The Scum at the Top
Commentary on the Rats in Washington
The Other Big Brother
By Michael Isikoff
Newsweek
© January 30, 2006
Pages 32-34
The Pentagon has its own domestic spying program. Even its
leaders say the outfit may have gone too far.
The demonstration seemed harmless enough. Late on a June afternoon
in 2004, a motley group of about 10 peace activists showed up
outside the Houston headquarters of Halliburton, the giant military
contractor once headed by Vice President Dick Cheney. They were
there to protest the corporation's supposed "war profiteering."
The demonstrators wore papier-mache masks and handed out free
peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwiches to Halliburton employees as
they left work. The idea, according to organizer Scott Parkin,
was to call attention to allegations that the company was
overcharging on a food contract for troops in Iraq. "It was
tongue-in-street political theater," Parkin says.
But that's not how the Pentagon saw it. To U.S. Army analysts at
the top-secret Counterintelligence Field Activity (CIFA), the
peanut-butter protest was regarded as a potential threat to
national security. Created three years ago by the Defense
Department, CIFA's role is "force protection"—tracking threats
and terrorist plots against military installations and personnel
inside the United States. In May 2003, Paul Wolfowitz, then
deputy Defense secretary, authorized a fact-gathering operation
code-named TALON—short for Threat and Local Observation
Notice—that would collect "raw information" about "suspicious
incidents." The data would be fed to CIFA to help the Pentagon's
"terrorism threat warning process," according to an internal
Pentagon memo.
A Defense document shows that Army analysts wrote a
report on the Halliburton protest and stored it in
CIFA's database. It's not clear why the Pentagon
considered the protest worthy of attention—although
organizer Parkin had previously been arrested while
demonstrating at ExxonMobil headquarters (the charges
were dropped). But there are now questions about whether
CIFA exceeded its authority and conducted unauthorized
spying on innocent people and organizations. A Pentagon
memo obtained by NEWSWEEK shows that the deputy Defense
secretary now acknowledges that some TALON reports may
have contained information on U.S. citizens and groups
that never should have been retained. The number of
reports with names of U.S. persons could be in the
thousands, says a senior Pentagon official who asked
not be named because of the sensitivity of the subject.
CIFA's activities are the latest in a series of
disclosures about secret government programs that
spy on Americans in the name of national security.
In December, the ACLU obtained documents showing the
FBI had investigated several activist groups, including
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals and
Greenpeace, supposedly in an effort to discover
possible ecoterror connections. At the same time, the
White House has spent weeks in damage-control mode,
defending the controversial program that allowed the
National Security Agency to monitor the telephone
conversations of U.S. persons suspected of terror links,
without obtaining warrants.
Last Thursday, Cheney called the program "vital" to the
country's defense against Al Qaeda. "Either we are
serious about fighting this war on terror or not,"
he said in a speech to the Manhattan Institute, a
conservative think tank. But as the new information
about CIFA shows, the scope of the U.S. government's
spying on Americans may be far more extensive than the
public realizes.
It isn't clear how many groups and individuals were
snagged by CIFA's dragnet. Details about the program,
including its size and budget, are classified. In
December, NBC News obtained a 400-page compilation of
reports that detailed a portion of TALON's surveillance
efforts. It showed the unit had collected information
on nearly four dozen antiwar meetings or protests,
including one at a Quaker meetinghouse in Lake Worth,
Fla., and a Students Against War demonstration at a
military recruiting fair at the University of California,
Santa Cruz. A Pentagon spokesman declined to say why a
private company like Halliburton would be deserving of
CIFA's protection. But in the past, Defense Department
officials have said that the "force protection" mission
includes military contractors since soldiers and Defense
employees work closely with them and therefore could be
in danger.
CIFA researchers apparently cast a wide net and had a
number of surveillance methods—both secretive and
mundane—at their disposal. An internal CIFA PowerPoint
slide presentation recently obtained by William Arkin,
a former U.S. Army intelligence analyst who writes widely
about military affairs, gives some idea how the group
operated. The presentation, which Arkin provided to
NEWSWEEK, shows that CIFA analysts had access to
law-enforcement reports and sensitive military and U.S.
intelligence documents. (The group's motto appears at the
bottom of each PowerPoint slide: "Counterintelligence 'to
the Edge'.") But the organization also gleaned data from
"open source Internet monitoring." In other words, they
surfed the Web.
That may have been how the Pentagon came to be so interested
in a small gathering outside Halliburton. On June 23, 2004,
a few days before the Halliburton protest, an ad for the
event appeared on houston.indymedia.org, a Web site for
lefty Texas activists. "Stop the war profiteers," read
the posting. "Bring out the kids, relatives, Dick Cheney,
and your favorite corporate pigs at the trough as we will
provide food for free."
Four months later, on Oct. 25, the TALON team reported
another possible threat to national security. The source:
a Miami antiwar Web page. "Website advertises protest
planned at local military recruitment facility," the
internal report warns. The database entry refers to plans
by a south Florida group called the Broward Anti-War
Coalition to protest outside a strip-mall recruiting
office in Lauderhill, Fla. The TALON entry lists the
upcoming protest as a "credible" threat. As it turned
out, the entire event consisted of 15 to 20 activists
waving a giant BUSH LIED sign. No one was arrested. "It's
very interesting that the U.S. military sees a domestic
peace group as a threat," says Paul Lefrak, a librarian
who organized the protest.
Arkin says a close reading of internal CIFA documents suggests
the agency may be expanding its Internet monitoring, and
wants to be as surreptitious as possible. CIFA has contracted
to buy "identity masking" software that would allow the agency
to create phony Web identities and let them appear to be
located in foreign countries, according to a copy of the
contract with Computer Sciences Corp. (The firm declined
to comment.)
Pentagon officials have broadly defended CIFA as a legitimate
response to the domestic terror threat. But at the same time,
they acknowledge that an internal Pentagon review has found
that CIFA's database contained some information that may have
violated regulations. The department is not allowed to retain
information about U.S. citizens for more than 90 days—unless
they are "reasonably believed" to have some link to terrorism,
criminal wrongdoing or foreign intelligence. There was
information that was "improperly stored," says a Pentagon
spokesman who was authorized to talk about the program (but
not to give his name). "It was an oversight." In a memo last
week, obtained by NEWSWEEK, Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon
England ordered CIFA to purge such information from its
files—and directed that all Defense Department intelligence
personnel receive "refresher training" on department policies.
That's not likely to stop the questions. Last week Democrats on
the Senate intelligence committee pushed for an inquiry into
CIFA's activities and who it's watching. "This is a significant
Pandora's box [Pentagon officials] don't want opened," says
Arkin. "What we're looking at is hints of what they're doing."
As far as the Pentagon is concerned, that means we've already
seen too much.
© 2006 Newsweek, Inc.
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January 15, 2007