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John Schindler
@20committee
Snowden i s a Fraud
June 12, 2015
In the two years since the Edward Snowden saga went public, a handful of people who
actually understand the Western signals intelligence system have tried to explain the
many ways that the Snowden Operation has smeared NSA and its partners with salacious
charges of criminality and abuse. Ive been one of the public faces of what may be called
the Snowden Truth movement, and finally there are signs that reality may be intruding
on this debate.
No American ally was rocked harder by Snowdens allegations than Germany, which has
endured a bout of hysteria over charges that NSA was listening in on senior German
officials, including Chancellor Angela Merkel. Although these stories included a good deal
of bunkum from the start, they caused a firestorm in Germany, particularly the alleged
spying on Merkel, which was termed Handygate by the media.
In response, Germany tasked Federal prosecutors with looking into the matter and, they
if determined there was sufficient evidence, to press charges against NSA for breaking
stringent German privacy laws. The investigation, led by Harald Range, Germanys
attorney general, has been slow and diligent, examining all possible evidence about NSA
spying on Germany. Here Snowdens purloined information would play a key role.
However, the matter has become politically fraught. In the first place, senior German
security officials were circumspect about the case, since Berlin is heavily dependent on
NSA for intelligence on vital matters like terrorism. Worse, follow-on Snowden
revelations showed that the BND, Germans foreign intelligence service, and NSA are
close partners, and the BND has itself been spying on EU neighbor states that are
friendly to Germany such as Austria, Belgium, and the Netherlands.
To top it off, last months major hack of the Bundestag, Germanys parliament, turns out
to have been the work of Russians, apparently state-sponsored. In reality, the major spy
threats to Germany are not NSA, but Russians and Chinese, as Ive been saying for some
time and, to be fair, so have German security officials, though they got drowned out in
the public hysteria over Snowden.
Now we learn that Ranges prosecutors are dropping their year-long Handygate inquiry,
for want of hard evidence. Federal prosecutors in Karlsruhe arent saying much, beyond
that they simply dont have evidence of spying that would stand up in court. Back in
December, Attorney General Range offered a warning about the dubious nature of much
of the evidence against NSA:
The document presented in public as proof of an actual tapping of the mobile phone is
not an authentic surveillance order by the NSA. It does not come from the NSA database.
There is no proof at the moment which could lead to charges that Chancellor Merkels
phone connection data was collected or her calls tapped.
Got that? Thats the polite, legalistic way of saying the Snowden claims are backed by
faked NSA documents, as has been clear for some time to anybody who understands
counterintelligence and the SIGINT system. This should surprise no one, since using fake
or doctored Western intelligence documents to embarrass democracies is a venerable
tradition for Russian intelligence the proper espionage term is Active Measures and
since Snowdens been in Moscow for the last two years and shows no signs of going
anywhere else anytime soon, two and two can be added together here.
To make matters worse for Snowdens fans, a report about the Handygate inquiry being
dropped in the magazine Der Spiegel, which has been a key player in the Snowden
Operation, includes the painful truth. While some have clamored to get Snowden out of
Moscow to testify before prosecutors, Berlin understood how politically tricky that
would be. Moreover, prosecutors determined that Ed simply didnt have much to say.
As a prosecutor explained, Snowden provided no evidence that he has his own
knowledge (keine Hinweise dafr, dass er ber eigene Kenntnisse verfgt). In other
words, Ed doesnt actually know what hes talking about. This is not news to anybody
who understands how NSA and the Allied SIGINT system actually work.
Snowden was an IT guy, not a SIGINT analyst, and in his final position he was working as
a contracted infrastructure analyst for NSAs Information Assurance arm, i.e. the
Agencys defensive side, which protects classified U.S. communications networks.
Snowden was never a SIGINTer, working on the intelligence collection side of the house,
and he doesnt seem to understand how that complex system, built over decades,
actually functions.
This is why Snowden has made so many odd, contradictory, and even outlandish
statements over the past couple years about SIGINT, which have caused those who
actually understand how NSA works to scratch their heads Ed doesnt know any better.
Its been obvious for some time to insiders that, for reasons we still dont fully
understand, Snowden decided to steal something like 1.7 million classified documents
from NSA servers through internal hacks. About 900,000 of those documents came from
the Pentagon and have nothing to do with intelligence matters.
Theres no way Snowden could have read more than a tiny fraction of what he stole,
nobody has that much time, and its clear now that Ed, an IT guy and a thief, who was
never any sort of spy as he portrays himself, would not have understood all those NSA
documents he made off with anyway.
Snowdens been living under the protection of Putins Federal Security Service now for
two years, functioning as a pawn of Russian intelligence. When his secret relationship
with the Kremlin started remains an open question, but that he has one now can only be
denied by the foolish (witness the weak lies told by his supporters about Eds FSB ties),
since when you defect, you wind up in the care of that countrys security service. Thats
how it works in America, and I dont hear anybody seriously suggesting that Putins
Kremlin is more liberal in these matters than the FBI or CIA.
In light of these revelations from Germany, its worth pondering whether Ed was always
just a pawn, a talking head, for others with agendas to harm Western security. As were
now in the Cold War 2.0 with Russia that I warned you about after Putins theft of
Crimea, this seems like a more than academic question.
For two years now, Ive been trying to inform the public about whats really going on
behind the Snowden Operation, using my understanding of how the SpyWar actually
functions, and Ive gotten a lot of grief for it from Eds hardcore fans. News out of
Germany cant help but lead me to point out that, well I told you so.
We also have the expert testimony, last May, of Oleg Kalugin, a retired KGB general,
that of course Snowden is working for Russian intelligence. Kalugin made his
bones heading Line KR, the legendary foreign counterintelligence arm of the KGBs
elite First Chief Directorate: in other words, his job was recruiting and running agents
just like Ed Snowden. Unless you happen to know more about Line KR operations
than MajGen Kalugin, I recommend you take his word on this one.
Sarah Harrison, after more than eighteen months of flat-out denials that Russian
intelligence had anything to do with her client/buddy Ed, now concedes that the FSB
did have a chat with the defector. However, she maintains:
1. Ed said no and gave the Russians nothing, ever.
2. The FSB never asked Ed again to cooperate.
3. The Kremlin was fine with this and allowed Ed to stay in Russia indefinitely
despite his non-cooperation.
If you believe any of these assertions, much less all of them, please do not discuss
important matters like intelligence when adults are present, since you appear a fool
and Putin patsy.
As the wheels long ago came off the Snowden show as anything other than a Russian
disinformation operation, Ed and his circle of helpers are now resorting to lies so
laughable that you wonder how dumb they think the Western public actually is. To
be fair to Putin, if Westerners can believe Ed Snowden is a human rights hero,
despite mountains of contrary evidence, why wouldnt they also believe that the
Obama administration is really behind terrorism in France?
idea is to weed out those with foreign allegiances and/or who are vulnerable to
exploitation by foreign intelligence services.
The polygraph is a controversial topic that I dont intend to explore in detail here. In the
hands of an experienced examiner, it can be a valuable interrogation tool; regrettably,
the IC has too few veteran polygraphers, thanks in large part to the fact that its a
boring and underappreciated job that most people leave as soon as they can transfer
into something more satisfying and sexy. In the hands of an inexperienced examiner,
the polygraph can be worse than useless, while using it with broad-brush questions
leads to many false positives and inconclusives (known as INCs in the trade). In my
time in counterintelligence, I saw the box perform both splendidly and miserably: it all
comes down to the examiner and his or her ability and sixth sense in interrogation. A
security panacea it is not and will never be.
Once you get cleared the process continues, however they call it a lifetime secrecy
oath with good reason and you will be subjected to periodic reinvestigations every
five years if you hold TS/SCI, every decade if you have a Secret-level clearance. Since five
(or ten) years can be a long time, serious incidents that may impact ones clearance
status are supposed to be reported through channels here the Alexis case highlighted
the failures in the system or are otherwise supposed to be self-reported.
Holders of TS/SCI clearances especially who undeniably surrender a fair amount of
privacy and freedom when they take on the responsibility are supposed to inform
security without delay regarding important life incidents or changes, including
criminality (Um, I got a DUI.), finances (Yeah...I owe a bookie $43,000 ponies
werent going my way.), foreign travel (Im taking my kids on spring break to
Iran!), and foreign entanglements (Im dating a stripper from China...were cool,
right?). Needless to add, some people are quicker to report these things than others,
and reinvestigations can reveal interesting facts. In my time in counterintelligence, I
heard them all.
Of course, people who are warped enough to betray their oath and the country are not
likely to self-report their misdeeds, la Snowden, so the burden falls on vigilant
security and especially co-workers to make note of such things and pass on relevant
information. Except they dont. Rather, they hardly ever do. I was involved in several
espionage investigations, and the one constant was that co-workers never reported
their concerns, which turned out to be considerable, to the proper authorities. Nobody
wants to be a rat, moreover theres a very human tendency at work whereby no one
wants to think the worst of a co-worker perhaps a coffee club buddy or carpool
friend. Americans are an optimistic people, you know.
Just how weak this reporting system is across DoD was laid bare by the recent case of
Vice Admiral Timothy Giardina, who until a few months ago was the deputy commander
of U.S. Strategic Command (STRATCOM) in English, his was the second hand on the
trigger of Americas vast nuclear arsenal. It would be hard to overstate the responsibility
in his hands. Regrettably, VADM Giardina was leading a secret life based on obsessive
gambling, at which he was spending something like fifteen hours a week, which would
qualify as a part-time job. One wonders how he had time for this when his full-time job
was among the busiest anywhere in DoD or the U.S. Government.
VADM Giardina was well known at several casinos around Omaha, Nebraska, where
STRATCOM is headquartered, and he seemed to lose more than win. As revealed in a
recent investigation by the Associated Press, the admiral was hailed as Navy Tim at his
homes-away-from-home, who knew more about him than STRATCOM or the Navy did.
Indeed, his official employers only learned of VADM Giardinas habit when he was
arrested for passing homemade fake chips; employing skills not taught at the Naval
Academy or any Navy school I attended, VADM Giardina had converted $1 poker chips
into the $500 kind. Casinos frown on this sort of thing, and the admiral was arrested and
subsequently banned for life from certain casinos. Before that ban was in place, VADM
Giardina kept gambling there, even after his arrest, so serious was his addiction.
It was this arrest that alerted his employers and the Naval Criminal Investigative Service
(NCIS) before that, they had no inkling about the admirals habits. When asked by a
casino security officer about the protocols he, as a TS/SCI (plus) holder, was subject to,
Giardina replied, (What) theyre really trying to do is find out if you got, you know, if
youre having sex with animals or something really crazy or youve got this wild life that
you could be blackmailed into giving military secrets out. We can only hope that Russian
and Chinese intelligence whose interest in the deputy commander of STRATCOM
would be difficult to overstate were as blissfully unaware as the U.S. Navy was about
his private life.
Why Giardina wasnt caught beforehand isnt difficult to discern. Nobody likes to tell
security, those sneaky and snoopy guys down the hall, about their counterintelligence
concerns regarding a co-worker particularly when that co-worker is your boss and a
three-star admiral. Despite the fact that the admiral, on advice of counsel, refused to
cooperate with NCIS, Giardina is getting kid-glove treatment. He was found guilty in
May 2014 of two counts of conduct unbecoming an officer: lying to an investigator and
passing fake gambling chips. Giardina was given a written reprimand and ordered to
forfeit $4,000 in pay; he will retire with one less star and still get a very handsome
pension. Needless to add, the APA (Admirals Protective Association) remains a
powerful force, and those lower in rank would never be dealt with so kindly. In identical
circumstances, less senior officers would see a pension-less future while enlisted
personnel would face prison. Giardina continues to profess a sort of innocence; perhaps
he can help O.J. Simpson find the real killers someday.
I wish I could tell you this is an anomaly. It is not; it is entirely normal in U.S. military and
intelligence circles these days. Rank has its privileges and connections matter more
than rules and regulations. I will share with you just one case, among many, that I was
involved in. The individual in question had gotten an job at an IC three-letter agency
through connections. Although this persons initial SSBI had revealed anomalies, related
to hostile foreign intelligence no less, they were brushed aside due to said connections.
Upon reinvestigation, it was learned that this person had some serious personal issues.
Specifically, there was domestic violence involving guns plus a suicide attempt. Police
were called and there were reports. Worse, the individual had lied to officers of the
court about all this. By any standard, this was a seriously disturbed individual. This was
all reflected in the paperwork given to DoD investigators.
You know what happened? Absolutely nothing. Last I heard this person still has TS/SCI
clearances and is working for the IC. Making big money, no less. I wish I could say Im
shocked, but I no longer am. How many Snowdens are there? Is it a handful? Dozens?
Platoons? Battalions?
I dont know and I no longer venture a guess. Despite recent, ahem, setbacks, the IC
has asked for more taxpayer money next year. If this is money well spent I shall defer
to you as a taxpayer. I dont think its worth having vastly expensive intelligence
agencies if you cant keep secrets and prevent those secrets from being broadcast to
the world...but then Im kinda old school about that sort of thing.
intelligence alliance has been agreed to. As a Russian report on Patrushevs visit
explained:
The events in Syria and Iraq, where contacts between the Russian and Iranian special
services have not only been resumed but have also proven their mutually advantageous
nature, particularly in assessing the threats and plans of local bandit formations, both
secular and Islamist, with respect to Russian facilities in Tartus in Syria, have impelled
Moscow and Tehran to the idea of the need to formalize these contacts in the shape of a
permanently operating mechanism. Russian special services also valued the volume of
information, voluntarily conveyed by Iran to our specialists, on the potential activity of
the Israeli Air Force against the Russian humanitarian convoys to Syria in the period of
the sharp aggravation of the situation in that country in the summer of last year.
Let there be no doubt that this new espionage alliance is aimed directly at the United
States and Israel. As the report added, the Iranians are prepared to provide Russia on a
permanent basis with information on American military activity in the Persian Gulf
obtained from their own technical intelligence facilities in other words, the Russians
and Iranians will be sharing SIGINT, the most sensitive of all forms of intelligence
gathering.
Relations between Putins Russia and revolutionary Iran have been warming up in recent
years on all fronts diplomatic, economic, and military and now theres an important
intelligence dimension too. Given the power and long reach of the intelligence services
of both Iran and Russia, this is a development that should cause serious concern in
Western capitals as well as many in the Middle East.
