Fusion
Centers Will Have Access to Classified Military
Intelligence
Writers Articles And Opinions
27 October 2009
By By Tom Burghardt
Speaking at
San Francisco's Commonwealth Club September 15,
Director of National Intelligence Admiral Dennis C.
Blair, disclosed that the current annual budget for
the 16 agency U.S. "Intelligence Community" (IC)
clocks-in at $75 billion and employs some 200,000
operatives world-wide, including private contractors.
In unveiling an unclassified version of the National
Intelligence Strategy (NIS), Blair asserts he is
seeking to break down "this old distinction between
military and nonmilitary intelligence, " stating that
the "traditional fault line" separating secretive
military programs from overall intelligence activities
"is no longer relevant."
As if to emphasize the sweeping nature of Blair's
remarks, Federal Computer Week reported September 17
that "some non-federal officials with the necessary
clearances who work at intelligence fusion centers
around the country will soon have limited access to
classified terrorism-related information that resides
in the Defense Department's classified network."
According to the publication:
Under the program, authorized state, local or tribal
officials will be able to access pre-approved data on
the Secret Internet Protocol Router Network. However,
they won't have the ability to upload data or edit
existing content, officials said. They also will not
have access to all classified information, only the
information that federal officials make available to
them.
The non-federal officials will get access via the
Homeland Security department's secret-level Homeland
Security Data Network. That network is currently
deployed at 27 of the more than 70 fusion centers
located around the country, according to DHS.
Officials from different levels of government share
homeland security-related information through the
fusion centers. (Ben Bain, "DOD opens some classified
information to non-federal officials," Federal
Computer Week, September 17, 2009)
Since the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, the
federal government has encouraged the explosive growth
of fusion centers. As envisaged by securocrats, these
hybrid institutions have expanded information
collection and sharing practices from a wide variety
of sources, including commercial databases, among
state and local law enforcement agencies, the private
sector and federal security agencies, including
military intelligence.
But early on, fusion centers like the notorious "red
squads" of the 1960s and '70s, morphed into national
security shopping malls where officials monitor not
only alleged terrorists but also left-wing and
environmental activists deemed threats to the existing
corporate order.
It is currently unknown how many military intelligence
analysts are stationed at fusion centers, what their
roles are and whether or not they are engaged in
domestic surveillance.
If past practices are an indication of where current
moves by the Office of the Director of National
Intelligence (ODNI) will lead, in breaking down the
"traditional fault line" that prohibits the military
from engaging in civilian policing, then another
troubling step along the dark road of militarizing
American society will have been taken.
U.S. Northern Command: Feeding the Domestic
Surveillance Beast
Since its 2002 stand-up, U.S. Northern Command (USNORTHCOM)
and associated military intelligence outfits such as
the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) and the
now-defunct Counterintelligence Field Activity (CIFA)
have participated in widespread surveillance of
antiwar and other activist groups, tapping into
Pentagon and commercial databases in a quixotic search
for "suspicious patterns."
As they currently exist, fusion centers are largely
unaccountable entities that function without proper
oversight and have been involved in egregious civil
rights violations such as the compilation of national
security dossiers that have landed activists on
various terrorist watch-lists.
Antifascist Calling reported last year on the strange
case of Marine Gunnery Sgt. Gary Maziarz and Col.
Larry Richards, Marine reservists stationed at Camp
Pendleton in San Diego. Maziarz, Richards, and a group
of fellow Marines, including the cofounder of the Los
Angeles County Terrorist Early Warning Center (LACTEW),
stole secret files from the Strategic Technical
Operations Center (STOC).
When they worked at STOC, the private spy ring
absconded with hundreds of classified files, including
those marked "Top Secret, Special Compartmentalized
Information, " the highest U.S. Government
classification. The files included surveillance
dossiers on the Muslim community and antiwar activists
in Southern California.
