5 Companies That Make Money By Keeping Americans Terrified of Terror Attacks
August 19, 2013Alex Kane, alternet
A massive industry profits off the government-induced fear of terrorism.
Michael Hayden, the former director of the National Security Agency, has invaded America’s television sets in recent weeks to warn about Edward Snowden’s leaks and the continuing terrorist threat to America.
But what often goes unmentioned, as the Guardian’s Glenn Greenwald pointed out, is
that Hayden has a financial stake in keeping Americans scared and on a
permanent war footing against Islamist militants. And the private firm
he works for, called the Chertoff Group, is not the only one making
money by scaring Americans.
Post-9/11 America has witnessed a boom in private firms
dedicated to the hyped-up threat of terrorism. The drive to privatize
America’s national security apparatus accelerated in the aftermath of
the terrorist attacks, and it’s gotten to the point where 70 percent of
the national intelligence budget is now spent on private contractors, as author Tim Shorrock reported. The private intelligence contractors have profited to the tune of at least $6 billion a year. In 2010, the Washington Post revealed that there are 1,931 private firms across the country dedicated to fighting terrorism.
What it all adds up to is a massive industry profiting off
government-induced fear of terrorism, even though Americans are more
likely to be killed by a car crash or their own furniture than a terror attack.
Here are five private companies cashing in on keeping you afraid.
1. The Chertoff Group
On August 11, former NSA head Michael Hayden, the man at the center of the Bush administration‘s 2005 surveillance scandal, was defending his former agency on CBS News in the wake of the latest NSA spying scandal. Commenting on President Obama’s half-hearted promises to reform some NSA practices, Hayden told host Bob Schieffer that “the
President is trying to take some steps to make the American people more
comfortable about what it is we’re doing. That’s going to be hard
because, frankly, Bob, some steps to make Americans more comfortable
will actually make Americans less safe.”
Former Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff had a
similar message when he appeared on ABC News August 4. Speaking about
the purported threat from an Al Qaeda affiliate in Yemen that led to the
closure of 19 U.S. embassies, Chertoff said that “the collection of
this warning information [about Al Qaeda] came from the kinds of
programs we’ve been discussing about, the ability to capture
communications overseas.”
CBS and ABC did not see fit to inform viewers that both
Hayden and Chertoff are employees of the Chertoff Group, a private firm
created in 2009 that companies hire to consult on best practices for
security and combatting terrorism. Some of the companies
the firm advises go on to win government contracts. Chertoff is the
founder and chairman of the group, while Hayden serves as a principal.
So they profit off a war on terror they say is crucial to keeping
Americans safe.
Though it’s unclear how much in total exactly the firm
makes, there are some known numbers. After the failed attempt in 2010 to
blow up an airliner on Christmas Day with a bomb hidden in underwear,
Chertoff pushed for better airport security procedures. One of the
suggestions Chertoff made was for the Transportation Security Agency to
use full-body scanners like the ones Rapiscan, one of the Chertoff
Group’s clients, made. And sure enough, after the Christmas Day plot,
the TSA ordered 300 Rapiscan machines. The Huffington Post reported that Rapiscan made $118 million from the government between 2009-2010.
2. Booz Allen Hamilton
This private intelligence contractor has become a household name in the wake of the NSA scandal.
Edward Snowden, the man responsible for leaking secret documents that
exposed the breadth of NSA surveillance, was working for Booz Allen when
he downloaded the documents he handed off to media outlets. As the New York Times reported in June, the
company parlays its technology expertise for intelligence uses into
massive government contracts. Thousands of employees of the company
provide services to the NSA, like analyzing the massive amounts of data
the government agency collects every day. The company is also the
shining symbol of the government-private security complex’s revolving
door: its vice president is the former director of national
intelligence, while the current director of national intelligence is a
former employee of Booz Allen.
Despite the Snowden security breach, Booz Allen continues
to work with the government. And they’re making a lot of money from the
U.S. In the last fiscal year, the company made $1.3 billion from working
in U.S. intelligence. In total, Booz Allen Hamiltion made over $5
billion last fiscal year. And the cash keeps coming: in January, the
company announced that it had won a contract with the Defense Department
to provide intelligence services. The amount of money it could make
from the deal is up to $5.6 billion.
And like Hayden and Chertoff, Booz Allen’s vice president
Mike McConnell has publicly hyped up the threat of terrorism to blast
Snowden’s leaks. McConnell told a government contracting conference in
July 2013 that Snowden’s leaks have done “irrevocable damage” to the U.S.’s ability to stop terrorism. “It’s going
to inhibit our ability to understand nuclear activity in North Korea,
what’s going on in Syria, what might be happening with the Taliban in Afghanistan,” said McConnell.
