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Interview with National Intelligence Director Mike McConnell 112

Schneier is reporting that Mike McConnell, U.S. National Intelligence Director, recently gave an interesting interview to the El Paso Times. "I don't think he's ever been so candid before. For example, he admitted that the nation's telcos assisted the NSA in their massive eavesdropping efforts. We already knew this, of course, but the government has steadfastly maintained that either confirming or denying this would compromise national security."
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Interview with National Intelligence Director Mike McConnell

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    Every post on Slashdot abott national intelligence kills another American!
  • A transcript of the interview is available here [elpasotimes.com].
  • Dupe! (Score:5, Informative)

    by A beautiful mind ( 821714 ) on Friday August 24, 2007 @11:10AM (#20344085)
    Dupe. [slashdot.org]
  • by TubeSteak ( 669689 ) on Friday August 24, 2007 @11:11AM (#20344101) Journal

    For example, he admitted that the nation's telcos assisted the NSA in their massive eavesdropping efforts. We already knew this, of course, but the government has steadfastly maintained that either confirming or denying this would compromise national security."
    Can't they use his admission in the AT&T trial?

    You kinda wonder who thought it'd be a good idea to let him say what he did.
    • by arivanov ( 12034 ) on Friday August 24, 2007 @11:30AM (#20344343) Homepage
      Who cares about the ATT trial. RTFA for f*** sake.

      There in the first paragraphs he basically states that his primary objective when he came in was to make any communication between foreign parties handled by an American entity and passing via an American wire or fibre a fair game with no judicial oversight for purposes of foreign intelligence including one for purely economical purposes. Nothing to do with terrorism or domestic surveillance. Terrorism comes much later as an excuse.

      Now add to that the particular insistence of this administration that an American person or corporation has to comply with American laws anywhere around the world and what does this mean from the perspective of "using american communications" and you get the real picture of what is this all about. It is not surprising that while they got lucky via judge-shopping the first time they got stopped the second time.
      • by caseydk ( 203763 )

        Not new.

        I worked for a former spook who told me all about this and how they were helping design some of the hardware directly with the telco's. Of course, he left the spook-business in '84 or so.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by arivanov ( 12034 )
          Not quite so.

          The world has changed dramatically since the mid 80-es. In the mid-80es the world was a world of national telco monopolies. French traffic stayed in France not traversing a single US fibre. German traffic stayed in Germany and so on. If you wanted to tap a conversation you had to get down and dirty and tap it locally. And most importantly the spooks had to do this themselves. Backdooring ATT switches did not really give them anything as far as Alcatel switches in France or the Marconi ones in t
      • Who cares about the ATT trial. RTFA for f*** sake.

        I, for one, care about the AT&T trial.

        Remember the whole "soap, ballot, jury, ammo" box thing?

        Since Congress is seriously considering passing a law granting immunity to the telcos, it looks like the first two boxes have already failed America.

        I feel that the AT&T trial will be a good venue to test out the applicable laws concerning wiretapping, assuming they can get past the wall of secrecy the gov't keeps trying to build up. IMO, the plaintiffs' case just got a bit stronger and it's the only pract

      • by iamacat ( 583406 )
        Now add to that the particular insistence of this administration that an American person or corporation has to comply with American laws anywhere around the world

        Sounds like a good rule to me - a person should, through maintaining citizenship, agree to follow laws of at least some country in the world rather than escaping all responsibility by moving around. American tourists having sex with child prostitutes should be prosecuted (while adult prostitution or smoking pot should be legal abroad or at home). A
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      Not a sworn statement. Unless it gets put in an affidavit or elicited at deposition (or trial) it's irrelevant. Many public statements have been made, but there's no accounting for the veracity of them unless they're sworn according to the legal standard. The 9th Cir. Court of Appeals specifically said this at the AT&T (EFF) class action hearing on the Govts. motion to dismiss a couple of weeks ago.

