense to sort of take a look at this and say, 'Okay,
we've built tremendous capability, but do we have more than we need?' " he
said.
CIA Director Leon Panetta, who was
also interviewed by The Post last week, said he's begun mapping out a five-year
plan for his agency because the levels of spending since 9/11 are not
sustainable. "Particularly with these deficits, we're going to hit the
wall. I want to be prepared for that," he said. "Frankly, I think
everyone in intelligence ought to be doing that."
In an interview before he resigned
as the director of national intelligence in May, retired Adm. Dennis C. Blair
said he did not believe there was overlap and redundancy in the intelligence
world. "Much of what appears to be redundancy is, in fact, providing
tailored intelligence for many different customers," he said.
Blair also expressed confidence that
subordinates told him what he needed to know. "I have visibility on all
the important intelligence programs across the community, and there are
processes in place to ensure the different intelligence capabilities are
working together where they need to," he said.
Weeks later, as he sat in the corner
of a ballroom at the Willard Hotel waiting to give a speech, he mused about The
Post's findings. "After 9/11, when we decided to attack violent extremism,
we did as we so often do in this country," he said. "The attitude
was, if it's worth doing, it's probably worth overdoing."
Outside a gated subdivision of
mansions in McLean, a line of cars idles every weekday morning as a new day in
Top Secret America gets underway. The drivers wait patiently to turn left, then
crawl up a hill and around a bend to a destination that is not on any public
map and not announced by any street sign.
Liberty Crossing tries hard to hide
from view. But in the winter, leafless trees can't conceal a mountain of cement
and windows the size of five Wal-Mart stores stacked on top of one another
rising behind a grassy berm. One step too close without the right badge, and
men in black jump out of nowhere, guns at the ready.
Past the armed guards and the
hydraulic steel barriers, at least 1,700 federal employees and 1,200 private
contractors work at Liberty Crossing, the nickname for the two headquarters of
the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and its National
Counterterrorism Center. The two share a police force, a canine unit and
thousands of parking spaces.
Liberty Crossing is at the center of
the collection of U.S. government agencies and corporate contractors that
mushroomed after the 2001 attacks. But it is not nearly the biggest, the most
costly or even the most secretive part of the 9/11 enterprise.
In an Arlington County office
building, the lobby directory doesn't include the Air Force's mysteriously named XOIWS unit, but there's a big
"Welcome!" sign in the hallway greeting visitors who know to step off
the elevator on the third floor. In Elkridge, Md., a clandestine program hides
in a tall concrete structure fitted with false windows to look like a normal
office building. In Arnold, Mo., the location is across the street from a
Target and a Home Depot. In St. Petersburg, Fla., it's in a modest brick
bungalow in a run-down business park.
Each day at the
National Counterterrorism Center in McLean, workers review at least 5,000
pieces of terrorist-related data from intelligence agencies and keep an eye on
world events. (Photo by: Melina Mara / The Washington Post)
Every day across the United States,
854,000 civil servants, military personnel and private contractors with
top-secret security clearances are scanned into offices protected by
electromagnetic locks, retinal cameras and fortified walls that eavesdropping
equipment cannot penetrate.
This is not exactly President Dwight
D. Eisenhower's "military-industrial complex," which emerged with the
Cold War and centered on building nuclear weapons to deter the Soviet Union.
This is a national security enterprise with a more amorphous mission: defeating
transnational violent extremists.
Much of the information about this
mission is classified. That is the reason it is so difficult to gauge the
success and identify the problems of Top Secret America, including whether
money is being spent wisely. The U.S. intelligence budget is vast, publicly
announced last year as $75 billion, 21/2 times the size it was on Sept. 10,
2001. But the figure doesn't include many military activities or domestic
counterterrorism programs.
At least 20 percent of the
government organizations that exist to fend off terrorist threats were
established or refashioned in the wake of 9/11. Many that existed before the
attacks grew to historic proportions as the Bush administration and Congress gave agencies more money than they were capable of
responsibly spending.