3. Science Applications International Corporation
Sometimes referred to as “NSA West” because so many former
NSA employees go on to work for the formerly California-based Science
Applications International Corporation (SAIC), this firm makes a ton of
cash off government contracts. And they do so by hawking their expertise
in combatting the terrorist threat.
Browse through SAIC’s website and you’re constantly greeted
with the words “terrorist threat” and information on how the SAIC can
help the government and others battle it. SAIC developed a “Terrorism
Protection Manual” for Florida law enforcement that was developed to fight “today’s national terrorist threat and implement recommended security best practices.” They boast of their “experience meeting
the terrorism incident response training needs of a wide variety of
customers, from training for a national Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) scenario, applicable at agency response levels, to lesser levels of incidents affecting a city, a military installation or a special facility.”
Back when John P. Jumper, the current CEO of SAIC, was an Air Force general, he said
the threat of terrorism is “greater than Nazism, greater than
communism. This threat that we have of terrorist zealots is the most
dangerous because these are people who care nothing about life. They
care nothing about our lives, for sure, and they care nothing about
their own lives.” And Larry Prior, a U.S. intelligence veteran who used
to run the company’s Intelligence and Security Group, said in an
internal newsletter that “the future of the nation rests on their
backs,” referring to employees in his group.
SAIC is an immensely lucrative and large company. It boasts
42,000 employees—20,000 of whom hold U.S. government security
clearances. It is the NSA’s largest contractor, according to CorpWatch, and is deeply involved in the NSA’s collection of intelligence. Last year it reported a net income of $525 million.
4. Center for Counterintelligence and Security Studies
U.S. intelligence agencies
aren’t the only sectors of government where the private sector has
cashed in on the fear of terrorism. The post-9/11 world has seen the
blossoming of a cottage industry of self-styled “experts” on Islam from
private companies that market their supposedly ironclad analysis of the
threat from Islamists to other federal agencies and state and local law
enforcement. These companies have profited from law enforcement taking
part in the “war on terror.”
Through Homeland Security grant programs like
the State Homeland Security Program and the Urban Areas Security
Initiative, the federal government has doled out over billions of
dollars to these private companies to provide Islamophobic training. One
of these companies is called the Center for Counterintelligence and
Security Studies.
Based in Virginia, the center “posits radical Islam as a
new global ideological menace on the order of the old communist threat
from the Soviet Union,” as Political Research Associates (PRA) noted in a 2011 report on private firms doing counter-terror training. Staff members include former FBI, CIA and Defense Department personnel.
Their claim to fame is providing education and training to members of the U.S. national security community—including law enforcement agencies, according to their website. They say they have trained over 67,000 people over the past decade.
It’s unclear exactly how much this firm makes per year. But
according to the PRA report, a five-day course for government employees
on the “Global Jihadist Threat Doctrine” costs $39,280. The firm also lists
the costs of individual courses on their website. For a 30-person class
titled “Dying to Kill Us: Understanding the Mindset of Suicide
Operations,” the cost is $7,856. For a three-day course for 30 people
on “Informant Development for Law Enforcement to FighTerrorism,” the
cost is $23,568.
The training pushes anti-Muslim ideology. On the section of
their website where they list feedback from participants of the
courses, one wrote: “An eye-opener. Especially how many Muslim
Brotherhood front organizations there are and that the government
doesn’t get it.”
5. Security Solutions International
Security Solutions International is yet another private firm hawking
anti-Muslim training to law enforcement. This Miami-based company
founded in 2004 uses its Israeli security connections to boost its
standing in the market. They use Israeli security trainers in their
courses and their president, Henry Morgenstern,
is a dual Israeli-U.S. citizen who says he “developed excellent high
level contacts with the Security Establishment [in Israel], making SSI
the premiere training company for counter-terror related subjects.”
The company has trained over 700 law enforcement agencies since 2004. Officials from law enforcement agencies like the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority and the Department of Homeland Security
have participated in the conferences they put on for profit. While SSI
claims that they don’t cast aspersions on the whole of Islam, an
examination of their trainings, conferences and the speakers they use
indicate otherwise.
At a 2009 conference sponsored by Police magazine, an SSI
instructor who is the company’s “expert” on Islam used a video that
showed a terrorist beheading a hostage. After the course was met with
criticism, the company’s CEO said “their religion got linked to
terrorism a long time ago.”
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