According to the San Diego Union-Tribune which broke
the story in 2007, before being run to ground Maziarz,
Richards and reserve Navy Commander Lauren Martin, a
civilian intelligence contractor at USNORTHCOM,
acquired information illegally obtained from the
Secret Internet Protocol Router Network (SIPRNet).
This is the same classified system which fusion
centers will have access to under the DoD's new
proposal.
Claiming they were acting out of "patriotic motives,"
the Marine spies shared this classified
counterterrorism information with private contractors
in the hope of obtaining future employment. Although
they failed to land plush private sector
counterterrorism jobs, one cannot rule out that less
than scrupulous security firms might be willing to
take in the bait in the future in order to have a leg
up on the competition.
So far, only lower level conspirators have been
charged. According to the Union-Tribune "Marine Cols.
Larry Richards and David Litaker, Marine Maj. Mark
Lowe and Navy Cmdr. Lauren Martin also have been
mentioned in connection with the case, but none has
been charged." One codefendant' s attorney, Kevin
McDermott, told the paper, "This is the classic
situation that if you have more rank, the better your
chance of not getting charged."
Sound familiar? Call it standard operating procedure
in post-constitutional America where high-level
officials and senior officers walk away scott-free
while grunts bear the burden, and do hard time, for
the crimes of their superiors.
Fusion Centers and Military Intelligence: Best Friends
Forever!
Another case which is emblematic of the close
cooperation among fusion centers and military
intelligence is the case of John J. Towery, a Ft.
Lewis, Washington civilian contractor who worked for
the Army's Fort Lewis Force Protection Unit.
In July, The Olympian and Democracy Now! broke the
story of how Towery had infiltrated and spied on the
Olympia Port Militarization Resistance (OlyPMR), an
antiwar group, and shared this information with
police.
Since 2006, the group has staged protests at
Washington ports and has sought to block military
cargo from being shipped to Iraq. According to The
Olympian:
OlyPMR member Brendan Maslauskas Dunn said in an
interview Monday that he received a copy of the e-mail
from the city of Olympia in response to a public
records request asking for any information the city
had about "anarchists, anarchy, anarchism, SDS
(Students for a Democratic Society), or Industrial
Workers of the World." (Jeremy Pawloski, "Fort Lewis
investigates claims employee infiltrated Olympia peace
group," The Olympian, July 27, 2009)
What Dunn discovered was highly disturbing to say the
least. Towery, who posed as an anarchist under the
name "John Jacob," had infiltrated OlyPMR and was one
of several listserv administrators that had control
over the group's electronic communications.
The civilian intelligence agent admitted to Dunn that
he had spied on the group but claimed that no one paid
him and that he didn't report to the military; a
statement that turned out to be false.
Joseph Piek, a Fort Lewis spokesperson confirmed to
The Olympian that Towery was a contract employee and
that the infiltrator "performs sensitive work within
the installation law enforcement community," but "it
would not be appropriate for him to discuss his duties
with the media."
In September, The Olympian obtained thousands of pages
of emails from the City of Olympia in response to that
publication' s public-records requests. The newspaper
revealed that the Washington Joint Analytical Center (WJAC),
a fusion center, had copied messages to Towery on the
activities of OlyPMR in the run-up to the group's
November 2007 port protests. According to the paper,
The WJAC is a clearinghouse of sorts of anti-terrorism
information and sensitive intelligence that is
gathered and disseminated to law enforcement agencies
across the state. The WJAC receives money from the
federal government.
The substance of nearly all of the WJAC's e-mails to
Olympia police officials had been blacked out in the
copies provided to The Olympian. (Jeremy Pawloski,
"Army e-mail sent to police and accused spy," The
Olympian, September 12, 2009)
Also in July, the whistleblowing web site Wikileaks
published a 1525 page file on WJAC's activities.
Housed at the Seattle Field Office of the FBI, one
document described WJAC as an agency that "builds on
existing intelligence efforts by local, regional, and
federal agencies by organizing and disseminating
threat information and other intelligence efforts to
law enforcement agencies, first responders, and key
decision makers throughout the state."