Update
on
Espionage Scandal
Polands
New
least a dozen officers serving at Russias Warsaw embassy, plus others undetected.
Russian espionage against Poland has been rising in recent months, to include drone
flights over Polish territory, and with these arrests Warsaw is letting the Kremlin know
that it does not have a free hand to engage in Special War against Poland. While neither
of these men is exactly James Bond, there is a message here that will not be missed in
Moscow.
It has been reported that Warsaw now plans to declare several GRU diplomats
persona non grata and expel them from Poland. Such would be the logical step in the
aftermath of the arrests, and a standard part of the spywar, and it will cause GRU
some trouble, as it will have to rebuild damaged networks. But nobody in Warsaw
expects that the expulsion will buy more than a bit of time to improve their
counterintelligence methods against the rising Russian espionage threat. All of NATO
should be doing the same.
official cover (although the Russian concept of Illegal is a good deal more specialized
in tradecraft terms) which represents a more serious problem for ABW and the Polish
government. More is sure to emerge in this case.
UPDATE (18 OCT, 1630 EST) A Polish website has revealed that the lawyer suspects
full name is Stanisaw Szypowski (left), who goes by the nickname Staszek. The site
soon apparent that Obama had misspoken, to be charitable. Either the president
doesnt read the intelligence hes getting or hes bullshitting, explained a former IC
insider to Eli Lake of The Daily Beast.
It soon emerged that three top administration officials had explicitly warned about
the rise of ISIL since the fall of 2013, to no apparent effect on the White House. One
of them was Lieutenant General Mike Flynn, the outspoken former director of the
Defense Intelligence Agency, who minced few words about his views on the rising ISIL
threat. Perhaps not coincidentally, Flynn was ousted at DIA this summer in a rather
public fashion, a defenestration that cannot look very wise in retrospect.
To make matters worse, Rep. Mike Rogers (R-MI), the chair of the House Intelligence
Committee, stated Monday that actually the IC had been warning the White House
about the emergence of ISIL as a serious threat in Iraq and Syria for over a year, to no
effect. This was not an Intelligence Community failure, but a failure by policy makers to
confront the threat, Rogers explained, adding that the incompetence of the Iraqi
military, which fell apart before ISIL, was well known to anybody in Washington, DC
who cared to know clearly implying that the White House did not.
It has since emerged that President Obama has not exactly been paying attention to
intelligence. This has been rumored for years, but now we have some data. Every
president gets a tailor-made Presidents Daily Brief (PDB), a very closely held and highly
classified document (for the background of the PDB this is a good primer). It turns out
that, since becoming Commander-in-Chief, Obamas overall attendance rate at his PDB
is only 42.4 percent, while in his second term so far its lower, 41.3 percent. Moreover,
in 2014, Obama has attended his PDB only 37.5 percent of the time.
Presidential interest in intelligence varies considerably, with some occupants of the
Oval Office taking a hands-on approach to secret matters, while some are more
aloof, but its safe to say that an attendance rate of hardly more than one-third at a
time of crisis, with the world spiraling out of control between Ukraine and ISIL, to cite
only the most pressing security problems today, is difficult to explain.
Its easy for Obamas defenders to dismiss this as mere partisanship, but its not. Ive
long defended Obama against unfair and sometimes unseemly charges from the Right
about his alleged anti-military attitudes or supposed lack of interest in security issues.
That said, we need to get to the bottom of this, given the extent of the strategic debacle
surrounding the rise of ISIL. Partisanship is not the issue here. Indeed, the analytic
element of the CIA that produces the PDB, the Directorate of Intelligence (DI), is pretty
much the NPR demographic, so efforts to dismiss this issue as more right-wing
posturing are wide of the mark.
Obama has created a scandal where one did not need to exist, for reasons I cannot
fathom. Picking a fight with the IC is a very bad idea, as anybody acquainted with how
Washington, DC, works is well aware. When thrown under the bus by any White
House, the spooks retaliate with leaks that are often highly damaging to the
administration; this is a venerable game inside the Beltway that wise politicians avoid as
a lose-lose situation. This about turf, not ideology: ask George W. Bush what happened
to his plans for war with Iran once the IC, led by CIA, put out its dovish 2007
*Some call it ISIS, the administration prefers ISIL, but if you want to be pedantic
Daish (for al-Dawlah al-Islamiyah) is correct.
Maybe it wasnt, he adds, veering off into uninformed speculation about how SID
and IAD are in cahoots to violate everyones privacy while letting Beijing read our
mail...or something. The author has so little idea of how NSA actually functions that
his argument is difficult to explain in any lucid fashion.
But the core problem is that the authors central rant is entirely wrong. If he had
bothered to read the IAD mission statement, which is linked in his own piece, it states
the following;
IAD protects and defends National Security Information and Information Systems. In
accordance with National Security Directive 42, National Security Systems are defined as
systems that handle classified information or information otherwise critical to military or
intelligence activities.
Got that? In other words, NSA is not responsible for security of the unclassified
systems at the White House or the State Department, which were recently
compromised according to press reports, and NSA has literally nothing to do with
not a coherent picture necessarily make, particularly when intelligence analysts lack
necessary knowledge language, culture, history, time in the target country about
the problem at hand. On this charge DoD intelligence, and the whole IC, have little
coherent defense, since decades of favoring diversity of experience over specialized
knowledge among intelligence officers leads to exactly the situation smart people
who know a little about a lot, rather than a lot about a little that Admiral Becker
lamented this week.
The most interesting, and unintentionally revealing, part of the J2s comments came
when he highlighted intelligence legends of the past, whose like cannot be found in DoD
spy circles today, Becker maintained. I am generally skeptical of hoary golden ages in
any organization, since memory plays tricks, yet here the admiral had a point. He cited
Vernon Walters, a legendary Cold War semi-spy. An Army general, Walters was a
polyglot who spoke several foreign languages well enough to serve as translator for
presidents; Walters also served as a CIA top manager and the White Houses secret
emissary to the Vatican. Yet his career was so totally unrepresentative of both DoD and
the IC that he presents a fascinating one-off during the Cold War. One suspects that a
gifted odd duck like Walters would not last long in todays Army; he certainly would
stand minimal chance of becoming a three-star general.
Becker likewise mentioned Admiral Bobby Ray Inman, a Navy intelligence officer who
rose to head NSA and serve as CIAs deputy director. A very gifted officer, Inman was
perhaps NSAs best-ever director, and he enjoyed a second-to-none reputation for
smarts. Again, however, Inman represents such an outlier, bureaucratically speaking,
that you wonder what Becker was getting at here. Not to mention that Inman has a
reputation for prickliness, as evidenced by the weird flame-out of his nomination as
Secretary of Defense by President Clinton. (It should also be noted that long-retired
Admiral Inman was a staunch, and rare, public critic of warrantless wiretapping by NSA
after 9/11.)
Yet the most intriguing example of past greats cited by Admiral Becker was the joined
case of Ed Layton and Joe Rochefort. This pair are rightly considered legends in Navy
intelligence circles for their remarkable achievement that enabled American victory at
the June 1942 Battle of Midway, the turning-point of the Pacific War. After Pearl
Harbor, these officers, who were close friends, played a critical secret role in giving
Admiral Chester Nimitz vital information about Japanese intentions. With half his fleet
sunk at Pearl Harbor, and suffering from a critical shortage of aircraft carriers, Nimitz
faced a dire situation in the spring of 1942. Fortunately for him, Rocheforts codebreaking unit in Hawaii was able to provide Nimitz amazing insights into Japanese
plans, thanks to their access to the enemys high-grade naval communications, with
Layton at the admirals side interpreting the top secret information for him.
Rocheforts team accurately predicted when and where the Japanese fleet would
strike, and the outnumbered Pacific Fleet beat them to the punch at Midway. Theirs
was one of the most remarkable stories in the annals of intelligence, and Nimitz
correctly considered Rochefort and Layton to have been his priceless advantage
lurking secretly behind the victory at Midway.
That said, it is more than a little disingenuous for Admiral Becker to suggest that theres
any mystery as to why Laytons and Rocheforts seem not to exist in the 21st
century U.S. Navy. An examination of how those officers became the legends they
remain reveals painful truths about DoD intelligence today. In the first place, Layton
and Rochefort were surface warfare officers (SWOs), i.e. ship-drivers, as were all Navy
line officers in the 1920s who didnt drive submarines or fly airplanes. They were
never in the intelligence career ghetto because it simply did not exist; in the mid1920s, when both junior officers went behind the green door and entered the top
secret world of code-breaking, they were accredited SWOs as there was no career path
yet for spooks in the Navy (back then intelligence and code-breaking were functionally
united in the Navy, only to be separated bureaucratically after World War II, as they
inexplicably remain today).
Rochefort was recruited for the Navys hush-hush code-breaking program in
Washington, DC based on his responses on a crossword puzzle that he sent to a P.O.
Box (this clever yet simple method worked well at quietly identifying sailors who might
excel at cracking codes). He and Layton underwent three years of intense, top secret
training in how to decipher Japanese codes. It was evident to Navy leadership, which
could read a map, that war with Japan was more a matter of when than if the same
is true today with China so a small, elite cadre of officers was developed who could
understand Japan and its navy. After completing their code-breaking course, Rochefort
and Layton were sent to Japan for three years to learn the language, culture and
mindset of the future enemy.
As a result of this rigorous program, by the time war with Japan actually came, the
U.S. Navy possessed officers who deeply understood the enemy linguistically,
operationally, and culturally, with gifted men like Layton and Rochefort leading the
intelligence effort that proved decisive in American victory in the Pacific War. There
is no mystery how this happened: it was the outcome of wise planning. And this sort
of forward-looking thinking in intelligence circles does not happen anymore, and is
the root cause of the dysfunction that Admiral Becker rightly decried this week.
In todays Navy, intelligence and information warfare officers have too little contact
with line officers, who generally view them as spooky and not always helpful.
Moreover, rigid career paths mean that officers on the make will seek a diversity of
assignments, avoiding specialization like the plague on a career that it is. Any
intelligence officer who suggested that s/he should study Chinese naval and
intelligence matters intensely for three years then go to China for three more years to
learn Mandarin and Chinese ways, would be laughed out of the room, between cost
and security concerns, amid whispers of career suicide. This simply is not how the
U.S. Navy or any of our armed services actually works.
Of course, such dysfunction is a choice. I have no doubt that the Navy today possesses
officers of the high caliber of Ed Layton and Joe Rochefort, but how they are groomed,
career-wise, means that such talents are not finding their niche. This bespeaks a
powerful bureaucratic inertia and a fundamental lack of seriousness about the threats
we face. If America wants to avoid a war with China, or win it should it come, the
Pentagon needs to get serious about grooming officers who truly understand the
enemy and his mindset. This cannot be done quickly and requires real talent-spotting
and nurturing; small is beautiful here its a question of quality, not quantity (which is
exactly why the Pentagon, which remains stuck in a mass-production mindset, does
not adopt such common-sense career paths).
Admiral Becker has raised important questions about just how effective DoDs vast
intelligence empire actually is at understanding China. He and those like him the
leaders of our IC have the ability to implement measures that, given time, will get
the Pentagon the gifted and properly educated officers that we need to win future
wars. We possess the talent; what we lack is the seriousness of purpose to break
bureaucratic china to make things actually happen. Theres not much time to waste.
P.S. Admiral Becker also did not address the painful fact that, due to bureaucratic
warfare of a kind only too well known in the Pentagon still, Joe Rochefort received no
career reward for his epic success that led to Nimitzs victory at Midway. Actually he
was punished for it. You can read my write-up of that scandal here.
Anatoliy Kucherena, Eds Russian lawyer, a man with extensive FSB connections,
recently told the media that his client does not enjoy official Kremlin protection.
Rather his security is handled by unnamed private security experts. Paid for by whom,
Kucherena did not clarify. Relatedly, Bamford observes that Ed, despite a lack of
funds, is doing well in his new home, which is an upgrade from his native country: He
has learned to live modestly in an expensive city that is cleaner than New York and
more sophisticated than Washington. Since Ed clearly isnt footing the bill for his
24/7 security the interview demonstrates that Snowden lives in constant fear of
abduction by American intelligence, even in his undisclosed Russian home who is?
That, like so many things, Bamford does not ask or explain.
The interview brims with many strange and unsupported statements that portray Ed as a
21st century martyr who has offered himself as a sacrifice for Americas myriad sins
against the planet. If you like this kind of thing, you like this kind of thing. Ed explains at
length how easy it was for him to steal all those classified materials from the stupid NSA,
and still the stupid NSA cant figure out exactly what he did, despite Snowdens
charitably leaving behind clues, he says, to assist their investigation. If you prefer your
narcissism unadulterated, this is the interview for you.
There is, however, one substantive issue in the piece that needs to be discussed.
Towards the end, Bamford dramatically explains how it was that his subject decided that
he had crossed the Rubicon, while in a secret NSA facility buried deep under a pineapple
plantation in Hawaii:
On March 13, 2013, sitting at his desk in the tunnel surrounded by computer screens,
Snowden read a news story that convinced him that the time had come to act. It was
an account of director of national intelligence James Clapper telling a Senate
committee that the NSA does not wittingly collect information on millions of
Americans. I think I was reading it in the paper the next day, talking to coworkers,
saying, can you believe this shit?
Snowden and his colleagues had discussed the routine deception around the breadth
of the NSAs spying many times, so it wasnt surprising to him when they had little
reaction to Clappers testimony. It was more of just acceptance, he says, calling it
the banality of evila reference to Hannah Arendts study of bureaucrats in Nazi
Germany.
I wont even address the Obamas-America-as-Hitlers-Germany trope, which is exactly
the sort of nonsense youd expect from a half-educated and self-important auto-didact
like Snowden. To be clear, Ed now says it was Clappers testimony of March 13, 2013
(the time had come to act) that caused him to go rogue and flee Hawaii on the lam two
months later with all those classified documents, after releasing them to members of the
media.
Wait. Wait one minute.
In the first place, its impossible to imagine that even self-proclaimed master-hacker
Edward Snowden managed to steal 1.5 million classified documents off NSA servers in
just a few weeks (although Ed denies the number is that large, he does not refute that
the haul was indeed vast).
