Why Google made the NSA
Inside the secret network behind mass surveillance, endless war,
and Skynet—
part 2
by Nafeez
Ahmed
INSURGE INTELLIGENCE, a new crowd-funded investigative journalism project, breaks the
exclusive story of how the United States intelligence community funded,
nurtured and incubated Google as part of a drive to dominate the world through
control of information. Seed-funded by the
NSA and CIA, Google was merely the
first among a plethora of private sector start-ups co-opted by US intelligence
to retain ‘information superiority.’
The origins of this ingenious
strategy trace back to a secret Pentagon-sponsored group, that for the last two
decades has functioned as a bridge between the US government and elites across
the business, industry, finance, corporate, and media sectors. The group has
allowed some of the most powerful special interests in corporate America to
systematically circumvent democratic accountability and the rule of law to
influence government policies, as well as public opinion in the US and around
the world. The results have been catastrophic: NSA mass surveillance, a
permanent state of global war, and a new initiative to transform the US
military into Skynet.
READ PART ONE
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free in the public interest, and was enabled by crowdfunding. I’d like to thank
my amazing community of patrons for their support, which gave me the
opportunity to work on this in-depth investigation. Please support independent, investigative journalism for the global
commons.
Mass
surveillance is about control. It’s promulgators may well claim, and even
believe, that it is about control for the greater good, a control that is needed
to keep a cap on disorder, to be fully vigilant to the next threat. But in a
context of rampant political corruption, widening economic inequalities, and
escalating resource stress due to climate change and energy volatility, mass
surveillance can become a tool of power to merely perpetuate itself, at the
public’s expense.
A major
function of mass surveillance that is often overlooked is that of knowing the
adversary to such an extent that they can be manipulated into defeat. The
problem is that the adversary is not just terrorists. It’s you and me. To this
day, the role of information warfare as propaganda has been in full swing,
though systematically ignored by much of the media.
Here, INSURGE INTELLIGENCE exposes how the
Pentagon Highlands Forum’s co-optation of tech giants like Google to pursue
mass surveillance, has played a key role in secret efforts to manipulate the
media as part of an information war against the American government, the
American people, and the rest of the world: to justify endless war, and
ceaseless military expansionism.
The
war machine
In
September 2013, the website of the Montery Institute for International Studies’
Cyber Security Initiative (MIIS CySec) posted a final version of a paper on ‘cyber-deterrence’ by CIA consultant
Jeffrey Cooper, vice president of the US defense contractor SAIC and a founding member of the Pentagon’s Highlands
Forum. The paper was presented to then NSA director Gen. Keith Alexander at a
Highlands Forum session titled ‘Cyber Commons, Engagement and Deterrence’ in
2010.
Gen. Keith Alexander
(middle), who served as director of the NSA and chief of the Central Security
Service from 2005 to 2014, as well as commander of the US Cyber Command from
2010 to 2014, at the 2010 Highlands Forum session on cyber-deterrence
MIIS CySec
is formally partnered with the Pentagon’s Highlands Forum through an MoU signed
between the provost and Forum president Richard O’Neill, while the initiative
itself is funded by George C. Lee: the Goldman Sachs executive who led the
billion dollar valuations of Facebook, Google, eBay, and other tech companies.
Cooper’s
eye-opening paper is no longer available at the MIIS site, but a final version
of it is available via the logs of a public national security conference hosted by the
American Bar Association. Currently, Cooper is chief innovation officer at
SAIC/Leidos, which is among a consortium of defense technology firms including
Booz Allen Hamilton and others contracted to develop NSA surveillance
capabilities.
The
Highlands Forum briefing for the NSA chief was commissioned under contract by the undersecretary of defense
for intelligence, and based on concepts developed at previous Forum meetings.
It was presented to Gen. Alexander at a “closed session” of the Highlands Forum
moderated by MIIS Cysec director, Dr. Itamara Lochard, at the Center for
Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington DC.
SAIC/Leidos’ Jeffrey
Cooper (middle), a founding member of the Pentagon’s Highlands Forum, listening
to Phil Venables (right), senior partner at Goldman Sachs, at the 2010 Forum
session on cyber-deterrence at the CSIS
Like
Rumsfeld’s IO roadmap, Cooper’s NSA briefing described “digital information
systems” as both a “great source of vulnerability” and “powerful tools and weapons”
for “national security.” He advocated the need for US cyber intelligence to
maximize “in-depth knowledge” of potential and actual adversaries, so they can
identify “every potential leverage point” that can be exploited for deterrence
or retaliation. “Networked deterrence” requires the US intelligence community
to develop “deep understanding and specific knowledge about the particular
networks involved and their patterns of linkages, including types and strengths
of bonds,” as well as using cognitive and behavioural science to help predict
patterns. His paper went on to essentially set out a theoretical architecture
for modelling data obtained from surveillance and social media mining on
potential “adversaries” and “counterparties.”