      Transcript here
      www.ca9.uscourts.gov/ca9/media.nsf/D654A11D7A67 5 986882573380083A50C/$file/06-17132.
  • well not exactly (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Q. So you're saying that the reporting and the debate in Congress means that some Americans are going to die? A. That's what I mean. Because we have made it so public. We used to do these things very differently, but for whatever reason, you know, it's a democratic process and sunshine's a good thing. We need to have the debate.

    interesting that he somehow connects the leak about domestic spying and our people dying. we've lost more people in Iraq and pissed off a lot more people than the domestic spying

    • As you say, not exactly. Depends on your definition of 'domestic spying', I suppose:

      Deaths from WTC: 2,726 See http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm51SPa6. htm [cdc.gov]

      US deaths in Iraq, to date: 3,774 See http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/ops/iraq_ca sualties.htm [globalsecurity.org]

      Could better 'domestic spying' have prevented the WTC atrocities, well, maybe.

      See http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,333 835,00.html [time.com]

      From that last article,
      "Could al-Qaeda's plot have been foiled if the U.S. had taken the fight to t
      • Re:well not exactly (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Xonstantine ( 947614 ) on Friday August 24, 2007 @01:38PM (#20345913)

        I'm very concerned about my civil liberties, but I'm even more concerned that the the next time I take the 'plane, the bus, the subway - or I'm just sitting at my desk, or on holiday with my family - I might get wiped out by some terrorist.
        I'm more concerned about my civil liberties. In the end, government can do very little to protect us but can certainly make our lives miserable while trying. The problem with all these terrorism laws is, despite ostensibly to fight a temporary battle, they stick around and get used for every day mundane law enforcement. Sort of like the telecom tax used to pay for the Spanish American war...these things tend to stick around long after their original purpose has lapsed.

        And I say these things as a big time conservative. It's like torture. I can honestly see situations where it would be acceptable (ticking nuclear bomb scenario, for example), but legalizing it is a really bad idea because it encourages too much potential abuse.
      • by heelrod ( 124784 )
        Liberty or Death. pick one. you scared?
      • I'm very concerned about my civil liberties, but I'm even more concerned that the the next time I take the 'plane, the bus, the subway - or I'm just sitting at my desk, or on holiday with my family - I might get wiped out by some terrorist.

        Quit being a sheep. You have a far greater chance of being killed by an auto accident, an earthquake, or even getting struck by lightning than by an act of terrorism. Even if they blow up a mall somewhere each week. - http://www.reason.com/news/show/36765.html [reason.com]

      • Odds of Dying (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Khammurabi ( 962376 ) on Friday August 24, 2007 @03:47PM (#20347405)

        I'm very concerned about my civil liberties, but I'm even more concerned that the the next time I take the 'plane, the bus, the subway - or I'm just sitting at my desk, or on holiday with my family - I might get wiped out by some terrorist.
        According to a nifty study [nsc.org] done in 2003, your odds of dying (per year) due to a terrorist act (assuming you're not blowing yourself up) are 1 in 77,292. And that number was calculated by lumping roughly 30 other causes of death in along with it (that's a fair bit of data skewing). The actual odds are likely 3 times as remote as that (if not more) if the real data would be taken into account. (What's it been pre and post 2001, like under 500 each year before and after if you include school shootings and such?)

        Your chances of dying en route to your destination as a passenger (1 in 6,050), and as a driver (1 in 6,498) should scare you and your family far more than any act of terrorism. Lifetime odds for heart disease (1 in 5), cancer (1 in 7) and stroke (1 in 24) should be scaring the crap out of you far more than any planned act of violence. If we'd have shoved a third of the money spent on the war on terrorism on reducing the risk of cancer, heart disease and stroke, we'd likely all have a much longer life.

        By fearing an act of terrorism, you are enabling them to win. By focusing our attention on them, we are proving that it is a viable method of controlling the population of the United States. By panicking at the mere mention of a possible act of terrorism, we are begging our government to take away some of our liberties. And what right do we have to our liberties when we so readily ask our government to use any means necessary to fix the problem for us?