More important, Glenn Greenwald, Eds partner in the operation, recently admitted
that he was in contact with Snowden long before Eds alleged awakening and decision to
go rogue. In Glenns words: [Ed] first tried to contact me or did contact me back in
December of 2012, when he sent me an anonymous email.
Are we really expected to believe that Ed began stealing thousands of classified
documents, then reached out to Glenn Greenwald, one of the most vehemently antiAmerican commentators anywhere just, well, because but it was Clappers
comments a few months later that convinced Ed to do something seriously wrong?
At this point, the players in the Snowden Operation cannot even keep their basic stories
straight. This is aided by certain members of the media who refuse to ask obvious
questions about the case, as here. The Bamford interview is nice if you want to feel good
about Snowden and what hes done, but as an effort to record what actually happened
its unreliable. All propaganda is.
to how using HIV programs as cover might expose genuine health care workers to
unnecessary risk?
I ought to be surprised, but I no longer am. The dismal performance of U.S.
counterintelligence has reached such unprecedented depths, lower even than in the
lamentable days of the Cold War when the KGB and its partners usually beat
Americans in the SpyWar handily, that I wonder if reform is even possible now. Ive
been firing off flares for years, as have others, no effect.
A decade ago, I thought that the CURVEBALL fiasco, in which an Iraqi defector fooled
U.S. intelligence with false information about his countrys WMD programs, with
disastrous consequences, might spark reform, because it was a flagrant case of what
can happen when CI vetting of sources is inadequate (particularly when its being
done through partners, here Germanys BND).
Nothing happened.
More recently, I thought that the disaster at Afghanistans Forward Operating Base
Chapman at the end of 2009, which killed seven CIA officers and contractors, plus two
foreign partners, when an al-Qaida operative blew himself up, might bring change,
since that tragic incident was a clear case of basic counterintelligence failure,
illustrating the lethal consequences of poor vetting of sources (again including poor CI
liaison work with a partner service, here Jordans).
Nothing happened.
Then, over the last year, weve had the Snowden disaster, the biggest
counterintelligence failure in the history of U.S. intelligence, and probably anybodys.
For want of decent vetting, on more than one occasion, the U.S. IC let Edward
Snowden into the inner sanctum of secrets, and he stole them more than 1.5 million
documents and gave them to self-styled journalists, then fled to Russia, where he
remains. The consequences of this epic failure will be felt for a generation in Americas
spy services.
If this doesnt spur real counterintelligence reform, nothing ever will. Yet I continue
to wonder. Evidence to date indicates that fundamental changes, long overdue in CI
and security, have yet to be implemented across the IC. In customary fashion, we
should expect overreaction in certain areas, which will uncover a bunch of false
moles and traitors, while critical areas will go unaddressed.
Several years ago I explained why reforming CI is so difficult for Washington, DC:
CI professionals are seldom popular. They are spooky by nature, prone to complex
explanations to seemingly unconnected events (to an extent this is a job requirement),
and they seldom bring good news. Who, after all, wants to be told by the hush-hush
guys down the hall that your premier operationthe one that youve been working on
for months if not years, the one that was supposed to make your careeris actually just
a mirage? Moreover, developing a cadre of effective CI officers takes time and talent,
as a good counterintelligence officer must be a genuine expert in his or her particular
region of interest, and he or she must have a detailed, and preferably
encyclopedic, knowledge of the opposing services operations and tactics going back
years or decades. Yet the United States must get serious about counterintelligence if it
wants to protect its interests in a dangerous world. During my time in the intelligence
community, I worked with CI officers from many agencies, including the talented staff of
the CIAs Counterintelligence Center. These people sometimes find it difficult to make CI
work because of the pervasive bias against counterintelligence at Langley. Let it be hoped
that this latest counterspy debacle will force the CIA, and all of our intelligence agencies,
to finally get serious about counterintelligence. This is the real world, not merely a thriller
spy movie.
I stick by all that, and I hereby issue another plea to the IC get serious, at last, about
counterintelligence. The costs of failure are embarrassing headlines in newspapers, and
far worse. If we cant get counterintelligence right meaning we cant protect our
secrets and prevent needless setbacks in operations due to a lack of CI vigilance, or even
common sense I have to wonder what the purpose of our vastly expensive
Intelligence Community actually is.
Berlin : NSA is
German industry
not
spying
on
Maassens answer to a question about the alleged CIA source run inside the BND is
interesting:
The point is whether it violates German law. If the United States collects German
information in the United States because we are so careless to let our
telecommunication run via the United States, we really have no reason to criticize it;
nor is our counterintelligence department able to do anything against it. However,
when the Americans tap data lines in Germany or even have human sources, they
violate German law. Then I say: enough is enough; we cannot accept that. In Germany,
German law must be abided by. By the way, I expect an Allied intelligence service to tell
us when someone offers himself as a source.
His answer, which would not be considered credible by many intelligence services, led to
an interesting reply from FAZ: Are you seriously telling us that the BND abides by the
local telecommunications law in Afghanistan and does not tap lines? To which Maassen
said, a bit pedantically: I dont know about that. Im sure that the BND abides by the
laws it is subject to.
FAZ then inquired about the BfVs reaction to Snowden and other revelations, leading to
this answer from Maassen:
After the end of the Cold War, some people thought that we would no longer need a
counterintelligence department because Germany was surrounded by friends. Now, the
political and public perception has changed and people have become aware that its
necessary to give counterintelligence the attention it deserves. I welcome that. We will
restructure our work. Im grateful for the political backing that we have for it now.
Wrapping up the counterspy aspect, FAZ asked specifically what would change, and
Maassen gave as direct an answer as any counterintelligence boss can be expected to:
The United States, the United Kingdom to mention only two examples are still our
partners, I would even say our friends. We need them, and they need us. Yet, as the old
saying goes: Trust is good, control is better. This is why we will increase
counterintelligence activities. This is the lesson we have learned.
In Germanys shoes I would be doing exactly what the BfV is now executing, namely
treating the U.S., U.K. and other members of the Anglospheres Five Eyes SIGINT Alliance
as CI threats that can no longer be ignored. Such is the price of the epic
counterintelligence fail that is the Snowden Operation. Life will get interesting for certain
American and British personnel in Central Europe henceforth.
numerous allies, close intelligence partners, who want to be told that all is well, that
NSA is as effective as ever and has brushed off the Snowden case in record time
and that it wont happen again.
Unfortunately, this is not true. It is difficult to reconcile statements from Rogers and
Clapper with ones previously made by General Keith Alexander, the former NSA
director (What Snowden has revealed has caused irreversible and significant damage
to our country and to our allies.) or by Lieutenant General Mike Flynn, the former DIA
director (this has caused grave damage to our national security), who added that the
wreckage goes far beyond the IC, and has serious and disturbing implications for the
Pentagon and the U.S. armed forces too. The unclassified version of DIAs damage
assessment describes Snowdens impact as staggering.
Key allies have been even more frank. Andrew Parker, head of the British Security
Service (MI5), stated that the Snowden-caused leaks from GCHQ, NSAs British
partner, hands the advantage to the terrorists. It is the gift they need to evade us and
strike at will, a view that was endorsed by Prime Minister David Cameron. Comments
by Paul Taloni, director of the Australian Signals Directorate, NSAs partner Down
Under, were even more detailed: Snowden has effectively informed Indonesia and
PNGs military that Australia knows how to decrypt their comms ... They will
immediately change them as a result, which will directly impact on Australias ability
to minimize future threats.
Dr. Taloni notes an important point, namely that letting targets know they are being
listened to usually means that they change how they communicate, and access is lost,
often for an extended period, and sometimes forever. Thus is intelligence diminished.
Unlike the world of human intelligence (HUMINT), where even a major setback means
a human source, or several, are compromised, in the arena of signals intelligence
(SIGINT), a compromise can shut down a vast array of collection programs and
effectively render you deaf against whole countries. Given the unprecedented extent
of the Snowden compromise, it would be foolish to assume that the SIGINT losses it
has engendered are not commensurately vast.
It needs to be noted that NSA has a long history of avoiding unpleasant truths in cases
of defection and betrayal. The Agency had little to say publicly about the case of William
Martin and Bernon Mitchell, two disgruntled analysts who defected to Moscow in 1960,
while noting internally, in language that seems apt today as well, that the men
possessed greatly inflated opinions concerning their intellectual attainments and
talents and defected to satisfy social aspirations. The Agency was similarly tightlipped
three years later about the case of Jack Dunlap, an Army sergeant assigned to NSA
for a time he was the directors driver who passed classified materials to the Soviets
in exchange for cash; as Dunlap committed suicide before he was convicted of anything,
he is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.
Perhaps the most relevant case is that of William Weisband, who is the only case in
NSA history that compares with Snowden in terms of damage to U.S. and Allied SIGINT.
As Ive explained before, Weisband was a longtime Soviet spy and mole inside U.S.
intelligence who compromised everything he could get his hands on, including
BOURBON, the top secret American-British program that listened in on high-level
Soviet communications, which went dark in 1948 after Weisband told Moscow about
it. He also told them about VENONA, the extraordinarily compartmented program that
decrypted Soviet intelligence communications; thanks to Weisband, the Kremlin knew
about VENONA several years before President Harry Truman was briefed on it. In short,
Weisband practically shut down Western SIGINT against the Soviet Union at the dawn
of the Cold War, when it was most needed, and that damage lasted for years and cost
lives.
NSAs reaction to the case was revealing. In the first place, there was no NSA when
Weisband was arrested in 1950, when another Soviet spy, revealed by VENONA,
fingered Weisband, who was then working in the heart of the SIGINT system, as his
Soviet intelligence handler back in the early 1940s. Weisband was a Russian linguist (it
was his native tongue) for the Armed Forces Security Agency (AFSA), NSAs direct
predecessor, where security was somewhat slipshod. Weisband should have been
caught earlier, his efforts to hide his betrayal were hardly impressive, but nobody was
paying attention.
Seeking to cover up this epic disaster, which AFSA leadership had been quietly expecting
ever since BOURBON was suddenly and inexplicably lost two years before, U.S.
intelligence clammed up. Nobody wanted to admit that our SIGINT system had been
penetrated, and in the climate of the time, Washington, DC, didnt even want to state
publicly that it had an agency that was breaking foreign codes. Weisband was allowed to
slip away without comment.
He did a year in Federal prison for the obscure crime of lying to a grand jury about his
secret Communist affiliations, and was never charged with anything relating to
espionage. He continued his life, becoming an insurance salesman in Northern Virginia,
dying of a heart attack in 1967 (ironically, just at the time the KGB wanted to give him a
bag of cash to help out the old master who had done so much for the Soviet Union).
There was not a peep to the American public about what Weisband had done.
Internally, it was obvious that the damage was so serious that it must never happen
again. Part of the problem was that AFSA was not really a unified agency, rather an
amalgam of preexisting Army, Navy, and Air Force SIGINT services; in particular, it
lacked any unified security and counterintelligence program. President Truman
ordered the establishment of a committee led by the New York attorney George
Brownell to look into improving the flawed AFSA model. Their recommendation was
the establishment of a fully unified cryptologic unit, under the Department of Defense,
with a single security effort to prevent future moles. Thus was the National Security
Agency born in November 1952.
After that, NSA pretty much forgot about Weisband. His co-workers were told to never
discuss the case with anybody. For decades, he simply did not exist; he was not even
mentioned in internal Agency security briefings, and most counterintelligence officials
at NSA possessed only a vague awareness of the Weisband affair, so total was the
amnesia. That only began to change in the mid-1990s, when NSA and CIA jointly
declassified the remarkable VENONA story, in which Bill Weisband had played a sordid
part. Only a half-century after his betrayal did the American public learn about what
Weisband had done, and it was not until 2003 that NSA officials offered a full,
unclassified look at the case to the public, revealing long-suppressed details about
what the traitor had done, and why.
Its natural for the leaders of secret agencies to want to keep their disasters hidden.
Deep down, all spy services want to be like surgeons who bury their mistakes. Yet this
is an unhealthy impulse that must be resisted. NSA will not prevent another Snowden
if the Agency does not honestly assess exactly what happened here. Moreover, the
public has a right to know the actual story, at least in outline, while our allies deserve
better than happy-talk. It is at best odd that IC leadership seems content to
pronounce the case not so big a deal when, in fact, it has been enormously painful for
the Western diplomats from many countries who have had to contend with the
considerable problems caused by the Snowden Operation, to say nothing of the
numerous American firms that have lost business, including huge contracts, thanks to
this affair.
NSA and U.S. intelligence wont be getting past the damage wrought by Edward
Snowden and his partners for many years, and neither will Western diplomacy and the
many businesspeople who did nothing to deserve the loss of income they are now
facing, and may be for a long time. It would be wise of senior U.S. Government officials
to keep this in mind. Moreover, its best to face the painful truth now, because the full
story of this debacle will come out eventually. It always does.
[As always, the authors comments are his own entirely.]
threat more seriously, with considerable assistance from U.S. intelligence partners.
Nevertheless that relationship can never be seamless, given politics and bureaucracies,
and in reality counterterrorism operations in Germany (or most any partner country, for
that matter) boil down to this. In the event that CIA or NSA (its more often the latter)
gets information about possible terrorist activities in, say, Bielefeld, U.S. officials tell the
Germans about it and there are then three possible responses from Berlin:
A) Great idea, lets run a joint operation against them and figure out whats going
on (the preferred answer).
B) Thanks, but theyre not doing anything illegal under German law, so get back to
us if you develop that sort of information (the lawyerly answer, and German security
agencies are very lawyerly).
C) We know about this, and weve spent the last six months placing an agent inside
this group, well get back to you if we learn more (this may or not be true).
Any answer other than A may result in a U.S. operation on German soil, without
German assistance, what spies term a unilateral, which always runs the risk of
getting caught and something embarrassing happening. Per the old MOSSAD
joke/curse: May we read about you in the newspapers! But in the post-9/11 world,
U.S. intelligence has not been inclined to err on the side of caution when terrorism
may be involved.
Then theres counterproliferation, especially Iranian. Tehran has a lot of businessmen
running around Germany, and some of them are not what they seem to be; many are
engaged in efforts to circumvent international sanctions on their country, and U.S.
intelligence particularly takes an interest in Iranians who are looking to buy materials
that could support the construction of weaponry and, worse, weapons of mass
destruction. There are perennial concerns about German export control officials not
being sufficiently diligent, plus shady German businessmen who will illegally sell
contraband to Iran for the right price. Theres a considerable Iranian intelligence
presence in Germany, and they too can get involved in proliferation, when theyre not
assassinating people in restaurants, so interest in this in Washington, DC, is
understandably high, and has been for many years.