The Pentagon's Defense Intelligence
Agency, for example, has gone from 7,500
employees in 2002 to 16,500 today. The budget of the National Security Agency, which conducts electronic eavesdropping, doubled.
Thirty-five FBI Joint Terrorism Task Forces became 106. It was phenomenal
growth that began almost as soon as the Sept. 11 attacks ended.
Nine days after the attacks,
Congress committed $40 billion beyond what was in the federal budget to fortify
domestic defenses and to launch a global offensive against al-Qaeda. It
followed that up with an additional $36.5 billion in 2002 and $44 billion in
2003. That was only a beginning.
With the quick infusion of money,
military and intelligence agencies multiplied. Twenty-four organizations were
created by the end of 2001, including the Office of Homeland Security and the
Foreign Terrorist Asset Tracking Task Force. In 2002, 37 more were created to
track weapons of mass destruction, collect threat tips and coordinate the new
focus on counterterrorism. That was followed the next year by 36 new
organizations; and 26 after that; and 31 more; and 32 more; and 20 or more each
in 2007, 2008 and 2009.
In all, at least 263 organizations
have been created or reorganized as a response to 9/11. Each has required more
people, and those people have required more administrative and logistic
support: phone operators, secretaries, librarians, architects, carpenters,
construction workers, air-conditioning mechanics and, because of where they
work, even janitors with top-secret clearances.
With so many more employees, units
and organizations, the lines of responsibility began to blur. To remedy this,
at the recommendation of the bipartisan 9/11 Commission, the George W. Bush
administration and Congress decided to create an agency in 2004 with
overarching responsibilities called the Office of the Director of National
Intelligence (ODNI) to bring the colossal effort under control.
While that was the idea, Washington
has its own ways.
The first problem was that the law
passed by Congress did not give the director clear legal or budgetary authority
over intelligence matters, which meant he wouldn't have power over the
individual agencies he was supposed to control.
The second problem: Even before the
first director, Ambassador John D. Negroponte, was on the job, the turf battles
began. The Defense Department shifted billions of dollars out of one budget and
into another so that the ODNI could not touch it, according to two senior
officials who watched the process. The CIA reclassified some of its most
sensitive information at a higher level so the National Counterterrorism Center
staff, part of the ODNI, would not be allowed to see it, said former intelligence
officers involved.
And then came a problem that
continues to this day, which has to do with the ODNI's rapid expansion.
When it opened in the spring of
2005, Negroponte's office was all of 11 people stuffed into a secure vault with
closet-size rooms a block from the White House. A year later, the budding agency moved to two floors of
another building. In April 2008, it moved into its huge permanent home, Liberty
Crossing.
Today, many officials who work in
the intelligence agencies say they remain unclear about what the ODNI is in
charge of. To be sure, the ODNI has made some progress, especially in
intelligence-sharing, information technology and budget reform. The DNI and his
managers hold interagency meetings every day to promote collaboration. The last
director, Blair, doggedly pursued such nitty-gritty issues as procurement
reform, compatible computer networks, tradecraft standards and collegiality.
But improvements have been overtaken
by volume at the ODNI, as the increased flow of intelligence data overwhelms
the system's ability to analyze and use it. Every day, collection systems at
the National Security Agency intercept and store 1.7 billion e-mails, phone
calls and other types of communications. The NSA sorts a fraction of those into
70 separate databases. The same problem bedevils every other intelligence
agency, none of which have enough analysts and translators for all this work.
The practical effect of this
unwieldiness is visible, on a much smaller scale, in the office of Michael
Leiter, the director of the National Counterterrorism Center. Leiter spends
much of his day flipping among four computer monitors lined up on his desk. Six
hard drives sit at his feet. The data flow is enormous, with dozens of
databases feeding separate computer networks that cannot interact with one
another.