Fusion centers are also lucrative cash cows for
enterprising security grifters. Wikileaks
investigations editor Julian Assange described the
revolving-door that exists among Pentagon spy agencies
and the private security firms who reap millions by
placing interrogators and analysts inside outfits such
as WJAC. Assange wrote,
There has been extensive political debate in the
United States on how safe it would be to move
Guantánamo's detainees to US soil--but what about
their interrogators?
One intelligence officer, Kia Grapham, is hawked by
her contracting company to the Washington State
Patrol. Grapham's confidential resume boasts of
assisting in over 100 interrogations of "high value
human intelligence targets" at Guantánamo. She goes
on, saying how she is trained and certified to employ
Restricted Interrogation Technique: Separation as
specified by FM 2-22.3 Appendix M.
Others, like, Neoma Syke, managed to repeatedly flip
between the military and contractor intelligence
work--without even leaving the building.
The file details the placement of six intelligence
contractors inside the Washington Joint Analytical
Center (WAJAC) on behalf of the Washington State
Patrol at a cost of around $110,000 per year each.
Such intelligence "fusion" centers, which combine the
military, the FBI, state police, and others, have been
internally promoted by the US Army as means to avoid
restrictions preventing the military from spying on
the domestic population. (Julian Assange, "The spy who
billed me twice," Wikileaks, July 29, 2009)
The Wikileaks documents provide startling details on
how firms such as Science Applications International
Corporation (SAIC), The Sytex Group and Operational
Applications Inc. routinely place operatives within
military intelligence and civilian fusion centers at a
premium price.
Assange wonders whether these job placements are not
simply evidence of corruption but rather, are
"designed to evade a raft of hard won oversight laws
which apply to the military and the police but not to
contractors? Is it to keep selected personnel out of
the Inspector General's eye?" The available evidence
strongly suggests that it is.
As the American Civil Liberties Union documented in
their 2007 and 2008 reports on fusion center abuses,
one motivation is precisely to subvert oversight laws
which do not apply to private mercenary contractors.
The civil liberties' watchdog characterized the rapid
expansion of fusion centers as a threat to our
constitutional rights and cited specific areas of
concern: "their ambiguous lines of authority, the
troubling role of private corporations, the
participation of the military, the use of data mining
and their excessive secrecy."
And speaking of private security contractors
outsourced to a gaggle on intelligence agencies,
investigative journalist Tim Shorrock revealed in his
essential book Spies For Hire, that since 9/11 "the
Central Intelligence Agency has been spending 50 to 60
percent of its budget on for-profit contractors, or
about $2.5 billion a year, and its number of contract
employees now exceeds the agency's full-time workforce
of 17,500."
Indeed, Shorrock learned that "no less than 70 percent
of the nation's intelligence budget was being spent on
contracts." However, the sharp spike in intelligence
outsourcing to well-heeled security corporations comes
with very little in the way of effective oversight.
The House Intelligence Committee reported in 2007 that
the Bush, and now, the Obama administrations have
failed to develop a "clear definition of what
functions are 'inherently governmental' ;" meaning in
practice, that much in the way of systematic abuses
can be concealed behind veils of "proprietary
commercial information. "
As we have seen when the Abu Ghraib torture scandal
broke in 2004, and The New York Times belatedly blew
the whistle on widespread illegal surveillance of the
private electronic communications of Americans in
2005, cosy government relationships with security
contractors, including those embedded within secretive
fusion centers, will continue to serve as a "safe
harbor" for concealing and facilitating state crimes
against the American people.
After all, $75 billion buys a lot of silence.
Tom Burghardt is a researcher and activist based in
the San Francisco Bay Area. In addition to publishing
in Covert Action Quarterly and Global Research, an
independent research and media group of writers,
scholars, journalists and activists based in Montreal,
his articles can be read on Dissident Voice, The
Intelligence Daily, Pacific Free Press and the
whistleblowing website Wikileaks. He is the editor of
Police State America: U.S. Military "Civil
Disturbance" Planning, distributed by AK Press.