A year
after this briefing with the NSA chief, Michele Weslander Quaid — another Highlands Forum delegate — joined Google to become chief technology officer, leaving
her senior role in the Pentagon advising the undersecretary of defense for
intelligence. Two months earlier, the Defense Science Board (DSB) Task Force on Defense Intelligence published
its report on Counterinsurgency
(COIN), Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (IRS) Operations. Quaid
was among the government intelligence experts who advised and briefed the
Defense Science Board Task Force in preparing the report. Another expert who
briefed the Task Force was Highlands Forum veteran Linton Wells. The DSB report
itself had been commissioned by Bush appointee James Clapper, then
undersecretary of defense for intelligence — who had also commissioned Cooper’s
Highlands Forum briefing to Gen. Alexander. Clapper is now Obama’s Director of
National Intelligence, in which capacity he lied under oath to Congress by
claiming in March 2013 that the NSA does not collect any data at all on
American citizens.
Michele
Quaid’s track record across the US military intelligence community was to
transition agencies into using web tools and cloud technology. The imprint of
her ideas are evident in key parts of the DSB Task Force report, which
described its purpose as being to “influence investment decisions” at the
Pentagon “by recommending appropriate intelligence capabilities to assess
insurgencies, understand a population in their environment, and support COIN
operations.”
The report
named 24 countries in South and Southeast Asia, North and West Africa, the
Middle East and South America, which would pose “possible COIN challenges” for
the US military in coming years. These included Pakistan, Mexico, Yemen,
Nigeria, Guatemala, Gaza/West Bank, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, among other
“autocratic regimes.” The report argued that “economic crises, climate change,
demographic pressures, resource scarcity, or poor governance could cause these
states (or others) to fail or become so weak that they become targets for
aggressors/insurgents.” From there, the “global information infrastructure” and
“social media” can rapidly “amplify the speed, intensity, and momentum of
events” with regional implications. “Such areas could become sanctuaries from
which to launch attacks on the US homeland, recruit personnel, and finance,
train, and supply operations.”
The
imperative in this context is to increase the military’s capacity for “left of
bang” operations — before the need for a major armed forces commitment — to avoid insurgencies, or pre-empt them while still in
incipient phase. The report goes on to conclude that “the Internet and social
media are critical sources of social network analysis data in societies that
are not only literate, but also connected to the Internet.” This requires
“monitoring the blogosphere and other social media across many different
cultures and languages” to prepare for “population-centric operations.”
The
Pentagon must also increase its capacity for “behavioral modeling and
simulation” to “better understand and anticipate the actions of a population”
based on “foundation data on populations, human networks, geography, and other
economic and social characteristics.” Such “population-centric operations” will
also “increasingly” be needed in “nascent resource conflicts, whether based on
water-crises, agricultural stress, environmental stress, or rents” from mineral
resources. This must include monitoring “population demographics as an organic
part of the natural resource framework.”
Other areas
for augmentation are “overhead video surveillance,” “high resolution terrain
data,” “cloud computing capability,” “data fusion” for all forms of intelligence
in a “consistent spatio-temporal framework for organizing and indexing the
data,” developing “social science frameworks” that can “support spatio-temporal
encoding and analysis,” “distributing multi-form biometric authentication
technologies [“such as fingerprints, retina scans and DNA samples”] to the
point of service of the most basic administrative processes” in order to “tie
identity to all an individual’s transactions.” In addition, the academy must be
brought in to help the Pentagon develop “anthropological, socio-cultural,
historical, human geographical, educational, public health, and many other
types of social and behavioral science data and information” to develop “a deep
understanding of populations.”
A few
months after joining Google, Quaid represented the company in August 2011 at
the Pentagon’s Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) Customer and Industry Forum. The forum would provide “the Services,
Combatant Commands, Agencies, coalition forces” the “opportunity to directly
engage with industry on innovative technologies to enable and ensure
capabilities in support of our Warfighters.” Participants in the event have
been integral to efforts to create a “defense enterprise information
environment,” defined as “an integrated platform which includes the network,
computing, environment, services, information assurance, and NetOps
capabilities,” enabling warfighters to “connect, identify themselves, discover
and share information, and collaborate across the full spectrum of military
operations.” Most of the forum panelists were DoD officials, except for just
four industry panelists including Google’s Quaid.
DISA
officials have attended the Highlands Forum, too — such as Paul
Friedrichs, a technical director and chief engineer of DISA’s Office
of the Chief Information Assurance Executive.