But we must not forget counterintelligence, which is a longstanding German weakpoint
and, given rapidly rising Russian espionage in that country, something that U.S. spies
rightfully fret over, given the very close defense and security relationship between
Washington, DC, and Berlin. Some of this Russian outreach is overt, including former
German chancellors who work for Russian state companies and celebrate their birthday
with Vladimir Putin, and the Kremlins influence operations in Germany, particularly
since the Ukraine crisis erupted, cannot be evaluated as anything less than highly
successful. More than a few prominent German journalists are serving Russian
intelligence, wittingly or otherwise.
But actual espionage, meaning the penetration of government ministries by spies, is a
deep concern too, as its common knowledge that the Russian Foreign Intelligence
Service (SVR) and military intelligence (GRU) have as many officers, including illegals
(meaning deep-cover types posing as civilians without any ties to Russia), in Germany
today as they had at the height of the Cold War. And West Germanys
counterintelligence record during the Cold War was frankly dismal, for many reasons.
East Bloc services had no trouble penetrating West German institutions at the highest
levels. To cite only some of the most famous cases: Heinz Felfe, the BNDs head of
counterespionage, was revealed to be a Soviet spy in 1961, while Otto John, the very
first director of the BfV, defected to East Germany in 1954, and 1974 saw the unmasking
of Gnter Guillaume, a top adviser to Chancellor Willy Brandt, as a spy for East
Germanys legendary Stasi. The Stasi in particular had no difficulty swiss-cheesing West
German institutions with their agents, many of whom volunteered their services to
them; in some cases, these Stasi agents changed the course of Germany history in
unlikely ways that have only come to light in recent years.
Given the extent of attention paid to Germany by the SVR and GRU, U.S. intelligence
would be foolish not to be watching this closely, especially because even closely allied
spy agencies seldom spill the beans about penetrations, which are embarrassing to
admit. Moreover, for all its skills in combating extremism and terrorism, particularly NeoNazis with whom they have a complex relationship the BfV has never been a firstrate counterintelligence service, despite serious efforts now being devoted to the
Russian espionage threat. It is to be expected that German security agencies are
currently penetrated by the Russians and their friends, as they have been since the
Second World War.
None of this is to deny that U.S. intelligence has made mistakes here. Running agents
inside a friendly spy service is always a gamble, and must be assessed based upon risks
and rewards, as may not have been done here properly. At a minimum, it would have
been wise to have put all these agents on ice when the Snowden Operation put the
U.S.-German intelligence relationship in serious jeopardy. Above all, if media reports
are correct and the CIA failed to inform the president of their BND agent Markus R.s
arrest in advance of Obamas phone conversation with an agitated German Chancellor
Angela Merkel, it is a puzzling mystery why CIA Director John Brennan still has a job at
Langley.
Much more will emerge about these cases in coming days, but its important to
maintain perspective about what U.S. intelligence really cares about. It would be
unfortunate if the BfVs scarce counterintelligence resources will now be devoted to
blunting American espionage, as seems almost certain, rather than against the far
greater Russian threat. But such are the ways of the SpyWar ...
be ruled out altogether. The Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) simply does not
allow American intelligence personnel theyve just met to jump on a flight to Mother
Russia. That never happens.
Why not, you ask? In real life, unlike in spy movies, the risks are too great. Deciding to
work with a possible defector, particularly one from your main adversary, is a big step in
and of itself, since both sides play sneaky operational games. In particular, they use
dangles, fake agents who present themselves as tasty morsels, hoping for a bite. They
show up uninvited to talk to the other side secretly, offering the hope of a big
recruitment if youre the Russian intelligence officer working the duty desk the day
that Mr. Walker* comes through the door, your career just got made if this works out.
Remember that for the Russians, penetrations of U.S. intelligence are the Holy Grail of
espionage, while recruiting a spy inside NSA the prime target that Kremlin spymasters
termed OMEGA during the Cold War was the highest of all KGB, and now SVR,
priorities.
But there are risks. Big ones. Mr. Walker may not be real. He (or she) may be testing
you: memorizing names and faces, watching your espionage procedures, seeing how
you and your team react to his showing up at your door. Therefore the SVR, like any
competent intelligence service, first establishes the bona fides of this guy. You do
name checks, you search the internet, you scour your own secret databases, and those
of friendly services, to see if theyve heard of this guy and the exact organization he
claims to work for. Does the story hes telling you seem plausible? Extensive
background checks and maybe polygraphs (note plural) will be ordered. In short, you
need to know: Does this guy check out?
What you really want to avoid is getting deceived and taking the bait on a guy who
actually is working for the other side and playing you. Such a misstep can have grave
consequences. That Mr. Walker is just an attention-seeking fantasist also has to ruled
out, since that will be an embarrassing report back to Moscow too. As the team on the
spot, you need to make sure that this scenario is what it seems to be, so you use a lot of
precautions. You take your time so as not to get burned. Establishing that Mr. Walker
is who he says he is, and not a dangle or a plant or a nutjob, can take weeks, if not
months. And this is just to recruit him as an agent, a witting source of the SVR, to say
nothing of his becoming a defector, which is a much bigger step. You always prefer an
agent-in-place over a defector, since that gets public and messy, not to mention that
the moment he reaches Russia, your defectors information has ceased to be up-todate. A potentially golden source has dried up once he defects.
Letting Edward Snowden move to Moscow was a major decision for the Kremlin, one
with huge political ramifications. We can be certain that such a decision was not made
by a mid-grade SVR officer in Hong Kong, neither was such a choice made quickly by the
Russians, particularly under a president who understands counterintelligence very well.
The reality is that Edward Snowdens relationship with Russian intelligence, whatever it
exactly is, predated his arrival in Moscow on June 23, 2013, probably by a considerable
margin. It did not begin in Hong Kong, but before, possibly long before. It cannot be
ruled out that the SVR (or possibly GRU, Russian military intelligence, which is a
formidable espionage service its own) initially dealt with Ed in a false-flag operation,
masking their true identity for a time, but experts who are acquainted with
Russias special services understand that the Official Narrative, that Ed just up and
moved to Moscow, cannot be true.
Getting to the bottom of this matter is critical to assessing the damage wrought by
the Snowden Operation, which despite the claims of his lawyers, is vast and
unprecedented. Although it will probably take years to unravel the full story of Eds
relationship with Russian intelligence, this matter needs thorough investigation now.
The U.S. Intelligence Community has senior people who, following in the long line of
espionage bosses who really would rather not know the full story behind an epic
traitor, seem to prefer to avert eyes from this issue, just as many journalists do. For
them, as bad as the Snowden story is already, think how much worse it will look if Ed
was really working for the Russians for years: that would be a truly epic
counterintelligence fail, and careers and reputations will be ruined. But we need to
know the full story here if we are to prevent future Snowdens, as we must.
*IC inside joke: People who show up at the door asking to work for you, unsolicited
and unrecruited, are called walk-ins by U.S. intelligence (the Russians prefer the
term volunteer), hence the unknown guy is referred to as Mr. Walker until his
actual identity is established. Relevant analogies to the Snowden case in the annals of
U.S. intelligence are Edward Lee Howard (a failed CIA case officer who defected to
Moscow in 1985) and William Martin and Bernon Mitchell (NSA analysts who
defected to Moscow in 1960): in all these cases the men had contact with the KGB
that long predated their defections; all ended badly.
These days, the Russians are very pleased with the gifts Edward Snowden has given
them. Hes busy doing something. He is not just idling his way through life.
The FSB are now his hosts, and they are taking care of him, Kalugin boldly claimed in an
interview with VentureBeat.
The 80 year-old retired Soviet intelligence officer is Russian spy royalty personified. At 34,
he became the youngest KGB general in history, and Kalugin famously helped run Soviet
spy operations in America during a career that spanned over three decades.
Kalugin and his wife relocated to Maryland after falling out of favor with the Russian
regime in the 1990s. After becoming a vocal critic of Russian president Vladimir Putin
(Kalugin called Putin a war criminal for his second invasion of Chechnya), a warrant was
issued for his arrest. Hes been in the U.S. ever since.
Kalugin still has juice within Russian intelligence circles and maintains contacts with
friends in Russia from his days as a Soviet spy. Kalugin teaches at the Centre for
Counterintelligence and Security Studies and also sits on the advisory board for the
International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C.
Back in Russia, according to Kalugin, Snowden is being handled by the FSB, the KGBs
successor. Kalugin claims that Snowden has shared much of his vast trove of secrets
about the NSA with his Russian hosts, and in the process, has allegedly handed the FSB
one of their biggest intelligence hauls and propaganda coups since the end of the Cold
War.
This claim echoes early warnings from congressman Michael McCaul, senator Dianne
Feinstein, lieutenant generalMichael Flynn, and congressman Mike Rogers, yet no
concrete evidence proves that such an exchange took place. Snowden has consistently
denied claims that he took security documents with him to Russia.
Whatever he had access to in his former days at NSA, I believe he shared all of it with
the Russians, and they are very grateful, Kalugin claims.
It has been over a year since Snowden downloaded thousands of top secret NSA
documents from his stint as a NSA contractor and traveled first to Hong Kong from his
home in Hawaii. He arrived in Moscow August 1 after he failed to gain asylum in 30 other
countries.
Snowdens leaks revealed the NSAs efforts to turn Facebook into a surveillance
machine, the agencys close ties with Google, and the theft of private user data from
firms like Yahoo and Apple. In the wake of these revelations, many of the tech
industrys most powerful firms have frantically adopted new security protocols at
unprecedented speeds.
Snowden shared his haul with security journalist Glenn Greenwald and other media
outlets, like the Washington Post and Germanys Der Spiegel, shedding unprecedented
light on the prodigious intelligence gathering programs of his former employer and
sending shockwaves around the world.
Greenwald, who lives in Brazil but is currently traveling in the U.S., did not return emails
for comment.
These days, exile in Russia means Snowden, 30, has lots of time on his hands. A source in
Moscow with connections to Russian intelligence said the American is believed to be
living, at least part time, in a dacha 70 miles south of Moscow in an FSB retirement
community reserved for favored cadres.
He has lots of free time. He doesnt need to go into the office anymore, Kalugin said.
Snowdens location could not be independently confirmed.
While free to leave Russia, Kalugin claims Snowdens whereabouts are monitored by his
FSB handlers, who allegedly control his spending budget and watch over whom he talks
with.
In Kalugins view, Snowden is guilty of treason.
Of course he is, by American standards. Snowden is a traitor, Kalugin said. When
someone changes sides and goes over to the other side, its a victory, he said.
Snowdens value to his Russian handlers has not totally run its course, claims Kalugin,
and the FSB will allegedly use him as a technical consultant and advisor on topics that
interest them. His travel in the country also may be coordinated by the FSB, Kalugin
said.
But the former KGB general believes that if he wants to, Snowden will have little trouble
integrating himself into Russian culture and digging in for the long haul.
He is not being left alone obviously. The Russians are trying their best to be hospitable,
Kalugin said.
At this point, said Kalugin, who has written three books on his 34 years in Soviet
intelligence, the reception in Russia for him has been exceptionally friendly.
And Im sure that Snowden is enjoying it.
My only quibble there is with Kalugins assertion that Snowden is free to leave Russia.
Count me skeptical there, since it is very much in the FSBs interest to keep U.S.
intelligence guessing as to exactly what Snowden stole, which would be the first thing Ed
would be asked by American interrogators, should they ever get the chance get to talk to
this most unique defector. Otherwise Kalugin has conveyed the essentials of the
Snowden Operation nicely.
It bears noting that Kalugin, who moved to the United States in the early 1990s and
has been an American citizen since 2003, is a sharp critic of Putin and his regime, yet
is a Russian patriot. He retired from the KGB in 1990 and promptly entered politics on
a platform of reforming the countrys repressive security apparatus. He left Russia
when it became clear that reform of that system was impossible.
Despite claims by Putin and FSB that Kalugin is a traitor he was convicted of treason
in absentia by the Kremlin in 2002 he does not see himself as such, and he has not
divulged the identities of Americans who spied for the KGB, commenting only on cases
already known to the public or Western authorities this being a point of honor for the
old spymaster. The sole exception is the case of George Trofimoff, a retired U.S. Army
colonel specializing in military intelligence who in 2001 was convicted of spying for the
KGB, partly on the basis of testimony provided by Oleg Kalugin involuntarily, it should
be noted (in an ugly turn of events, the U.S. Department of Justice subpoenaed Kalugins
testimony).
I have been acquainted with the general for many years and I can attest that he is an
honorable intelligence officer of the old school who does not make up stories for fun
and profit. He reflects the old German maxim: Nachrichtendienst ist Herrendienst
(Intelligence is gentlemans work). Kalugin spent many years running spies just like
Edward Snowden, winning a raft of KGB medals for his acumen at espionage,
particularly against American intelligence. Until we learn more from Russia, Kalugin has
provided what may be the last word on Edward Snowden and his relationship with the
Kremlin.
They pulled the plug, another official said. What the Germans want, and wanted, is
that we would never do anything against their laws on their territory. That is an
agreement the United States has with no country, the official said.
Foreign intelligence agencies exist to break the laws of foreign countries; if German
politicians do not grasp this their own spies certainly do, and Germanys BND
breaks the laws of many foreign countries every day of the year then perhaps its
best that Berlin collected its marbles and went home. Senior U.S. foreign policy and
defense officials are very busy right now and have bigger issues to contend with than
Germany being peeved about NSA.
Besides, the issue is dying in Germany among normals too. It remains clear that Berlin
will never grant Snowden the asylum in Germany that he so desperately wants, after
nearly a year in Putinistan, while this week he was blocked from testifying virtually to the
German parliamentary commission looking into Eds allegations about NSA activities.
This is an unambiguous signal from Berlin that the tantrum phase is over and there is
no mileage in further irritating Washington, DC, particularly as Europe faces its biggest
crisis since the Cold War with Russias Special War against Ukraine, which of course is
being orchestrated by Eds Q&A buddy in the Kremlin.