There is a long explanation for why
these databases are still not connected, and it amounts to this: It's too hard,
and some agency heads don't really want to give up the systems they have. But
there's some progress: "All my e-mail on one computer now," Leiter
says. "That's a big deal."
To get another view of how sprawling
Top Secret America has become, just head west on the toll road toward Dulles
International Airport.
As a Michaels craft store and a
Books-A-Million give way to the military intelligence giants Northrop Grumman
and Lockheed Martin, find the off-ramp and turn left. Those two shimmering-blue
five-story ice cubes belong to the National
Geospatial-Intelligence Agency,
which analyzes images and mapping data of the Earth's geography. A small sign
obscured by a boxwood hedge says so.
Across the street, in the
chocolate-brown blocks, is Carahsoft, an intelligence agency contractor specializing in mapping,
speech analysis and data harvesting. Nearby is the government's Underground
Facility Analysis Center. It identifies overseas underground command centers
associated with weapons of mass destruction and terrorist groups, and advises
the military on how to destroy them.
Clusters of top-secret work exist
throughout the country, but the Washington region is the capital of Top Secret
America.
About half of the post-9/11
enterprise is anchored in an arc stretching from Leesburg south to Quantico,
back north through Washington and curving northeast to Linthicum, just north of
the Baltimore-Washington International Marshall Airport. Many buildings sit
within off-limits government compounds or military bases.
Others occupy business parks or are
intermingled with neighborhoods, schools and shopping centers and go unnoticed
by most people who live or play nearby.
Many of the newest buildings are not
just utilitarian offices but also edifices "on the order of the
pyramids," in the words of one senior military intelligence officer.
Not far from the Dulles Toll Road,
the CIA has expanded into two buildings that will increase the agency's office
space by one-third. To the south, Springfield is becoming home to the new $1.8
billion National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency headquarters, which will be the
fourth-largest federal building in the area and home to 8,500 employees.
Economic stimulus money is paying hundreds of millions of dollars for this kind
of federal construction across the region.
Construction for the
National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency in Springfield (Photo by: Michael S.
Williamson / The Washington Post)
It's not only the number of
buildings that suggests the size and cost of this expansion, it's also what is
inside: banks of television monitors. "Escort-required" badges. X-ray
machines and lockers to store cellphones and pagers. Keypad door locks that
open special rooms encased in metal or permanent dry wall, impenetrable to
eavesdropping tools and protected by alarms and a security force capable of responding
within 15 minutes. Every one of these buildings has at least one of these
rooms, known as a SCIF, for sensitive compartmented information facility. Some
are as small as a closet; others are four times the size of a football field.
SCIF size has become a measure of
status in Top Secret America, or at least in the Washington region of it.
"In D.C., everyone talks SCIF, SCIF, SCIF," said Bruce Paquin, who
moved to Florida from the Washington region several years ago to start a SCIF
construction business. "They've got the penis envy thing going. You can't
be a big boy unless you're a three-letter agency and you have a big SCIF."
SCIFs are not the only must-have
items people pay attention to. Command centers, internal television networks,
video walls, armored SUVs and personal security guards have also become the
bling of national security.
"You can't find a four-star
general without a security detail," said one three-star general now posted
in Washington after years abroad. "Fear has caused everyone to have stuff.
Then comes, 'If he has one, then I have to have one.' It's become a status
symbol."
Among the most important people
inside the SCIFs are the low-paid employees carrying their lunches to work to
save money. They are the analysts, the 20- and 30-year-olds making $41,000 to
$65,000 a year, whose job is at the core of everything Top Secret America tries
to do.
At its best, analysis melds cultural
understanding with snippets of conversations, coded dialogue, anonymous tips,
even scraps of trash, turning them into clues that lead to individuals and
groups trying to harm the United States.