        America should not respond to these threats with cowardice. Countering violence with more violence is not the solution, but the act of a country fearful of the terrorists committing these acts. The terrorists need to know that what they do will not change us, and will not change who we are. America should really just turn to them and say, "Go ahead and do your worst. We shall still be here at the end. We will NOT be intimidated by you. We shall prevail." A leader with any kind of backbone and dignity would not have reduced this country to the same level as our enemy. It has only emboldened the terrorists and confirmed that what they are doing (acts of violence) will achieve the results they seek.

        So do not fear them. Any person who resorts to resolving an argument via violence is not one who should merit our respect as an equal.
        • I'll reply to your post, but also address the other comments, if I may.

          1. To the people who posted along the lines of 'gutless, coward etc.', well kids, I fought for my country and have the pieces missing from me to prove it. I did not lose them due to smoking or to auto accidents.

          2. As for odds of dying, well, I'm pretty good at stats, thanks. However, please note that I choose to drink, smoke, drive and fly - both private and commercial. I'm aware of the odds, and am no more afraid of them than I would
      • by Jaysyn ( 203771 )
        Gutless. Coward.
        • I've killed for my country, and been wounded.

          I was scared shitless in combat. So I guess you're right.

          How about you? Ever been to war, brave man?
          • You didn't kill for my country. You may have killed for a policy, and if you think that makes you wise, brave, or otherwise better than me or anyone else then you sir are quite mistaken.
      • by Sj0 ( 472011 )
        Actually, if the fighter jets scrambled when 4 planes were hijacked like they were supposed to, very few people would have died, because the jets would have been in position to shoot down the planes before they were used to attack civilians.

        But nobody wants to talk about that. It's way better to fuck the American people over and send our boys off to die in the asshole of the world than to actually keep Americans safe while protecting everyone's civil liberties.

        Let's not even TALK about the fact that the deb
        • Yeah, as you say. Let's not talk about that, huh? Notice how nobody replied to your post, or modded you, and were just happy to flame the shit out of me, and get modded 'interesting'...

          As you'll see from my other posts, I was there in the shit, so I know what being 'sent off to die' means.
          Like many others before me, I found out that it was pretty much a waste of time, money, youth and life. But I least I came back alive.

          The real concern is, while we are witnessing a massive erosion of our civil liberties
  • American's will die, laughing.
  • by Ffakr ( 468921 ) on Friday August 24, 2007 @11:22AM (#20344241) Homepage
    I suspect that some officials are beginning to feel the wall against their backs.
    I read sections of this article and it's like reading an interview with a government in Bizarro world, we'll it's like reading an interview with just about anyone in this Administration I suppose.

    McConnell admitted the Telecos were in on illegal wiretapping (yes it was illegal, the FISA courts have told Bush this several times). He then went on to say that they should get immunity because that revelation would hurt their buisiness. He claims to be affraid it would put them out of business. Way to teach big corporations to not engage in illegal activities, grant them blanket immunity.

    McConnell described how many people in and out of the US were currently under surveillance. He gave out more detail than anyone [I've seen] has been asking about. The critics of illegal wiretapping don't ask for methods and proceedures they just want this done within the constraints of the law. McConnell was getting awfully close to giving out dangerous information.
    McConnell then states that publication of this information will kill Americans. No Shit, he said that. First off, it's hyperbole.. he didn't give out that much info but he started to get close. Second, why the fuck is National Intelligence Director giving out information to a reporter that will get Americans killed? I suspect he believes that.

    There's something wrong with McConnell.

    Impeach everyone
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Billosaur ( 927319 )

      There's something wrong with McConnell.

      Yes, he was being candid. Does that make him a loon? No. Look, half the trouble with domestic surveillance and spying in general is that people know it's going on, in their hearts they know it's an important source of information to prevent bad things from happening, but their psyches can't get wrapped around the idea that someone may be watching them. Take work for example -- you hear stories all the time about people being caught at work doing illegal things, usually because of emails or browsing record

      • in their hearts they know it's an important source of information to prevent bad things from happening, but their psyches can't get wrapped around the idea that someone may be watching them.