Todays edition of the Munich daily Sddeutsche Zeitung has an article entitled The
anger that goes away that elaborates how Berlin has accepted the new status quo
over NSA and Germany is ready to move on from the Snowden drama. As it notes,
despite much noise in the German media about increasing surveillance of suspected
American and British intelligence operations by Germanys domestic security service,
the Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV), a plan to do so having been
prepared, nothing has actually been done: There is little evidence that this will
happen. Even before the Ukraine crisis, the plan had few supporters in the
government. Now, there are none left to be found.
Similarly, close partnerships between the BND and U.S. intelligence have continued
normally, despite the media circus, and BND chief Gerhard Schindler is reported to
have good relations with Admiral Mike Rogers, the new NSA director. The only avenue
left for Germans wishing to punish NSA and the United States for its alleged crimes is
an investigation underway by the Attorney Generals office in Karlsruhe, but this, too,
is stalled, indeed moribund. Without Snowdens testimony it will soon fade away; as
the article notes, Its been common knowledge...in Berlin for weeks that a withdrawal
from prosecution has already been written in Karlsruhe, and its expected that the
attorney generals signature on that document closing the case is imminent. There will
end Germanys Snowden affair, at least as far as Chancellor Merkel and her
government are concerned.
However, let it not be said that Germany and its agencies have done nothing in
response to the Snowden Operation. As Sddeutsche Zeitung observes:
The NSA affair is not without consequences. The BfV has prohibited its employees from
making the usual July 4th visit for Americas national holiday. Previously, U.S. authorities
have usually invited up to a hundred BfV officials and most of them came too. This is
now looks unprofessional.
Im sure the U.S. Intelligence Community can find other guests to take up those empty
seats in time for this July 4th. In the meantime, Germany is dealing with the bad visuals
of having so many of its top businesspeople and politicos appearing decidedly cozy,
even huggy, with Vladimir Putin while Ukraine burns.
To beat Vladimir Putin, were going to need to be a little more like him.
The last two weeks have witnessed the upending of the European order and the close of
the post-Cold War era. With his invasion of Crimea and the instant absorption of the
strategic peninsula, Vladimir Putin has shown that he will not play by the Wests rules.
The end of history is at an endwere now seeing the onset of Cold War 2.0.
Whats on the Kremlins mind was made clear by Putins fire-breathing speech to the
Duma announcing the annexation of Crimea, which blended retrograde Russian
nationalism with a generous helping of messianism on behalf of his fellow Slavs,
alongside the KGB-speak that Putin is so fond of. If you enjoy mystical references to
Orthodox saints of two millennia past accompanied by warnings about a Western fifth
column and national traitors, this was the speech for you.
Putin confirmed the worst fears of Ukrainians who think they should have their own
country. But his ambitions go well beyond Ukraine: By explicitly linking Russian ethnicity
with membership in the Russian Federation, Putin has challenged the post-Soviet order
writ large.
For years, I studied Russia as a counterintelligence officer for the National Security
Agency, and at times I feel like Im seeing history in reverse. The Kremlin is a fiercely
revisionist power, seeking to change the status quo by various forms of force. This will
soon involve NATO members in the Baltics directly, as well as Poland and Romania
indirectly. Longstanding Russian acumen in what I term Special War, an amalgam of
espionage, subversion and terrorism by spies and special operatives, is already known to
Russias neighbors and can be expected to increase.
Read the rest at POLITICO Magazine...
Western
Journalists
Russian Intelligence
and
murderous regimes in history notwithstanding, there is an Egon Erwin Kisch Prize for
journalists in Germany today.
American journalism, too, had secret soldiers of Stalin in its ranks, and there were
more than a handful. In a case I was involved in decades after the fact, back in the
1940s one of the most prominent members of the U.S. journalistic scene was, we
discovered much later thanks to information derived from KGB sources, also a
devoted secret Communist. He was so overtly pro-Stalin that it creeped out his
fellow-traveling friends, and during World War II he apparently passed U.S. classified
information to the Soviets. However, by the late 1940s, he had a change of heart and
over time became a committed anti-Communist, which was not uncommon back
then. Moreover, there was nothing to be done with the case, as we learned of his
treason decades after the event, which was mitigated by the reality that he
abandoned the Moscow Line early in the Cold War, and he was dead to boot. Its an
interesting file that some researcher will make an intriguing footnote to history out
of decades hence, once its been declassified and released to the archives.
The most notorious case, however, is that of I.F. Stone, Izzy to his legions of admirers
on the Left, who cultivated the image of the muckraking journalist for truth pitchperfectly for decades. It was a fraud. Inconveniently, he was an agent of Soviet
intelligence in the late 1930s, at the height of Stalins purges, and maintained some
sort of witting relationship with the KGB to 1956, when he broke with Moscow later
than many over the invasion of Hungary. KGB efforts to reestablish their
relationship with the elderly Stone, an old master in Chekist parlance, in 1968 were
not successful. The extent to which Soviet connections influenced Stones daring
reporting must remain an open question, but the vehement efforts of his defenders
to deny his ties to the Soviet secret police are thoroughly debunked here.
Needless to add, there is an Izzy Prize to reward special achievement in independent
media in honor of I.F. Stone. Its inaugural winner was Glenn Greenwald, who along
with Jeremy Scahill was recently named to the I.F. Stone Hall of Fame.
For too many decades, among too many Western investigative journalists, secret
loyalty to the Kremlin has been more a feature than a bug. As we enter a Second Cold
War of the Kremlins creation, its time to face up to this reality and start asking
about the real motivations of truth tellers who like to criticize the West while
dodging negative comments about Moscow.
How
Snowden
Russian Intelligence
Empowered
term for the Kremlins intelligence and security agencies), does a masterful job of
explaining how Moscow has used the Snowden Operation effectively for its own
purposes, foreign and domestic, so I am posting the article, entitled Year in Review:
The Special Services, in translation in toto:
Thanks to Edward Snowden, the fugitive contractor for the National Security Agency
(NSA) who found refuge in Russia, 2013 will be remembered for the revelations of the
American special services cyber-surveillance of their own citizens as well as citizens of
friendly European states and totally non-hostile Latin American states.
His information, which revealed the methods and scale of electronic interception, made
everyone start thinking about the confidentiality of private life and how to avoid finding
ourselves in a brave new world where nobody will be able to hide anything from the
authorities.
For journalists, human rights activists, and ordinary people, Snowden became a hero,
eclipsing WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. But in Russia, unfortunately, Snowdens
revelations led mainly to negative consequences. They gave the Russian authorities carte
blanche to regulate the Internet and provided a formal pretext for an onslaught on
Internet giants like Google and Facebook.
Last summer, as soon as Snowden had published his first revelations about American
surveillance on the Internet, an offensive against global platforms began in Russia, on the
pretext of protecting our compatriots personal data. Initiatives designed to place
Google, Facebook, and others totally under the oversight of the Russian special services
are being put forward in the State Duma by Deputy Sergey Zheleznyak and in the
Federation Council by Senator Ruslan Gattarov.
The aim is to make the Internet giants site their servers in Russian territory and store
Russian users information only here. In that event all the information that we post on
Andrey Lugovoy who is better known from the story of the poisoning of [FSB defector
Colonel] Aleksandr Litvinenko in London introducing extrajudicial blocking of websites
for inciting extremism and unauthorized demonstrations.
The invasion of citizens private lives, which has been intensifying in recent years,
provoked outrage among communications operators for the first time in many years. In
November Vympelcom criticized the system of legal interception of telephone
conversations and correspondence (SORM). The company sent a letter to the Ministry of
Communications criticizing a draft order by the department imposing new requirements
on the system for the inception of Internet traffic: According to these, the operator must
store all users information for twelve hours.
The FSBs growing appetites in the sphere of surveillance are nothing new, as is indicated
by the twofold increase in the interception of telephone conversations and email over the
past six years: from 265,937 in 2007 to 539,864 in 2012. But for many years none of this
caused a murmur in the industry. Therefore Vympelcoms outrage that the draft order is
contrary to the Constitution, which protects citizens right to confidentiality of
correspondence, seems encouraging.
The point is that the offensive against the confidentiality of private life on the Internet
has recently been proceeding so quickly that it has even frightened the business sector.
Apart from the special services and the law enforcement agencies, new players have
emerged in this field. In 2013 the Central Bank fined two major e-mail services
Rambler.ru and Mail.ru for refusing to provide information about users
correspondence without a court ruling. And recently the department drew up
amendments to the law on insider dealing that would grant the Central Bank access to
the telephone conversations and correspondence of potentially unscrupulous market
players.
The proving ground where the state has decided to use all the surveillance technologies
at its disposal is the approaching Olympic Games in Sochi. There, the authorities have
put into practice a comprehensive approach, bringing together advanced technologies
in the sphere of the interception of information and field surveillance as well as
administrative oversight measures that were tried out back at the time of the 1980
Olympics.
As we have written previously in our investigation, in Sochi, SORM has been
substantially strengthened and local providers have been busy buying equipment
recommended by the FSB in order to meet the states requirements for monitoring
everyone, including athletes and fans. Rostelecom has also installed DPI [deep packet
inspection] equipment on mobile communications networks in the region, making it
possible not only to monitor all traffic but also to filter it by searching for the required
information by keywords. Moreover, DPI helps, if necessary, effectively to identify
users.
But even this was not enough, and in November a government decree came out making
provision for the collection of metadata from all types of communication used by
athletes, journalists, and even members of the Organizing Committee themselves and for
the creation of a database. This will include the names and surnames of
subscribers and information about who called whom and when, all the information will
be stored for three years, and the FSB will have access to it.
For the countrys main special service this year was generally very successful. Yet again,
the FSB extended its powers. This time, the special service was given permission to
conduct surveillance and monitoring for the purposes of protection against threats to
information security. Given that in our country the concept of an information threat is
interpreted very broadly and includes threats to the spiritual life of citizens and the
spiritual revival of Russia, this greatly facilitates the procedure for the interception of
citizens traffic. In 2013, the FSB became the countrys chief cyber department. In
January, by presidential edict, it was instructed to create a system for discovering and
eliminating the consequences of computer attacks on Russian information resources.
In this situation the shocking interception, including gunfire, of the Greenpeace
activists ship is perfectly understandable. The FSB explained that it was acting, in
defense of the interests of the Russian Federation in the Arctic region, and for that
purpose all means are good.
The FSB, to the president, is still the special service that cannot be criticized. Nobody
from the top FSB leadership was punished for the terrorist acts in Volgograd on the eve
of the New Year, which cost dozens of lives, just as there was not a single important
resignation after the hostage-taking incident at the theater center on Dubrovka or the
tragedy in Beslan. Even though a video by Pavel Pechenkin, who blew himself up at the
station, in which he clearly declares his intention of doing something of the kind, was
openly available on the Internet from March 2012, this could not prevent the terrorist
act. The special services knew that he belonged to the ranks of the Dagestani
underground and that he was planning to commit a terrorist act, but they could do
nothing. On the eve of the Olympic Games in Sochi, this looks particularly worrying.
There it is, folks, the truth about the FSB and Putins Russia, which are hosting Mr.
Snowden. It would be nice if free speech defenders and anti-secrecy advocates like
Julian Assange and Glenn Greenwald, not to mention Edward Snowden, occasionally
mentioned any of this, which is vastly more invasive of citizen privacy than anything
done in any Western country, but somehow I wouldnt expect them to anytime soon.
been kicked by Obama to Congress for resolution, which will be difficult, since telecom
companies understandably have little interest in involving themselves further in whats
become a touchy mess. In all, Obama many of whose national security policies of late
Ive been critical of performed masterfully yesterday, delivering a near pitch-perfect
speech and resetting the agenda on intelligence matters.
Predictably, the NSA haters have gone bonkers. Somehow, in a fest of self-delusion
that must rival anything done by the Reverend Jim Jones to his ill-fated followers,
many convinced themselves that Obama might shut down NSA and have its leaders
frog-walked into Federal custody, if not simply shot without trial. Alas, nothing of the
sort was ever going to happen. In part because no White House will ever shut down
its top source of foreign intelligence, or can afford to. But mostly because the
hysterical charges weve seen thrown at NSA that it violates the privacy of hundreds
of millions, many American for months were essentially false.
Haters will hate, as is their wont, and Ive frankly enjoyed the bouts of online hysteria
from Snowden fanboys since yesterday, involving a gnashing of teeth of epic
proportions (for a so-perfect-it-cannot-be-parodied combination of ignorance and
sanctimony, Conor Friedersdorf is impossible to top). But the games over, Obama
just blew the whistle.
Theres much work to be done, naturally, and Congress will spend the rest of 2014
hashing out just what the Presidents reforms should actually look like in application
(expect a long, needlessly drawn out catfight on The Hill, like everything there), but
the White House has shut the door on the ridiculous, overheated spectacle that the
Snowden Operation dumped on our Intelligence Community.
None have any expectation that the leaks will stop, given the unimaginably huge
amount of Top Secret documents from NSA and Allied agencies that Snowden stole,
but the humdrum effect has already set in. The world has become accustomed to
such a regular barrage of revelations about NSA that, unless the Iranians are correct
that aliens really are running things at Fort Meade (theyre not, I checked), few of these
will be front page stories any longer.
The Snowden Operation has guaranteed that NSA has become a global stand-in for
unmitigated evil for certain people, a Keyser Sze who reads your email, and theres
not much that Washington, DC, and its friends can do about that. But the real intent
of Ed, Glenn, and their coterie was never intelligence reform, rather the destruction
of NSA and the Western intelligence alliance. As of yesterday, we know that will not
happen. Henceforth, youll occasionally encounter people who are obsessed with
NSA and think the Agency reads their texts of cat pictures, but these are the same
sort of people who, in a previous age, were obsessed with Knights Templar, Jews, and
Masons, and can be ignored when adults are talking.
I say NSA because the global meme fostered online by the Snowden Operation bears
so little resemblance to what the Agency actually is and does. Planet Greenwald has
done a weirdly masterful job of placing NSA in the same category as UFOs,
Kennedy Assassination, Bigfoot, and Area 51: there actually is something deep
down there that might possibly be true, but its so buried under hyperbole and
fantasy as to be unfathomable as any reality.