Their work is greatly enhanced by
computers that sort through and categorize data. But in the end, analysis
requires human judgment, and half the analysts are relatively inexperienced,
having been hired in the past several years, said a senior ODNI official.
Contract analysts are often straight out of college and trained at corporate
headquarters.
When hired, a typical analyst knows
very little about the priority countries - Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan
- and is not fluent in their languages. Still, the number of intelligence
reports they produce on these key countries is overwhelming, say current and
former intelligence officials who try to cull them every day. The ODNI doesn't
know exactly how many reports are issued each year, but in the process of
trying to find out, the chief of analysis discovered 60 classified analytic Web
sites still in operation that were supposed to have been closed down for lack
of usefulness. "Like a zombie, it keeps on living" is how one
official describes the sites.
The problem with many intelligence
reports, say officers who read them, is that they simply re-slice the same
facts already in circulation. "It's the soccer ball syndrome. Something
happens, and they want to rush to cover it," said Richard H. Immerman, who
was the ODNI's assistant deputy director of national intelligence for analytic
integrity and standards until early 2009. "I saw tremendous overlap."
Even the analysts at the National
Counterterrorism Center (NCTC), which is supposed to be where the most
sensitive, most difficult-to-obtain nuggets of information are fused together,
get low marks from intelligence officials for not producing reports that are
original, or at least better than the reports already written by the CIA, FBI,
National Security Agency or Defense Intelligence Agency.
When Maj. Gen. John M. Custer was
the director of intelligence at U.S. Central Command, he grew angry at how
little helpful information came out of the NCTC. In 2007, he visited its
director at the time, retired Vice Adm. John Scott Redd, to tell him so.
"I told him that after 41/2 years, this organization had never produced
one shred of information that helped me prosecute three wars!" he said
loudly, leaning over the table during an interview.
Two years later, Custer, now head of
the Army's intelligence school at Fort Huachuca, Ariz., still gets red-faced
recalling that day, which reminds him of his frustration with Washington's
bureaucracy. "Who has the mission of reducing redundancy and ensuring
everybody doesn't gravitate to the lowest-hanging fruit?" he said.
"Who orchestrates what is produced so that everybody doesn't produce the
same thing?"
He's hardly the only one irritated.
In a secure office in Washington, a senior intelligence officer was dealing
with his own frustration. Seated at his computer, he began scrolling through
some of the classified information he is expected to read every day: CIA World
Intelligence Review, WIRe-CIA, Spot Intelligence Report, Daily Intelligence
Summary, Weekly Intelligence Forecast, Weekly Warning Forecast, IC Terrorist
Threat Assessments, NCTC Terrorism Dispatch, NCTC Spotlight . . .
It's too much, he complained. The
inbox on his desk was full, too. He threw up his arms, picked up a thick,
glossy intelligence report and waved it around, yelling.
"Jesus! Why does it take so
long to produce?"
"Why does it have to be so
bulky?"
"Why isn't it online?"
The overload of hourly, daily,
weekly, monthly and annual reports is actually counterproductive, say people
who receive them. Some policymakers and senior officials don't dare delve into
the backup clogging their computers. They rely instead on personal briefers,
and those briefers usually rely on their own agency's analysis, re-creating the
very problem identified as a main cause of the failure to thwart the attacks: a
lack of information-sharing.
A new Defense
Department office complex goes up in Alexandria. (Photo by: Michael S.
Williamson / The Washington Post)
The ODNI's analysis office knows
this is a problem. Yet its solution was another publication, this one a daily
online newspaper, Intelligence Today. Every day, a staff of 22 culls more than
two dozen agencies' reports and 63 Web sites, selects the best information and
packages it by originality, topic and region.
Analysis is not the only area where
serious overlap appears to be gumming up the national security machinery and
blurring the lines of responsibility.
Within the Defense Department alone,
18 commands and agencies conduct information operations, which aspire to manage
foreign audiences’ perceptions of U.S. policy and military activities overseas.