        I sure hope not. The reason so many people buy into the, "you have nothing to fear if you have nothing to hide" BS is precisely because so many people have nothing to hide. What they should be worried about is people who do have something legitimate to hide.

        Like a business that competes with one of the megalocorps that make up the military-industrial-complex - they don't need their proprietary information being 'leaked' to the competition, but if the competition is a DHS contractor doing the spying then

        • by nuzak ( 959558 ) on Friday August 24, 2007 @01:34PM (#20345847) Journal
          I always counter "I have nothing to hide, so you have no reason to look. Got reasonable suspicion? Demonstrate it to a judge who grants you the authority and makes a record of it."

          Apparently, a vague word like "reasonable" is the lynchpin of all liberty. We have to trust politicians to be reasonable. We're screwed.

          • by Sj0 ( 472011 )
            If you're reasonable, the terrorists have already won, and the white man will forever subjugate the black man.

            (Figure I'd make it blanket, I hate all extremists, no matter what arbitrary direction they claim to be walking in)
          • You _do_ have something to hide, and it doesn't necessarily mean you're doing something wrong. Personal matters, bank statements, passwords... In fact, if if anyone tells you they don't have anything to hide, then just tell them to take their clothes off. People need to change their mindset with regard to hiding anything.
    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      "yes it was illegal, the FISA courts have told Bush this several times"

      The FISA courts don't make this determination, so stop that stupid bullshit.

      The wiretaps weren't illegal, the SUPREME FUCKING COURT has said so. Making shit up because you don't like what he did is pretty fucking pathetic. I'd expect it from Bush, but why are you doing it?

      Sometimes I wish I could slap the fuck out of you lying idiots, it makes it impossible to discuss these things when you're spreading misinformation because the realit
      • Could you please provide a link to the supreme court ruling? I knew one of the cases was dismissed because there wasn't enough, (any), proof that those bringing the suit were targets of the surveillance. However, as far as I know there are still several cases pending, and SCOTUS hadn't ruled on the legality of the program. If this has been done, I would like to know about it.

    • by sumdumass ( 711423 ) on Friday August 24, 2007 @12:16PM (#20344855) Journal
      You have a few factual problems with your statement. Fist, the FISA court (not courts seeing how there is only one) hasn't told Bush this was illegal. The only court to do so had their ruling over turned and that isn't getting into the fact of accusations of conflict in interest that could have influence the overturned ruling.

      Now the judges of the secrete "FISA court" have expressed their outrage but none of them have put it into a ruling or anything legal. I also don't see this as anyone with their backs against the wall. It is just another round of going on the offense. Unfortunately, for this administration, it seems like that is something new so I can understand your misinterpreting it.
  • Last week, he also said [wired.com] that, if the US Congress debates spy laws, "some Americans are going to die".

    Here's a quote from the interview with El Paso Times:

    Q. So you're saying that the reporting and the debate in Congress means that some Americans are going to die?
    A. That's what I mean. Because we have made it so public. We used to do these things very differently, but for whatever reason, you know, it's a democratic process and sunshine's a good thing.

    What's this guy smoking? Or maybe it is a threat to the members of congress à la the film, Enemy of the State.

    • FTR, that's actually the same interview. (Doh!)

      See Wikipedia: Enemy of the State [wikipedia.org] if you haven't seen it (good film). Although, the NSA murder a senator in that case (not a congressman) who refuses to vote for increased warrantless surveillance.

      • Pedantic, I know, but senators are Congressmen. Representatives are also Congressmen. The United States has a bicameral legislature [wikipedia.org].
        • by sepluv ( 641107 )
          I'm not in the US, but I assumed that the situation there was the same as it is here in the UK where we have an upper and a lower house of parliament but we only call members of the lower house "MPs" or "members of parliament" (even though lords are also technically members of parliament).
          • There doesn't seem to be a consistent usage, but slightly more often than half the time in the US congressmen are referred to as either senators or representatives. You actually don't hear the term congressman very often in reference to an individual.
          • Re: (Score:1, Funny)

            by Anonymous Coward
            In the US, there is a trend to avoid this congress/senate confusion and start calling them "defendant."
        • True, but typical convention is to refer to Senators as such, while members of the house are either Representatives or Congresspersons.
    • if the US Congress debates spy laws, "some Americans are going to die".
      [....]
      What's this guy smoking?