I say this with regret, as someone who was calling for reforms of the Intelligence
Community, especially NSA, before anybody heard of Edward Snowden. Real reform is
impossible now, for at least a generation, because the Snowden Operation has so
soiled the cause of real IC reform with treachery, narcissism, crankery, and Putins
Russia. I worry that todays modest reforms may not be able to keep up with rapid
changes in IT. Privacy concerns about NSA are entirely valid, and had the Snowden
Operation confined its leaks to issues of purely domestic surveillance, that healthy
and necessary debate about post-9/11 intelligence might have happened, at last. But
Ed went to Russia, where he remains. The real drivers of the Snowden Operation
never sought a domestic debate about NSA, that was never their agenda, so here we
are. Winston Churchill famously termed the Allied victory at El Alamein in late 1942
as not the beginning of the end, but the end of the beginning. Now were a bit
further along than that in the Snowden Operation.
Discussions of NSA and especially NSA will be prominent online and in the real
world for years to come. The Agency has lost its cover, for better or worse. As Ive
said before, I hope the Agency uses this opportunity to rebrand itself in a spirit of
openness to the American people about its essential mission, which the public has a
right to know more about. Regardless, the Agency will survive and its personnel
military, civilian, and contractor will keep protecting our country and our allies.
Before long people will be asking, What ever happened to that strange guy who
defected to Russia? Once the Snowden Operation kicked off when exactly that
was remains an open question of high interest to counterintelligence investigators in
dozens of countries there was never going to be any other outcome.
long experience with Swedish security agencies who emphasized the quid pro quo
aspect to international intelligence cooperation.
The effectiveness of FRA can be judged by the fact that its headquarters on Lovn island
near Stockholm was one of the two Swedish facilities targeted by Russian TU22M3 longrange and nuclear-capable bombers in a simulated night strike in late March an
incident that caused public outcry as the Swedish Air Force reacted slowly and had to
call NATO for fighter help against the Russian threat. Moreover, the humbug at the
heart of the Snowden Operation can be deduced from the telling fact that, although
Moscow has certainly been aware of the extent of FRA activities against Russia since at
least June, when Ed showed up at Sheremetyevo Airport, Russian telecommunications
companies have done nothing to reroute their traffic away from Sweden, which remains
the main data hub for Russian Internet traffic going abroad.
The most revealing riposte to the Snowden Operationss propaganda attack on
Sweden comes in the form of an open letter and invitation by Runar Viksten, the
head of the countrys Defense Intelligence Court (Frsvarsunderrttelsedomstolen)
that performs oversight of FRA activities. Tellingly titled Inaccuracy damages Swedish
signals intelligence work, this remarkable document is the most comprehensive
rebuttal to the Snowden-Greenwald agitprop model Ive yet seen in a single letter,
and Ill give you its highlights; I encourage any of you who know Swedish to read the
whole thing.
Beginning with the statement, In step with the so-called revelations made by
Snowden, several fallacies about Swedish signals intelligence and its uses have been
spread by media representatives and representatives of political parties, the letter
makes a point-by-point refutation of the lies that have been propagated about FRA
recently.
It has been claimed that Swedish legislation on signals intelligence was commissioned
by foreign authorities. That is not true ... The allegation of foreign control is a
conspiracy theory of a highly fanciful nature.
It has been claimed that foreign powers can order signals intelligence from FRA. That is
not true. Everything FRA does, in an operational respect or in terms of development,
must be sanctioned by the Defense Intelligence Court.
It has been claimed that surveillance belonging to the areas of follow-up on the signals
sector and signals technology, as well as the development of this countrys own
technology, has been insufficiently regulated as far the protection of personal privacy is
concerned. That is not true. This signals intelligence work also has to be sanctioned by
the court.
It has been implied or insinuated that Swedish signals intelligence is directed at our
Nordic neighbors and other Western democracies. That is not true ... Swedish signals
intelligence work, in contrast to legislation in other countries, is not directed at
protecting economic interests. The list of surveillance targets also shows that foreign
powers might be the targets of this work, mostly with regard to external military
threats, and in cases where the actions of foreign powers have a substantial impact on
Swedish foreign, security, or defense policy ... These insinuations are therefore
groundless.
It has been claimed that signals intelligence cooperation with other countries means
that Sweden passes on information on persons in this country and receives information
which, for reasons of personal privacy, it should not have been possible to obtain
pursuant to signals intelligence legislation. That is not true ... FRA does not accept
information which lies outside the areas authorized by Swedish law and those
sanctioned by the Defense Intelligence Court.
As far as the latest claims regarding so-called active signals intelligence work and
suspected computer hacking are concerned, the following can be stated without going
into the methods which may be used to gather information. Everything that FRA does
regarding signals intelligence requires the courts authorization. The activities that
FRA engages in after receiving such authority are not illegal and therefore cannot
involve the crime of hacking.
To top it off, Viksten concludes his letter with an invitation to Planet Greenwald to
provide their evidence in open court:
The ignorance I have referred to, which has been expressed in various contexts,
damages confidence in Swedish law and Swedish signals intelligence work. It would
therefore be good if those persons who express opinions on the regulations governing
Swedish signals intelligence would take pains to provide a firm foundation for their
claims. That could, for example, be done by making an appointment for a visit to the
court, which in contrast to the claims that have been made, is not a secret tribunal.
Thats how you do it, folks. Edward Snowden and Glenn Greenwald often have said
they just want a chance to make their case to the public, preferably in court. There it
is. It shouldnt be too hard to get in touch with Mr. Viksten or his office.
Well be waiting ...
basic idea was the DDIR serves as the institutional memory, who can hold the job for
years, while directors come and go.
The man who basically created the DDIR position was Louis Tordella, who held the
job from 1958 to 1974, an astonishing sixteen years. It was no secret that Tordella, a
strong personality, had the ability to stonewall bad ideas from the director, and he
could always just wait out any DIRNSA he didnt like. It needs to be noted that
DIRNSAs have not always been intelligence officers and their level of knowledge of
what NSA actually does could not necessarily be assumed. As the wise old hand, the
DDIR was able to offer wisdom accrued during decades in the cryptologic business, as
well as serve as an advocate for NSAs civilian workforce.
Nobody would serve as DDIR anywhere near as long as Tordella, but the basic concept
of the DIRNSA-DDIR relationship remained the same until General Hayden showed up in
1999. Before long, his deputy, Barbara McNamara known as BAM at the Agency, a
respected career analyst who had served as the Deputy Director for Operations, i.e. the
SIGINT boss was shunted off to London as the Agency representative to GCHQ, as she
was perceived as standing in the way of Haydens desired reforms.
Hayden, a career Air Force intelligence officer, came to Fort Meade on a mission to
shake up the Agency and modernize it, which was unquestionably necessary. However,
some of his bull-in-china-shop methods alienated much of NSAs civilian old guard, not
least because he installed as DDIR Bill Black, a career NSA civilian who had already
retired from the Agency and gone to cash in with defense contractors; during his sixyear stint as deputy, Black was considered by many to be too pliant to Haydens wishes.
The tradition that a civilian DDIR could block bad and possibly unethical or illegal
ideas suggested by the director had been lost, with fateful consequences.
Its fashionable to condemn old guards but the reality is that the generation of senior
NSA civilians shunted aside since 1999, of which BAM can serve as a stand-in here,
had made their careers after the post-1970s reforms and jealously guarded the
notion that NSA was a law-abiding organization above all else.
Its clear that GEN Alexander has kept his superiors at the Pentagon and the White
House happy with his expansion of the Agencys intelligence empire into many spheres,
overseeing its growth in what some have termed the golden age of SIGINT. Yet this
has also come with unprecedented controversy, with NSA facing scandal and uproar of
the likes its never seen. Alexanders near-decade tenure as DIRNSA will be
remembered more for the Snowden scandal than anything else.
There are many lessons to be learned from how NSA has been run for the last fifteen
years, some of which can already be discerned with clarity. Civilianization of the
directors job may help, but its no panacea either; this, too, will create challenges.
That said, its abundantly clear that empire-building generals can create havoc in
bureaucracies to ill effect. Old-think bureaucrats are a figure of derision to some,
but they can also serve as a needed obstacle to daring new ideas that are actually
stupid if not flat-out illegal.
Like Cher, we cannot turn back time, no matter how much we may want to, and NSA
isnt returning to the old system that worked for decades. The Agency needs a new
model of leadership for the 21st century, learning the painful lessons of the Snowden
debacle. Its impossible to say as yet what the new DIRNSA-DDIR system will look like,
but Im glad its being publicly discussed, as it ought to be. Who runs Americas vast
SIGINT empire, and how, is a matter the public has a right to be informed about.
PS: If you want to sound like part of the Fort Meade in-crowd, note that DIRNSA is
pronounced Durn-sah while DDIR rolls off the SIGINTers tongue as Dee-Dur:
emphasis for both is on the first syllable.
Its a coincidence ... that Ed and the whole Greenwald/Wikileaks circle has acted in a
manner completely consistent with longstanding Kremlin espionage tradecraft (e.g.
Active Measures).
Its a coincidence ... that of the thousands of pages of U.S. and Allied intelligence
information stolen by Snowden and published around the world, none of it reveals
Russian security matters.
Its a coincidence ... that Edward celebrated his 30th birthday with Russian
diplomats in their consulate in Hong Kong.
Its a coincidence ... that Snowdens lawyer, who controls his access to the outside
world, is a public advocate for the FSB and Russian intelligence.
Its a coincidence ... that if youre one of the lucky few who actually gets to meet with
Snowden at his undisclosed Russian location, youre taken there in black-windowed
vehicles in a convoy.
Its a coincidence ... that, even if you get to meet Ed, youll never be allowed a second
alone with him, as his bulky minders (whos paying for them, anyway? I thought
Wikileaks was broke) never leave his side.
Above all, the Official Narrative requires you to believe that although literally every
single Western defector to the Soviet Union and Russia for a full century now was
extensively interrogated by Kremlin spies and placed under their protection as long
as they were in the country, its completely different with Edward Snowden. If you
actually believe that, I hope you also put your fallen-out teeth under your pillow at
night, in the expectation the Tooth Fairy will reimburse you.
energise terror networks that had been largely defeated thanks to joint intelligence and
police co-operation between Australia and Indonesia.
Australia has 30 Australian Federal Police officers based in Indonesia working with local
authorities, mainly on anti-people-smuggling and counter terrorism operations. It is
understood about a dozen of those officers work on people-smuggling, a relatively loworder issue for Jakarta and one where co-operation may be downgraded with little cost
to Indonesia but considerable pain to Australia, which in the past two months has
ramped up its efforts to disrupt smuggling ventures.
But insiders say there could not be a worse time to suspend intelligence co-operation
between the two countries because it would limit the ability of Australian and Indonesian
agencies to monitor those released prisoners, some of whom are likely to resume jihadist
activities against their own citizens and Western tourists.
The joint counter-terror co-operation between the two countries, which has been the key
to capturing the Bali bombers and dismantling the deadly Jeemah Islamiah terror
network, appeared to be under threat last night after the chief of Indonesias national
intelligence agency BIN, Marciano Norman, was called to the Presidential Palace to
discuss the security co-operation ramifications of the Australian crisis.
Australian intelligence, including information gleaned by the Australian Signals
Directorate, remains a key part of Indonesias war against Islamic extremism. One insider
said yesterday Indonesias fight against Islamic extremism had always relied
enormously on intelligence supplied by Australian agencies including the ASD, the
successor of the Defence Signals Directorate, which allegedly intercepted Dr Yudhoyonos
mobile phone.
The arrest and prosecution of the original Bali bombers couldnt have happened without
Australian intelligence support, The Australian was told. When (then prime minister
John) Howard went up three or four days after the bombing he took with them the heads
of the intelligence agencies and said, Youve got carte blanche.
Others say that if this sort of co-operation was suspended as a result of the spy scandal, it
would create a law enforcement vacuum and an opportunity for Islamic extremists to
regroup and once again target Indonesians and Australians in Bali and Jakarta.
ASIO fears Indonesian terror groups, including JI, could become more active when about
300 out of 830 convicted and imprisoned terrorists are released over the next year
having served their sentences for crimes carried out over the past decade. It is feared
that many of terrorists are likely to resume extremist activities, especially because
Indonesian prisons are considered to be hothouses for extremist teachings.
The impending release of terrorist detainees from Indonesian prisons, a spike of which is
expected to occur in 2014 is likely to increase this (terror) threat, ASIO warned in its
recently released annual report. Many of the individuals scheduled to be released in this
period have undertaken terrorist training or have been linked to, or involved in, bombings
against either Western of local targets.
Their release is likely to inject significant capability into extremist networks. The
expertise and anti-Western credentials of some individuals have the potential to
refocus and reinvigorate currently diffuse and relatively unsophisticated extremist
networks.
Greg Barton, an Indonesia expert at Melbournes Monash University, said the release of
so many prisoners in one year was a big concern. While we dont have a clear picture
of recidivism rates, it is safe to assume that some will still be quite sympathetic to
(extremism) and that some will go back to operations, Professor Barton told The
Australian.
In recent years Jakartas counter-terrorism capacity had become more sophisticated
and other countries, including the US, were beginning to play a greater role in assisting
the Indonesians, reducing Jakartas dependence on Australian intelligence and
expertise.
But Australia was still Indonesias main partner in the fight against local extremism. In
addition to intelligence about extremists, Australia is understood to have gifted the
Indonesians a raft of equipment, such as long-range surveillance microphones, cameras
and night vision equipment. Australia also supplies technical expertise in areas such as
computer exploitation, for example extracting information from laptops seized from
extremists.
One wonders how well Indonesian intelligence will fare against extremists and terrorists
without the reporting and technical assistance of the ASD. Im afraid were going to find
out the hard way. Lets hope those 300 soon-to-be released Indonesian terrorists have
spent their time in prison learning and embracing that jihad is love (as non-violent
Salafis like to put it), because otherwise bad things seem sure to follow.
The bottom line is that The Guardian and its defenders are simply lying when they
assert that 850,000 people saw the stuff that Ed stole. No, they didnt. Not once, ever.
Even as an NSA counterintelligence officer with ridiculously high level clearances and
accesses to do my job, I never saw everything because thats literally impossible in
the system. Every persons access is specifically tailored to what he or she needs to
know to do the job, and nothing more.
Which is why Ed had to hack NSA systems for months and years, including stealing the
log-ins and passwords of others, who presumably had better accesses than a mere
system administrator would, to get a look at the TS/SCI+ information he wanted to steal
and expose to the world, while making off to Moscow as a finishing touch.