And all the major intelligence
agencies and at least two major military commands claim a major role in
cyber-warfare, the newest and least-defined frontier.
"Frankly, it hasn't been
brought together in a unified approach," CIA Director Panetta said of the
many agencies now involved in cyber-warfare.
"Cyber is tremendously
difficult" to coordinate, said Benjamin A. Powell, who served as general
counsel for three directors of national intelligence until he left the
government last year. "Sometimes there was an unfortunate attitude of
bring your knives, your guns, your fists and be fully prepared to defend your
turf." Why? "Because it's funded, it's hot and it's sexy."
Last fall, U.S. Army Maj. Nidal
Malik Hasan allegedly opened fire at Fort Hood, Tex., killing 13 people and
wounding 30. In the days after the shootings, information emerged about Hasan's
increasingly strange behavior at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, where he had
trained as a psychiatrist and warned commanders that they should allow Muslims
to leave the Army or risk "adverse events." He had also exchanged
e-mails with a well-known radical cleric in Yemen being monitored by U.S.
intelligence.
But none of this reached the one
organization charged with handling counterintelligence investigations within
the Army. Just 25 miles up the road from Walter Reed, the Army's 902nd Military
Intelligence Group had been doing little to search the ranks for potential
threats. Instead, the 902's commander had decided to turn the unit's attention
to assessing general terrorist affiliations in the United States, even though
the Department of Homeland
Security and the FBI's 106 Joint Terrorism
Task Forces were already doing this work in great depth.
The 902nd, working on a program the
commander named RITA, for Radical Islamic Threat to the Army, had quietly been
gathering information on Hezbollah, Iranian Republican Guard and al-Qaeda
student organizations in the United States. The assessment "didn't tell us
anything we didn't know already," said the Army's senior
counterintelligence officer at the Pentagon.
Secrecy and lack of coordination
have allowed organizations, such as the 902nd in this case, to work on issues
others were already tackling rather than take on the much more challenging job
of trying to identify potential jihadist sympathizers within the Army itself.
Beyond redundancy, secrecy within
the intelligence world hampers effectiveness in other ways, say defense and
intelligence officers. For the Defense Department, the root of this problem
goes back to an ultra-secret group of programs for which access is extremely
limited and monitored by specially trained security officers.
These are called Special Access
Programs - or SAPs - and the Pentagon's list of code names for them runs 300
pages. The intelligence community has hundreds more of its own, and those
hundreds have thousands of sub-programs with their own limits on the number of
people authorized to know anything about them. All this means that very few
people have a complete sense of what's going on.
"There's only one entity in the
entire universe that has visibility on all SAPs - that's God," said James
R. Clapper, undersecretary of defense for intelligence and the Obama
administration's nominee to be the next director of national intelligence.
Such secrecy can undermine the
normal chain of command when senior officials use it to cut out rivals or when
subordinates are ordered to keep secrets from their commanders.
One military officer involved in one
such program said he was ordered to sign a document prohibiting him from
disclosing it to his four-star commander, with whom he worked closely every
day, because the commander was not authorized to know about it. Another senior
defense official recalls the day he tried to find out about a program in his
budget, only to be rebuffed by a peer. "What do you mean you can't tell
me? I pay for the program," he recalled saying in a heated exchange.
Another senior intelligence official
with wide access to many programs said that secrecy is sometimes used to
protect ineffective projects. "I think the secretary of defense ought to
direct a look at every single thing to see if it still has value," he
said. "The DNI ought to do something similar."
The ODNI hasn't done that yet. The
best it can do at the moment is maintain a database of the names of the most
sensitive programs in the intelligence community. But the database does not
include many important and relevant Pentagon projects.
Because so much is classified,
illustrations of what goes on every day in Top Secret America can be hard to
ferret out. But every so often, examples emerge. A recent one shows the
post-9/11 system at its best and its worst.