      He is smoking his job.

      Imagine that you have his job. And imagine that you take it seriously.

      Working against you, from your point of view, is a very leaky organization - Congress.

      As part of your job, you must talk to people like Reyes (D-Texas) and Leahy (D-Vermont) and Specter (D-Rino).

      People who would disclose secrets regarding sources and methods, just to get a vote.

      • I liked your Spector bit.
      • by sepluv ( 641107 )
        Of course, I can envisage a situation where an information leak indirectly related to a congressional debate might indirectly harm US agents. The reason I suggested he might be smoking something is that he sees it as so black and white, and he assumed that it was obvious, without any intervening explanation, that Congress debating changing spying laws would cause people to die. Surely, if anything, it is Congress looking into the operations of the security service to possibly help them in redrafting the la

    • Maybe he came clean on the telco intercepts because the grandson of the man who helped hide the telecom bunkers threatened to start posting their locations on Google Maps.

      Glenn L. Powers
      http://www.globalshout.net/ [globalshout.net]
  • by Dice Fivefold ( 640696 ) on Friday August 24, 2007 @11:41AM (#20344491)
    "U.S. National Intelligence" -- Hmm, isn't that like an oxymoron?
  • by richg74 ( 650636 ) on Friday August 24, 2007 @11:46AM (#20344539) Homepage
    ... the government has steadfastly maintained that either confirming or denying this would compromise national security.

    One of the things that is so ridiculous -- almost surreal -- about the government's position on this is that they seem, on the one hand, to attribute almost mystical powers to potential terrorists (they can blow up a plane with 4 ounces of nail polish remover !!!), and on the other hand to assume that they're dumber than rocks. The administration has said they're snooping on phone calls and E-mail; I don't think it takes a terrorist Einstein to figure out that they might be getting assistance from folks like AT&T.

    To take another example, the administration claimed, a while back, that national security was threatened by a story that they were monitoring international funds transfers through SWIFT. Of course, various members of the government had given speeches urging that financial links to potential terrorists be blocked. And, the last time I looked, SWIFT [wikipedia.org] (the international body that develops standards and procedures for funds transfers) had 8,000+ member banks. Its existence is hardly a closely-guarded secret, and I don't think it would take too many Nobel Prize winners to figure out that transfers through SWIFT might be monitored.

    • by tchdab1 ( 164848 )
      For decades the left has claimed that much of the government's need to keep various operations a secret is actually a need to keep it secret from voting citizens, keep their political processes off the public record and away from media and scrutiny.

      Discussion here often concludes that any bad guys or foreigners must know, or allow for, the fact that US authorities must be doing things (surveillance, torture, renditions, assasinations, overthrows of elected officials not deemed desireable, etc.) they are act
  • by E-Sabbath ( 42104 ) on Friday August 24, 2007 @11:58AM (#20344653)
    Look how much the man speaks, compared to how little the interviewer speaks. There are no slips in this interview, and there are a very large amount of omissions. Of course, all the omissions are of things that would be blatantly illegal, and we do know some of them are occurring. (Surveillance of all American phone calls at the switch level, for example. The taps are in, even if unused.) It only makes me exceptionally curious as to what he's hiding, because I certainly get the impression he's hiding something.
  • by HobophobE ( 101209 ) on Friday August 24, 2007 @12:08PM (#20344755) Homepage
    You know, I'm really glad we have these government agencies so eager to set up this net and catch information exclusively about terrorist activities overseas that threaten our interests. The problem is they do not seem to understand (or want to) the implications of their actions.

    Setting up a tap into the wires that carry ANY American's communication without some sort of check on their power to thwart abuse is unacceptable. As in, 'in direct violation of the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States of America.' They have to put some kind of oversight in place and it can't be Albert Gonzales. It has to be judicial branch.