Whether The Guardian broke British law is a matter I will defer to legal experts, but
on the matter of who had access to the stolen information they are publishing for the
world to see, they are simply telling one lie after another. It should stop at once.
UPDATE: Ive been attacked by anti-NSA activist Marcy Wheeler for allegedly not
providing evidence that The Guardian actually said what ... they said. The Guardian
has cited the 850,000 had access to this stuff lie in many forms since the summer;
mere Googling will reveal many of them, heres another current example if you like
that sort of thing. Marcy is probably the most informed literature Ph.D. without any
intelligence experience regarding SIGINT within at ten or twelve miles from wherever
youre sitting at this moment. This ones for you, Marcy!
As Ive noted at length already, the drama surrounding the continuing leaks of classified
information from the U.S. National Security Agency, care of the defector Edward
Snowden, has now taken center stage in Germany. Which is not altogether surprising
because Germany is such a close partner with the United States in security and other
matters, and also because a significant component of the Wikileaks apparat lives in
Berlin.
To anyone versed in counterintelligence, specifically the modus operandi of Russian
security services, the Snowden Operation* is a classic case of Active Measures, in other
words a secret propaganda job. That its ultimate objective is fracturing the Western
security and intelligence alliance is made increasing clear in the tone of the reporting
coming from the Operation, especially its German mouthpiece, the newsmagazine Der
Spiegel. Relying on fronts, cut-outs, independent journalists, plus platoons of what
Lenin memorably termed Useful Idiots, is just what the Kremlins intelligence services do
when they want to engage in Active Measures. Weve been down this road before in
many ways whats going on now is merely a replay of the operational game from the
1970s based on the CIA defector Phil Agee (KGB covername: PONT), but with broadband
access yet the Snowden Operation is unusually successful and brazen, even by
Moscows high standards in this regard.
This is also the conclusion of the German security services, based on a new report in
the Berlin daily Die Welt. The recent Moscow visit of the leftist Green Party
parliamentarian Hans-Christian Strbele with Snowden caused a global sensation. It was
also transparently the work of the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB). Noting the
stage-managed aspect of the photo op, There is no doubt that this was a room that was
prepared by the intelligence service, concluded a German senior intelligence official,
adding that this was a typical FSB room meaning fully wired. To expand on Die
Welts reportage:
The three-hour conversation had been recorded in this room with microphones and video
cameras. After analyzing the course of the visit, German security experts came to the
conclusion that the FSB completely organized and monitored Strbeles visit to Moscow,
and effectively used it for its purposes. The goal of the visit had been to rekindle the
debate about the NSA spying affair, thus burdening relations between Germany and the
United States even more. This is playing into the hands of Russia, said the intelligence
official, criticizing Strbeles action. That the Green Party official allowed himself to be
used by Russia for that countrys interests was to be regarded as borderline, he
explained.
The Snowden Operation is far from over, and more German-related Active Measures are
to be expected. That said, its somewhat reassuring that, no matter what
politicians may say, German intelligence is at least aware of the real game thats
afoot here.
*Until some future Vasili Mitrokhin tells us what Edward Snowdens actual FSB
covername is, Ill be terming whats going on the Snowden Operation (
).
The report adds that during the recent French campaign in Mali, Jean-Yves Le Drian,
Frances defense minister, used [SIGINT reports from] NSA which were passed on to the
French, which made it possible to locate and then destroy the armed jihadist groups.
And no one in the armed forces or the intelligence services wants this flow of
information to stop; much to the contrary.
While France, like Germany, is not part of the Five Eyes SIGINT alliance, it shares a
great deal of information with NSA regularly and in 2010, according to the report, Paris
came close to joining the alliance but the Obama White House scuttled the deal in the
end. There is also a tight intelligence sharing relationship between DGSE and the BND,
its German equivalent, and its evident that French spies are more than a tad
displeased with all the public fuss in Germany about matters that are best left out of
the publics eye, in Frances view. That Chancellor Merkel is exploiting the Snowden
crisis to get her country fully into the Five Eyes system is the common perception
among French officials.
Furthermore, while French diplomats believe that the NSA scandal has complicated
relationships, this, too, shall pass and there will be no fundamental changes to
intelligence partnerships except on a bilateral basis, i.e. between Washington, DC, and
Paris. The notion of a European Union united front against NSA is dismissed out of
hand by French diplomats as a pipe dream. Furthermore, it is significant that, even
while expressing his displeasure about the NSA allegations, President Hollande never
alleged violations of sovereignty, unlike some leaders. France is eager to get past
this crisis.
Moreover, French diplomats seem dismissive of German complaints. As one top
diplomat stated, You cannot say just anything on just any network! For this reason the
Foreign Ministry has nearly 200 encrypted cell phones. Paris has invested heavily in
secure telephone and computer communications for its ministries in recent years, and
French intelligence believes that Frances sensitive diplomatic communications remain
safe from foreign decryption or intrusion.
In all, this is exactly the mature, nuanced view of intelligence that one would expect
from France, a country with excellent espionage services that form a key part of the
Western intelligence alliance against common enemies and threats. I wish America had
more such friends.
Its 2013, when virtually all Americans depend on IT, via the Internet and the
smartphones practically everyones got, to function on a daily basis, so you cant blame
people who until recently had never heard of SIGINT when they get a tad freaked out by
the leaks theyve heard all so much about in recent months. Time to find a way to
explain, generally, what NSA does and how it does it. The truth is far less scary than the
lies being told about the Agency.
If the current leadership cant find a way to convincingly tell the American people what
the Agency does including the indelible and truthful message that, unless youre in
bed with foreign spies or terrorists, NSA has less than zero interest in you then its
time for new leadership. Thats coming soon anyway, based on media reports, but
theres not much time to waste. NSA leadership and public affairs by their nature have
been reactive and not accustomed to the public eye. Thats totally over, and its not
coming back. Deal with it. Rebrand now while you still can and regain the publics trust.
Im confident that, once they understand what NSA really does, the vast majority of
Americans will be glad the Agency is on watch.
But thats not all youve got to do. Theres no point in having an NSA if you cant prevent
further Snowden-like debacles. Which is another way of saying if you dont have
effective counterintelligence, why bother to have intelligence? Sadly, I predicted a
Snowden-like disaster over a decade ago, when I was working counterintelligence for the
Agency, and I was not the only one who had that sense of impending dread.
The Snowden story reveals a basic lack of seriousness about counterintelligence and
security that has undermined everything the Agency does. There are plenty of things to
blame here too much outsourcing, a lack of bureaucratic follow-through, an
unwillingness to go all Angleton on people but the unavoidable bottom line is that
counterintelligence failed here, epically. This must never be allowed to happen again.
Sure, more resources are needed for CI who ever turns more money and billets down?
but above all there needs to be a culture shift at the Agency. Nobody actually likes
counterintelligence, the hardass people who bring bad news and possibly want to
investigate your office, but they have to be allowed to do what they do in a spirit of
cooperation. After the Snowden disaster it shouldnt take much effort to convince
Agency personnel that the threat from defectors and traitors is all too real. Sometimes
the odd, Aspergery IT guy in the next cubicle with bad social skills plus anger at the
government actually is out to destroy you.
And I would caution the CI folks not to go overboard now. Dont repeat the letspolygraph-everybody-silly errors that came after the Martin and Mitchell defections to
Moscow, or what happened at CIA when Rick Ames was unmasked as a traitor and
Russian spy. The vast majority of Agency personnel are good people gain their trust
and they will practically do your job for you.
Hows that for a start? I think thats enough taskers for today. But do get on them. A
lot is riding on fixing these problems. NSA really is the best and brightest of Americas
secret government. Earn the trust of the American people and never let an Ed
Snowden in any Agency building again. That would be a great start and, in the end,
everybody wins. The American people deserve no less, so give it to them.
SIncerely,
John Dash Schindler
painfully accurate. There can be no doubt that Germanys intelligence and security
services, preeminently the Federal Intelligence Service (BND, Germanys CIA plus NSA
equivalent) and the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV, equivalent
to Britains Security Service), are indeed deeply dependent on American partners, and
have been since the day of their creation.
The depths of that dependency are laid bare in Die Welts account. Germanys helpless
dependence on the U.S. Intelligence Community is not new but it entered a complicated
phase after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States which, lest we
forget, were staged mostly out of Hamburg, a fact which the Die Welt piece notes: The
Americans did not want to rely exclusively on us after September 11th. That is
understandable, explained a German intelligence official. Thus was born increased
attention to Germany among U.S. spy agencies.
Additionally, Germanys intelligence agencies are underfunded and lack the technical
capabilities of other leading Western countries; in espionage, Germany has chosen to
punch below its economic and political weight, and now bears the consequences,
namely deep dependency on foreign partners such as NSA and CIA. As I recently
reported, the BND head Gerhard Schindler recently called for more reliance on foreign
partners, not less, and here he was simply reflecting budgetary and political realities in
Germany, where there is scant appetite for more investment in security.
Even in domestic intelligence matters Germany is heavily dependent on American
help, especially from NSA, whose SIGINT has been provided to the Germans in many
cases, leading to the disruption of a number of planned terrorist attacks in Germany
since 2001. Without information from the Americans, there would have been
successful terrorist attacks in Germany in the past years, explained a BfV official,
truthfully.
For these reasons its unlikely that any big changes to German intelligence or its
relationship to NSA and CIA will happen soon. Although the current political brouhaha is
serious, even though some of the hand-wringing is obviously staged by politicos who
know better, this, too, shall pass, unless Germany wants to spend significantly more
money on its own security and intelligence. And, as yet, there is no sign of that.
Germanys condition reflects the reality that too many European countries have
underinvested in their own defense and security since the end of the Cold War, and
are therefore deeply dependent on the United States for assistance. I would like the
Germans and other European countries to take more responsibility for their own
security and fund their militaries and intelligence agencies at higher levels. They
would be better partners then too. But Im not optimistic on that front. Protesting,
after all, is easier than reforming bureaucracies or finding more money in lean
budgetary times.
Fortunately theres a lot out there you can read. The best place to start is NSAs in-house
shop, the Center for Cryptologic History (CCH), which is staffed by people who
understand the business and publish lots of stuff some classified, some unclassified
on the history of the Agency. The quality of their work is generally quite high and
customarily scrupulously honest about past mistakes. Every two years CCH hosts the
Cryptologic History Symposium, unclassified and open to the public, which draws top
experts on intelligence, codes and ciphers; its like the Gathering of the Juggalos for ICP
fans you kinda gotta be there if youre part of the SIGINT in crowd. Ive spoken at the
Symposium several times, and its next on in a few weeks.
I was fortunate to spend my last year with the Agency at CCH, where I worked on
classified projects such as editing and co-authoring NSAs official history of Operation
IRAQI FREEDOM (Phases I-III), as well as several unclassified projects. It was a lot of
fun. CCH also supports the Cryptologic History Museum, located next to Agency
headquarters, which was the first IC museum to be open to the public, and which
remains a fun family destination where people of all ages can learn about codes and
ciphers and how NSA has developed over the decades. The museum has a superb
library, the best open collection on cryptology in the world, which is a goldmine for
researchers.
There are plenty of people writing on NSA, intelligence, and cryptology, and Ill give you
my views of a few of the leading people in the field since some of them are less than
forthright about their background Ill add some clarity plus what I think of their work.
Since I believe in full disclosure, Ill add an FD line as needed.
The doyen of the field is David Kahn, who practically established it with the
publication of his seminal work The Codebreakers in 1967. Kahn is a fine writer and
professionally trained historian who brings a lifelong interest in codes and ciphers to
the table. He has published many fine books on intelligence NSA buffs will want to
read his biography of Herbert Yardley, a card-playing, womanizing, hard-living
codebreaker and easily the most interesting figure in the annals of U.S. espionage
but The Codebreakers is the place to start. Its purely historical, you wont learn
anything about PRISM in its pages, but its a foundational work you must read and
comprehend if you wish to understand cryptology. When Kahn went to press in 1967,
NSA went into panic mode, fearing any public discussion of SIGINT; three decades
later he was a guest of honor at the Agency. Times change. To top it off, hes a very
nice guy and a gentleman of the old school. (FD: Ive known David for years, and was
he kind enough to donate many of his papers and much of his huge collection of
books on cryptology to NSA, which resides in the National Cryptologic Museum
library, for the benefit of researchers.)
If you want a more academic flavor, I recommend anything written by John Ferris,
who has a deep understanding of SIGINT thats almost impossible to find among those
whove never worked in the spy business. Ferriss work is historical and heavily about
the British, but is superb, indeed indispensable, if you want to understand how
modern cryptology was born in the World Wars. (FD: Ive been acquainted with John
for over twenty years.)
Among more popular writers we have James Bamford, who has been a thorn in NSAs
side since he published The Puzzle Palace in 1982, a gossipy tome that was culled largely
from unclassified Agency newsletters. Bamford claims to be a scrappy outsider, but in
fact he served for three years in the Naval Security Group, the Navys portion of NSA, so
he was a cryptologic insider, something he customarily omits from his bio. Bamfords
writings on NSA, which are considerable, are noted for their quantity, not quality. He
tends to sensationalism and sometimes outright fabrication. Bamford cannot be
considered a reliable source on SIGINT and his methods tend towards the sleazy; before
9/11, when the Cryptologic History Symposium was held inside NSA headquarters,
Bamford used to try to chat up random NSAers, hoping they would tell him secrets.
Smooth. (FD: I dont know Bamford, having only met him once; I was one of the NSAers
he idiotically thought would tell him a whole bunch of TS/SCI.)
Matthew Aid also writes about NSA and related intelligence matters from the lessthan-accurate posture of an outsider. Unlike Bamford, he is a solid researcher who
knows a great deal about SIGINT and speaks with some authority. (Ive endorsed his
book on NSA, though not without reservations, in this review.) Aid should know about
cryptology because he, too, served the Agency in uniform. Back in the 1980s he was an
Air Force enlisted SIGINTer (Russian language analyst) at an Agency field site in the UK.
Unfortunately, his intelligence career ended badly, as he was found to be
impersonating an officer and, worse, was taking classified information home with him;
this resulted in over a year in prison. Understandably, Aid doesnt talk about this much.
Although Aid isnt a hack like Bamford, he tends to criticism of NSA, for reasons that
are not difficult to imagine. (FD: Ive met Aid a couple times, and found him pleasant
and knowledgeable, but I cant say I know him.)