Last fall, after eight years of
growth and hirings, the enterprise was at full throttle when word emerged that
something was seriously amiss inside Yemen. In response, President Obama signed
an order sending dozens of secret commandos to that country to target and kill the
leaders of an al-Qaeda affiliate.
In Yemen, the commandos set up a
joint operations center packed with hard drives, forensic kits and
communications gear. They exchanged thousands of intercepts, agent reports,
photographic evidence and real-time video surveillance with dozens of
top-secret organizations in the United States.
That was the system as it was
intended. But when the information reached the National Counterterrorism Center
in Washington for analysis, it arrived buried within the 5,000 pieces of general
terrorist-related data that are reviewed each day. Analysts had to switch from
database to database, from hard drive to hard drive, from screen to screen,
just to locate what might be interesting to study further.
As military operations in Yemen intensified
and the chatter about a possible terrorist strike increased, the intelligence
agencies ramped up their effort. The flood of information into the NCTC became
a torrent.
Somewhere in that deluge was even
more vital data. Partial names of someone in Yemen. A reference to a Nigerian
radical who had gone to Yemen. A report of a father in Nigeria worried about a
son who had become interested in radical teachings and had disappeared inside
Yemen.
These were all clues to what would
happen when a Nigerian named Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab left Yemen and
eventually boarded a plane in Amsterdam bound for Detroit. But nobody put them
together because, as officials would testify later, the system had gotten so
big that the lines of responsibility had become hopelessly blurred.
"There are so many people
involved here," NCTC Director Leiter told Congress.
"Everyone had the dots to
connect," DNI Blair explained to the lawmakers. "But I hadn't made it
clear exactly who had primary responsibility."
And so Abdulmutallab was able to
step aboard Northwest Airlines Flight 253. As it descended toward Detroit, he
allegedly tried to ignite explosives hidden in his underwear. It wasn't the
very expensive, very large 9/11 enterprise that prevented disaster. It was a
passenger who saw what he was doing and tackled him. "We didn't follow up
and prioritize the stream of intelligence," White House counterterrorism
adviser John O. Brennan explained afterward. "Because no one intelligence
entity, or team or task force was assigned responsibility for doing that
follow-up investigation."
Blair acknowledged the problem. His
solution: Create yet another team to run down every important lead. But he also
told Congress he needed more money and more analysts to prevent another
mistake.
More is often the solution proposed
by the leaders of the 9/11 enterprise. After the Christmas Day bombing attempt,
Leiter also pleaded for more - more analysts to join the 300 or so he already
had.
The Department of Homeland Security
asked for more air marshals, more body scanners and more analysts, too, even
though it can't find nearly enough qualified people to fill its intelligence
unit now. Obama has said he will not freeze spending on national security,
making it likely that those requests will be funded.
More building, more expansion of
offices continues across the country. A $1.7 billion NSA data-processing center
will be under construction soon near Salt Lake City. In Tampa, the U.S. Central
Command’s new 270,000-square-foot intelligence office will be matched next year
by an equally large headquarters building, and then, the year after that, by a
51,000-square-foot office just for its special operations section.
Just north of Charlottesville, the
new Joint-Use Intelligence Analysis Facility will consolidate 1,000 defense
intelligence analysts on a secure campus.
Meanwhile, five miles southeast of
the White House, the DHS has broken ground for its new headquarters, to be
shared with the Coast Guard. DHS, in existence for only seven years, already
has its own Special Access Programs, its own research arm, its own command
center, its own fleet of armored cars and its own 230,000-person workforce, the
third-largest after the departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs.
Soon, on the grounds of the former
St. Elizabeths mental hospital in Anacostia, a $3.4 billion showcase of
security will rise from the crumbling brick wards. The new headquarters will be
the largest government complex built since the Pentagon, a major landmark in
the alternative geography of Top Secret America and four times as big as
Liberty Crossing.
Staff researcher Julie Tate
contributed to this report.
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