    They could have amended the FISA law to remain legal (ie, concordant with the Constitution), but instead they passed a law that does indeed violate the Constitution. And that's pretty scary, that these agencies and our President and our Congress are not sensitive to protecting the law.

    There's some strong arguments against the whole program. Slashdot covered the issue of 'well what if someone hacks the tap?' and that's a big problem. There's huge potential for abuse of power, as well. And there's always the prospect of the erosion of trust within a society which leads to totalitarian-style culture. There's enough doubt about the value of this thing that it should be forced through the courts.

    There's still no evidence having the exact specifications of a pending attack on the USA would enable our government to do anything to prevent it. On September 11, 2001 attacks happened despite sufficient warning. They lacked the will to properly defend the country then. Now is no different.
    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )
      As a foreigner what I found particularly interesting was the liability protection for US corporations assisting in warrant less wire tapping in foreign countries. Does that mean all foreign countries should immediately bar US corporations from participating in the communication sector as they well break the laws of those countries and invade the privacy of those countries citizens and those countries business communications, a blank check provided by the US government for US corporations to participate in i
      • Most foreign countries who have laws regulating how their government tapps the citizen's phones have them writen in a way that outside agencies aren't restricted.

        We have known for a long time that the US, UK, AU, and a few other countries have had agreements where we can monitor other calls and then we exchange anything important found. Echelon was a crutch on this issue where they started using computers to listen for key words then record from there and thereby reducing the manpower needed to do it. I ser
    • I don't think you know what the constitution says. Noting in the new law violates it. And no, they don't need some sort of oversight. Of course it would be nice to have in order to protect form abuse but nothing is mandating it.

      There's still no evidence having the exact specifications of a pending attack on the USA would enable our government to do anything to prevent it. On September 11, 2001 attacks happened despite sufficient warning. They lacked the will to properly defend the country then. Now is no d

      • Nothing violates it? How about 'the right to be secure against unreasonable search and seizure' which includes 'warrants issued' (a function of the judicial branch) only with 'probable cause supported by oath or affirmation particularly describing' what is being searched, seized, etc.

        And yes, go ahead and look up 'warrant' in a law dictionary (NOT on last.fm) and you'll see that it's most specifically a writ by a judge. The new law says Albert gets to send a sealed memorandum to the Chief Justice and be don
        • The key modifier here is reasonable. Reasonable is defined by congress and tort laws. It is this way on purpose. Benedict AArnold would have never been caught it reasonable meant a warrant by a judge.

          The notion, 'don't need oversight' is entirely misguided. Oversight is a founding principle of the United States. And in the case of search and seizure (which includes wiretapping) it is in fact required by the Constitution. It requires warrants.

          No, it doesn't say a warrant is required. It says and no warran

          • I'd like to ask you to preview your posts. It was a chore to separate what you were quoting from your responses. Also, if you choose to respond to this please try to be a little more civil. I understand you disagree with me, and maybe you really believe I'm of an inferior intellect, but it is entirely counterproductive to berate me for my beliefs. If you really, truly believe I'm anything like what you seem to paint me as then I'm not worth your time.

            You think I'm wrong? Well when has a cop needed a warrant

            • They can attempt to define reasonable by law, but if they say "reasonable is anything we seize we can sell on eBay for profit" won't fly. The instances where police are enabled to act without a warrant are exceptions and require the same sorts of circumstances and evidence that a warrant would require. In other words, the only way to legally search and seize WITHOUT a warrant is under conditions where if the authorities had the luxury of time to get a warrant it would be granted. Otherwise any seizure or s

              • Gonna keep this one short since it's been several days and I didn't keep up with this thread.

                These claims I've heard repeatedly from various unnamed news sources and government officials that "they're only after the bad guys" -- no one backs that up. It's like if I say "yeah, here's an invisible check for $1,000,000,000,000,0.....00,000,000,000.00," good luck getting it cashed.

