By Tim Shorrock
(WASHINGTON, DC) – Not long ago, as I was preparing an article on government contracting,
I was given a tour of Northern Virginia by a friend who spent over a
decade as an intelligence operative and another five years working as an
intelligence contractor. We drove through Arlington, Herndon, Fairfax,
Tysons Corner and McLean, and up to Dulles Airport. Our route took us
from the entrance to the CIA through “contractor alley” and past the
huge, gleaming office buildings that house the dozens of corporations
that make up what Lt. Gen. James Clapper, the incoming director of the
Office of National Intelligence, likes to call “the intelligence enterprise.”
This industrial neighborhood is home to around 60 percent of the
Intelligence Community. These are the private sector warriors who staff
the offices and installations of the CIA, the National Security Agency,
the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, and the rest of the
so-called “Intelligence Community.” As I first reported in Salon in 2007 and later in my book, SPIES FOR HIRE, 70 percent of our intelligence budget goes to these companies. Officially, according to a 2008 ODNI study
of human capital within the IC, nearly 40,000 private contractors are
working for intelligence agencies, bringing the total number of IC
employees to more than 135,000.
So here, as an introduction to the upcoming Washington Post series on intelligence contractors that has the agencies quaking in their boots,
is a guide to the “real” IC (I’m sure the Post isn’t going to credit my
work, so here’s my chance – with a little help from fellow muckrakers
like emptywheel – to scoop the paper for once: screw ‘em).
Enjoy the ride; initial links to company names are to their section of the intelligence database I built with CorpWatch. All photos are copyright Tim Shorrock/2010.
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We begin the tour: Ah, yes,
SAIC, the Big Daddy of privatized intelligence, the company responsible for the failed $5 billion
Trailblazer
program at the NSA, which was supposed to keep track of the billions of
bits of data downloaded by the NSA around the world but totally failed.
SAIC, which recently moved its
headquarters from San Diego to this building, stands like a private
colossus across the whole intelligence industry. Of its 42,000
employees, more than 20,000 hold U.S. government security clearances,
making it, with
Lockheed Martin, one of the largest private intelligence services in the world.
SAIC’s offices stand in this office park,
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right next to its biggest competitor,
Booz Allen Hamilton.
Booz is involved in virtually every aspect of the modern intelligence
enterprise, from advising top officials on how to integrate the 16
agencies within the Intelligence Community (IC), to detailed analysis of
signals intelligence, imagery and other critical collections
technologies.
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Booz’s strategic role in the IC was best described in 2003 by Joan Dempsey, then the top assistant to
CIA Director George Tenet
for community management. “I like to call Booz Allen the Shadow IC,”
she said when receiving a lifetime achievement award from a contractor
group, because it has “more former secretaries of this and directors of
that” than the entire government.
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Dempsey,
whose picture is to the right (speaking at a contractor-sponsored event
known as GEOINT) is now Booz’s senior vice president, responsible for
many of the programs she managed while at the CIA. Booz itself it owned
by the
Carlyle Group,
one of the nation’s most politically-connected private equity funds.
Booz is also known for being king of the revolving door at the IC, as
personified by former NSA Director
Mike McConnell,
who left the NSA to become Booz’s top executive on military
intelligence, served for most of the Bush administration as DNI, and is
now back in his old slot at Booz.
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So, not surprisingly, security is tight at this building; just after I
took this picture, a pair of burly security guards came out and gave me
the cold stare. I smiled and promptly left.
This collosal building, near the SAIC/Booz complex, is the
headquarters for Accenture, the global consulting company that was
formerly a branch of Andersen Consulting. Few people know (and you
certainly wouldn’t pick up from
their website) that Accenture is deeply involved in intelligence work.
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But
as I learned at several industry gatherings I attended while
researching my book, it does financial planning and audits for the IC
and recently began providing information-sharing and collaboration
tools to agencies. Its customers, according to Accenture literature
I’ve gathered, include the NSA, the Defense Intelligence Agency, the NGA
and the National Reconaissance Office.
Down the road, visible for several miles, is this Sheraton Hotel.
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It’s
not a contractor building, of course, but it is where the CIA and other
agencies like to wine and dine their contractors as well as visiting
dignitaries from foreign intelligence agencies such as Britain’s MI5.
This building behind the trees is the headquarters for Scitor, a
virtually unknown company that does over $300 million worth of business
with U.S. intelligence every year.
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Scitor
is “the biggest company you never heard of,” a former NSA officer who
knows the company well once said (see the company’s profile in my book).