Among insiders who have written things that are accessible to the public, I would
highlight Robert Hanyok, a former CCH colleague whos now retired. He authored
several important works of SIGINT history, particularly on NSA and Vietnam, much of
which has been declassified and merits close attention. Michael Warner, formerly with
CIA and now the Cyber Command historian, is a fine writer and researcher on all
intelligence matters, and has published stuff that you need to read to understand how
the IC works and where NSA fits in. With now-retired NSA counterintelligence guru
Robert Lou Benson, he wrote the seminal work on VENONA which is another mustread. (FD: I know all these guys and was privileged to have Lou Benson as a mentor
during my Agency service.)
Journalists writing about NSA generally dont know what theyre talking about, though
notable exceptions are Scott Shane and Siobhan Gorman, who work hard at
understanding the Agency and what it does. Theyve been writing about NSA since Ed
Snowden was just a kid. The best is Marc Ambinder, who brings serious analysis and a
lot of legwork on SIGINT to the table; he is always worth a read and serves as a sane
antidote to Greenwaldism and related forms of naive nihilism masquerading as
intelligence reportage.
There are plenty of nutty people writing and talking about NSA out there and I
recommend you avoid them all. Above all, disregard Wayne Madsen, who did serve as a
Navy cryptology officer some years ago, but who has left earth orbit altogether and
espouses a conspiratorial worldview that would make Julius Streicher blush, along with
the vicious anti-Semitism to match (this week he wrote about Obamas Rosh
Hashanah war on Syria made out of a tallit prayer shawl). Suffice to say that you will
learn more about what NSA actually does by asking a houseplant or your cat. (FD: Ive
never met the guy but he and his minions have conducted a vicious smear campaign
against me online, including fake sites, and have written to the Naval War College trying
to get me fired: Stay classy, Wayne!)
Thats enough reading to start; as more stuff on NSA gets published and there will be a
torrent of insta-books soon, thanks to Snowden Ill share my two cents on them.
particularly as Putin savors his big win in this round, having humiliated American
intelligence as its never quite been publicly humiliated before. The onetime Chekist in
Putin surely is going to bed at night with a smile these days. There are no former
intelligence officers, Russias president once famously said, and he was also talking
about himself.
But what of the actual espionage losses caused by Ed Snowden? Context matters here,
and although the U.S. media hardly covered it, readers of this blog are aware that last
year saw the unfolding of a spy scandal in Canada that was simply vast in its
implications. Canadian naval officer Jeffrey Delisle for nearly five years before his
detection was regularly passing huge amounts of classified information to Russian
military intelligence (GRU). Every month or so, Delisle would leave his desk in the
intelligence fusion center in Halifax with a memory stick filled with top secret
information to sell to the Russians.
Moreover, Delisle is a trained intelligence officer unlike Snowden, who is no more
than an IT guy with little if any operational intelligence experience and its apparent
that much of what he gave away to GRU was SIGINT from NSA and its Five Eyes
partners (British GCHQ, Canadian CSEC, Australian DSD, New Zealand GCSB). The
Russians seemed to have really cleaned up with this one, and despite efforts from
ministers in Ottawa to downplay what Delisle did, Canadian senior intelligence officials
have made clear that the case is without precedent in its damage and implications, far
beyond Canada.
Simply put, one must wonder, after nearly five years of Delisle selling the Russians all
the Five Eyes TOP SECRET/ SCI data he could get his hands on, how much there really
was about NSA, GCHQ, et al, that Moscow didnt already know. Perhaps Snowden is, if
not exactly a patsy, a none-too-clever fellow Putin today called Ed a strange guy
whose main purpose is causing pain and suffering to Washington, DC. Which, let it be
said, he has done rather well, thanks to the propaganda offensive waged by
Greenwald, Poitras, and their helpers in several countries, with Eds purloined
information, and who have masked their radical activism under the (thin) guise of
post-modern journalism.
Part of a counterintelligence officers job is detecting patterns, linkages between cases,
that normal people dont see. When the large Illegals network run by the Russian Foreign
Intelligence Service (SVR) in the United States was rolled up by the FBI in mid-2010, with
the arrest and expulsion of ten deep-cover SVR agents, Moscow was humiliated, a pain
that Putin seems to have absorbed personally. Illegals, after all, are the jewel in the
crown of Russian HUMINT, an elite cadre of spies. Although the U.S. media mainly
focused on the redheaded vixen Anna Chapman, ignoring what she and her spy-partners
were actually doing in their secret lives, counterintelligence professionals were left with
awkward questions, not least because, in Russian practice, Illegals are useful for
undertaking highly sensitive tasks, including handling truly deep-cover agents working
for Moscow.
To the surprise of absolutely zero veteran counterspies, it soon emerged that the
roll-up of the SVR Illegals network in 2010 set off a molehunt inside U.S intelligence,
including at NSA. There were actually several Russian moles said to be embedded
inside the Intelligence Community, including at least one at NSA. Since there have no
public announcements of the detection or arrest of any Russian moles in the IC, it
appears that those individuals have not been caught.
Thus we are left with the discomforting realization that, between undetected moles,
Delisle, and Snowden, NSA and its sister agencies have been deeply penetrated by
Russian intelligence in recent years. What, then, is the exact role being played by Ed
and his motley crew of anti-secrecy activists who seem hellbent on exposing as
many NSA (and GCHQ) programs as they can?
It is possible that Snowdens appearance on the radar of Russian intelligence
presumably late in 2012, almost certainly through Wikileaks actually represents a
cover mechanism of sorts for Moscow. Tasked now with an enormous damage
assessment and trying to uncover if Snowden had any helpers inside NSA, it seems
unlikely that IC counterintelligence experts will have the resources or manpower
anytime soon to find the Russian moles who may be deeply embedded inside NSA
and related U.S. intelligence agencies.
If that sounds far-fetched, it shouldnt, because Moscow has done exactly this sort of
thing before, with considerable success. Very little can be said with certainty at this
point, though a clearer picture will emerge with time. Suffice to say that experienced
counterintelligence hands, accustomed to living with the vaunted wilderness of
mirrors that comes with playing spygames with Moscow, are asking the right
questions.
In the meantime it would be a step in the right direction for the U.S. and Allied
governments to start treating Wikileaks like the front for hostile intelligence that it
actually is. Right now, President Obama is contemplating bombing Syria and possibly
starting a new war in the Middle East. Surely he can find the strength to call
Wikileaks what it actually is, a far easier thing to achieve.
Wikileaks,
Snowden,
Belarus Connection
and
the
July 6, 2013
After having his first round of asylum applications turned down across the board,
NSA leaker/defector Edward Snowden may at last have found a home. Its been
reported that Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has said his country will offer
asylum to Americas most wanted IT guy, whom no one else seems to want. This may
settle the matter, and Snowden will be able to leave Moscows Sheremetyevo Airport
at last, but the more than minor issue of how Ed will actually get to Venezuela
remains unresolved.
Its worth noting that Maduro, who earlier this week was in Moscow, went home via
Belarus, where he celebrated independence festivities in Minsk with President or as
Maduro called him, Comrade President Aleksandr Lukashenka. Maduros
predecessor, the late Hugo Chavez, visited Belarus five times, which really stood out
because virtually no heads of state visit Minsk these days, thanks to Belaruss awful
record as Europes only repressive dictatorship. There the secret police, still termed
the KGB (it would have cost a fortune to change the letterhead), keeps a lid on
dissent in a way that dismays virtually everyone in Europe. In recent years, Vladimir
Putin, once a strong supporter of the weird Lukashenka neo-Soviet cult, has put some
distance between Moscow and Minsk because nobody outside quasi-Stalinist circles
wants to be publicly associated with Belarus.
Wikileaks, however, is one of the few organizations with kind words about Lukashenka
which, given the awful record of the Belarusian KGB against the press and dissidents is
an odd position for an anti-secrecy group to take and heres where things get
interesting. The key figure in all this is Israel Shamir, who is one of the oddest and
shadiest characters youd ever want to meet. Importantly, hes been telling everyone
for years that hes the Wikileaks representative for Russia and Belarus. He has gone to
bat for the latter country and has been involved in discrediting Belarusian dissidents
which, given how badly Minsk treats such people, is no trivial matter.
So who is Israel Shamir? Thats not an easy question to answer with much certainty. His
official biography states that he was born in the Soviet Union in 1947 and emigrated to
Israel in 1969, but little of his curriculum vitae stands up to detailed scrutiny. He admits
to having something like a half-dozen different identities, complete with aliases. Of
greatest interest here is that, before he became famous for his Wikileaks links, he was
best known as a neo-Nazi holocaust denier in European circles. Which is a pretty rare
thing for a Jew and Israeli citizen to get mixed up in. Shamir, operating under several
names, is noted for his anti-Semitic vitriol and is fond of extolling the Protocols of the
Elders of Zion and hanging out with Nordic neo-Nazis. His views are so strange and
vehement that many have wondered if Shamirs is actually an agent provocateur on
behalf of some intelligence service. Jewish scholar Norman Finkelstein, known for his
own pro-Palestinian views, who crossed paths with Shamir more than once, called him
a maniac, adding, He has invented his entire personal
history. Nothing he says about himself is true. In all, Shamirs a pretty odd choice as
Wikileaks go-to guy for Russia.
The role of Shamir in Wikileaks, as well as his bizarre views, began to get noticed in
late 2010, with an expose in Reason that asked just what was going on here, quoting
Shamir as calling Jews a virus in human form and boasting of his Holocaust denial.
Importantly, that piece had an admission by Kristinn Hrafnsson, Wikileaks
spokesman, when asked directly about the groups links with Shamir: Yes. Yes, he is
associated with us.
Not surprisingly, awkward questions followed including in The Guardian, not exactly a
right-wing rag. Reports followed all links here are to The Guardian, which given that
newspapers current involvement with the Snowden case should indicate something
that Shamir, is indeed deeply involved in the Wikileaks operation: As Adam,
Shamir (along with his Swedish son, a well-known anti-Semitic activist), has a key role
in Wikileaks decisions, he was the editor of the groups Russian-related US
diplomatic cables that were leaked by PFC Bradley Manning, and perhaps most
distastefully, he was involved in a smear campaign against the Swedish women who
accused Julian Assange of rape (the reason he remains holed up in the Ecuadorian
embassy in London).
Sensing it had a PR problem on its hands, Wikileaks made a few public statements on
its employee-friend-whatever Shamir. A Wikileaks press release on 3 February 2011
fudged the issue, observing that it was almost certainly false that Shamir is actually
an employee of the group, while noting that he was being paid by several (unnamed)
Russian press outfits; in all, this raised more questions than answers about who Shamir
is really working for. Wikileaks followed up with another press release on 1 March
2011, stating, Israel Shamir has never worked or volunteered for WikiLeaks, in any
manner, whatsoever. This statement seems patently untrue, given what is known
about Shamirs activities, but this remains the official Wikileaks line on this very
strange man.
I discovered this again last night, when I was pinged by Jacob Applebaum, the
American hacktivist and Wikileaks inner circle member. A Twitter spat followed, in
which I repeatedly asked Applebaum to clarify the groups relationship with Shamir,
and he refused to do so beyond citing the 1 March 2011 press release.
Unfortunately, Shamir never seems to have gotten the memo that he and Wikileaks
have nothing to do with each other. He divides his time between Israel, Sweden, and
Russia whos paying for all this, by the way? Wikileaks seems to have limited funds
and pops up in the media in those countries (in the first two countries not normally in a
flattering manner). He is prominent in the country of his birth, and he is easy to find in
the Russian media, denouncing US neo-imperialism and praising Wikileaks and, most
recently, extolling the virtues of Edward Snowden. Of critical importance is the fact that
Shamir regularly is identified in the Russian media as a Wikileaks representative and
speaks as if he has the groups imprimatur.
Most recently, on 4 July 2013 exactly two days ago Shamir was interviewed in the
Russian newspaper Zavrta (which has a left-wing nationalist orientation; its not a
unambiguous. The content of the interview is classic Shamir, including fawning praise
of Snowden, whom he compares favorably with Kim Philby. I dont think he was
being ironic there.
The bottom line is Israel Shamir continues to represent himself as a member of
Wikileaks, indeed he usually implies hes in the groups inner circle. More than a few
people have questioned Shamirs mental stability, so it is possible that Wikileaks has
indeed cut ties with him and Shamir is simply lying. But given Wikileaks less than
transparent track record on this matter, more than Applebaums obfuscations is
required. Someone is clearly lying here, its important to know who.
Its especially important given the fact that Wikileaks is playing a leading role in the
Snowden case, to the dismay of some of Eds admirers and even members of his
family. Not to mention that Snowden, as of this writing, is still in Moscow. One need
not be a counterintelligence guru to have serious questions about Shamir and
Wikileaks here. It may be a much bigger part of the story than it appears to the naked
eye.
[N.B. The opinions expressed here are the authors alone.]
What NSA and its partners do is done by the intelligence services of all reasonably
advanced countries. One of the strange and discomforting things about the current
Snowden sensation, at least to this historically-minded ex-spook, is the specter of a
younger generation that finds any espionage intrinsically illegitimate and immoral.
Here we have the fusing of techno-utopianism and an Assange-like belief that any
state secrecy is unacceptable: in all, a strange brew of naivete and nihilism.
The historical truth, of course, is that states have been performing espionage as long as
there have been anything like states; its not called the Second Oldest Profession for
nothing. States have regarded espionage running and catching spies, intercepting
other states messages while protecting your own as core state business for
millennia, long before anybody thought states should provide education, pensions,
health care, or even police. Espionage is not going away anytime soon.
Ed Snowden has brought attention to issues of domestic surveillance that, as readers of
this blog will know, Ive advocated for some time. Having witnessed DNI Clapper and
DIRNSA Alexander at best flub answers to critical questions before Congress, its clear
that major scrutiny is coming, and ought to. Regrettably Snowdens activities, which
every day make him less a whistleblower and more a traitor and possible defector, not
least because from his Chinese perch he seems to object to US surveillance not
surveillance per se, may actually detract from that important and necessary debate.
Citizens in all countries ought to hold their governments accountable regarding
domestic intelligence activities, which should be regulated by laws and monitored
through oversight. But campaigning to abolish espionage altogether indicates a lack
of seriousness about weighty matters of statecraft and secrecy that demand rigor
and the utmost seriousness.
Watch this space, much more is coming ....