                That's it. That's my whole argument. My argument is that we need oversight.

                I can accept 9/11 if there had been oversight to make sur
                • You see, here is the thing. In these taps, they are legally allowed to listen to the terrorist or suspected terrorist. They aren't violating the laws with that. Now, the government obviously isn't listening to the calls of the other 6 billion or so people in the world, Their funds are limited and the man power is limited. So we have a set of rules that say Country X has declared this person a terrorist, we have declared that person a terrorist, someone we have these people connected to those people and we (
  • Industry Ties (Score:3, Informative)

    by jkonrad ( 318894 ) on Friday August 24, 2007 @12:24PM (#20344927)
    Earlier this year, Salon had an article detailing McConnell's extensive private sector connections [salon.com] with the very telecommunication companies for which he is now demanding immunity:
    McConnell, a retired vice admiral and former director of the National Security Agency, is the current director of defense programs at Booz Allen Hamilton.

    With revenues of $3.7 billion in 2005, Booz Allen is one of the nation's biggest defense and intelligence contractors. Under McConnell's watch, Booz Allen has been deeply involved in some of the most controversial counterterrorism programs the Bush administration has run, including the infamous Total Information Awareness data-mining scheme. As a key contractor and advisor to the NSA, Booz Allen is almost certainly participating in the agency's warrantless surveillance of the telephone calls and e-mails of American citizens...

    Booz Allen, along with Science Applications International Corp., General Dynamics, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, CACI International and a few other corporations, is one of the dominant players in intelligence contracting. Among its largest customers are the NSA, which monitors foreign and domestic communications, and the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, an amalgamation of the imagery divisions of the CIA and the Pentagon that was established in 2003. . . .

    Buried deep on the company's Web site, however, I recently found an explanation of a Booz Allen I.T. contract with the Defense Intelligence Agency, which carries out intelligence for the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the secretary of defense. It states that the Booz Allen team "employs more than 10,000 TS/SCI cleared personnel." TS/SCI stands for top secret-sensitive compartmentalized intelligence, the highest possible security ratings. This would make Booz Allen one of the largest employers of cleared personnel in the United States.

    Among the many former spooks on Booz Allen's payroll are R. James Woolsey, the well-known neoconservative and former CIA director; Joan Dempsey, the former chief of staff to CIA Director George Tenet and recently executive director of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board; and Keith Hall, the former director of the National Reconnaissance Office, the super-secret organization that oversees the nation's spy satellites. . . . .

    And in a relationship that has been completely missed in media coverage of his appointment, McConnell is the chairman of the Intelligence and National Security Alliance, the primary business association of NSA and CIA contractors. As INSA chairman, I've been told, McConnell is presiding over an initiative to enhance ties between the intelligence agencies and their contractors and domestic law enforcement agencies.

    Greenwald comments [salon.com]: "McConnell's ties to these companies are so deep and numerous that it really rises to the level of conflict of interest for him to demand -- on national security grounds, no less -- that they be granted full immunity from liability for past illegal acts. He is, in essence, demanding immunity for vast numbers of his former partners, clients, associates and scores of business interests in which he had, if not still has, a substantial stake. This conflict is glaring and extreme, but Democrats said nothing about it when granting prospective immunity to this industry at his insistence. Thus far, they have also said nothing in the face of McConnell's demands that this immunity now be made retroactive as well."

  • Live Free Or Die (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Sloppy ( 14984 ) on Friday August 24, 2007 @12:57PM (#20345329) Homepage Journal
    And the problem with a few of us getting killed (where the alternative is violating the law as well as sacrificing some very basic values about freedom and the role of government) is..?
  • Ah yes, debating policies is killing Americans. My neighbor is really annoying and plays loud classical music at 7AM, I wonder when his number will come up--but before I go any further on that topic, what do people think about national security? Has it gone to far (1 American killed)? Why is domestic spying happening (2)? Is it more important (3) to be safe (4) or free (5,6,7)?

    This kind of logic really gets me going. What is the point really of having an NSA at all, I mean if they think they are so fan

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