It is a technology company that does extensive work for the Air Force
in aerospace communications and satellite support services. The
privately held company is also an important contractor for the CIA’s
Directorate of Science and Technology. Within that directorate, it is
used primarily by the Office of Technical Services, the secretive unit
that develops the gadgets, weapons, and disguises used by spies. If you
can divine anything from its
website,
you’re probably a spook yourself. So too if you can recognize these
companies, whose logos are pointed out by my guide: Juniper, Blackbird
Technologies and RavenTech (so many predator metaphors!)
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On the other hand, most people recognize
BAE Systems,
one of the many British companies that have made deep inroads into the
U.S. intelligence market. BAE’s intelligence division has extensive
operations throughout the DC area and operates numerous
Sensitive Compartmented Information Facilities
(SCIF) for intelligence agencies. These facilities have special
windows that prevent outside infiltration of electronic spying devices.
According to BAE, “Our newest facility in Herndon, Virginia, known as
the Information Analysis Center (IAC) is a state-of-the-art workspace,
built to stringent…customer security, communications, and analytic
requirements. This facility, which was opened in July, 2005, provides
over 150,000 square feet of accredited SCIF space accommodating over
700 personnel.” BAE provides much of its contracting services
(especially to the CIA) through its
Global Analysis
intelligence unit, which described itself as “a leading provider of
skilled, fully cleared, and experienced intelligence and geospatial
analysts working directly with Government agencies and U.S. military
commands to satisfy regular and surge requirements.” This is no bit
player.
Not every building in contractor alley is marked. Only those who know
can identify the headquarters of the DNI or the National
Counter-Terrorism Center. But it’s easy to figure out which facility in
the Herndon-Fairfax corridor is an intelligence center: the intense
security just gives it away.
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This building is reportedly a special intelligence office; next to it is a small building with a
CACI logo on it. That makes the barricaded site even more obvious.
Finally, if you think that Dulles International Airport is just for the public, guess again.
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Throughout
the complex are terminals often used by the CIA to whisk officials,
operatives and contractors to their foreign destinations without being
seen by ordinary travellers and with heavy security. That’s what this
building is; my tour guide said he had used it several times to depart
for the Middle East and other spots, both as an intelligence operative
and as a contractor. Dual use, you might say, and a metaphor for the
entire intelligence enterprise.
Then of course there’s the industry parties, where the contractors
get to spend their money on lavish events of back-slapping and
celebration. That’s what’s happening here,
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where Stan Soloway, the executive director of the
Professional Services Council,
the voice and chief lobbyist of the contractor industry, is opening the
“Academy Awards of the Government Contracting World” at the swank Ritz
Carlton Hotel in Tysons Corner.
At this event, held every October, the scions of the Washington
business community pay tribute to the leading companies in the
government contracting industry. Like A-List actors at the Oscars, it’s
the high-flying intelligence contractors that usually sweep the awards:
at this event, in 2008, the big winner was Booz Allen, which was chosen
best contractor of the year for companies earning more than $300 million
a year. Booz’s competitors for the top spot were CACI International,
which earns much of its money from the CIA, and CSC, another big NSA
contractor.
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“This
is the new face of government,” Soloway, a top Pentagon acquisition
official during the Clinton administration, later told me about the 350
corporate members of his association.
So who elected you? I thought.
The highlight of the PSC’s gala was the induction of Norman R.
Augustine (below), the former chairman and CEO of Lockheed Martin, into
the contractor “hall of fame.” Lockheed Martin, largely on the basis of
its huge military and intelligence business, is the government’s
largest contractor, bringing in close to $17 billion in contracts in
2009 (see the rankings
here).
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“There
are fewer greater burdens that one could bear than accepting the
fiduciary responsibility of spending the public’s money,” Augustine told
the contractors. Ah yes, the new white men’s burden: spying for profit.
So that’s our tour. Enjoy the sites. And enjoy the
Dana Priest-Bill Arkin series in the Post.
It’s about damn time they covered this story: intelligence outsourcing
to this extent has only been a fact of life in Washington since, oh,
2002. The real question to be asked of the Post is: why the hell did it
take them eight years?
Note: I was a guest on Democracy Now! with Amy Goodman on July 19, 2010, talking about this article and the Washington Post stories on privatized intelligence. On July 21 I did a live Q&A on FDL/Emptywheel, talkin’ SPIES FOR HIRE and the WaPo.
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