Knowledge
is Power
Given all
this it is hardly surprising that in 2012, a few months after Highlands Forum
co-chair Regina Dugan left DARPA to join Google as a senior executive, then NSA
chief Gen. Keith Alexander was emailing Google’s
founding executive Sergey Brin to discuss information sharing for national
security. In those emails, obtained under Freedom of Information by
investigative journalist Jason Leopold, Gen. Alexander described Google as a
“key member of [the US military’s] Defense Industrial Base,” a position Michele
Quaid was apparently consolidating. Brin’s jovial relationship with the former
NSA chief now makes perfect sense given that Brin had been in contact with
representatives of the CIA and NSA, who partly funded and oversaw his creation
of the Google search engine, since the mid-1990s.
In July
2014, Quaid spoke at a US Army panel on the creation of a “rapid acquisition
cell” to advance the US Army’s “cyber capabilities” as part of the Force 2025 transformation initiative. She told Pentagon officials that “many of the Army’s
2025 technology goals can be realized with commercial technology available or
in development today,” re-affirming that “industry is ready to partner with the
Army in supporting the new paradigm.” Around the same time, most of the media
was trumpeting the idea that Google was trying to distance itself from Pentagon funding, but in
reality, Google has switched tactics to independently develop commercial
technologies which would have military applications the Pentagon’s
transformation goals.
Yet Quaid
is hardly the only point-person in Google’s relationship with the US military intelligence
community.
One year
after Google bought the satellite mapping software Keyhole from CIA venture
capital firm In-Q-Tel in 2004, In-Q-Tel’s director of technical assessment Rob
Painter — who played a key role in In-Q-Tel’s Keyhole investment in the
first place — moved to Google. At In-Q-Tel, Painter’s work focused on
identifying, researching and evaluating “new start-up technology firms that
were believed to offer tremendous value to the CIA, the National
Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, and the Defense Intelligence Agency.” Indeed,
the NGA had confirmed that its intelligence obtained via Keyhole was used by
the NSA to support US operations in Iraq from 2003 onwards.
A former US
Army special operations intelligence officer, Painter’s new job at Google as of
July 2005 was federal manager of what Keyhole was to become: Google Earth
Enterprise. By 2007, Painter had become Google’s federal chief technologist.
That year,
Painter told the Washington Post that
Google was “in the beginning stages” of selling advanced secret versions of its products to the US
government. “Google has ramped up its sales force in the Washington area in the
past year to adapt its technology products to the needs of the military,
civilian agencies and the intelligence community,” the Post reported. The Pentagon was already using a version of Google
Earth developed in partnership with Lockheed Martin to “display information for
the military on the ground in Iraq,” including “mapping out displays of key
regions of the country” and outlining “Sunni and Shiite neighborhoods in
Baghdad, as well as US and Iraqi military bases in the city. Neither Lockheed
nor Google would say how the geospatial agency uses the data.” Google aimed to
sell the government new “enhanced versions of Google Earth” and “search engines
that can be used internally by agencies.”
White House
records leaked in 2010 showed that Google
executives had held several meetings with senior US National Security Council
officials. Alan Davidson, Google’s government affairs director, had at least
three meetings with officials of the National Security Council in 2009,
including White House senior director for Russian affairs Mike McFaul and
Middle East advisor Daniel Shapiro. It also emerged from a Google patent
application that the company had deliberately been collecting ‘payload’ data
from private wifi networks that would enable the identification of “geolocations.”
In the same year, we now know, Google had signed an agreement with the NSA
giving the agency open-ended access to the personal information of its users,
and its hardware and software, in the name of cyber security — agreements that Gen. Alexander was busy replicating with
hundreds of telecoms CEOs around the country.
Thus, it is
not just Google that is a key contributor and foundation of the US
military-industrial complex: it is the entire Internet, and the wide range of
private sector companies — many nurtured and funded under the mantle of the US
intelligence community (or powerful financiers embedded in that community) — which sustain the Internet and the telecoms infrastructure;
it is also the myriad of start-ups selling cutting edge technologies to
the CIA’s venture firm In-Q-Tel, where they can then be adapted and advanced
for applications across the military intelligence community. Ultimately, the
global surveillance apparatus and the classified tools used by agencies like
the NSA to administer it, have been almost entirely made by external
researchers and private contractors like Google, which operate outside the
Pentagon.
This
structure, mirrored in the workings of the Pentagon’s Highlands Forum, allows
the Pentagon to rapidly capitalize on technological innovations it would
otherwise miss, while also keeping the private sector at arms length, at least
ostensibly, to avoid uncomfortable questions about what such technology is
actually being used for.
But isn’t
it obvious, really? The Pentagon is about war, whether overt or covert. By
helping build the technological surveillance infrastructure of the NSA, firms
like Google are complicit in what the military-industrial complex does best:
kill for cash.
As the
nature of mass surveillance suggests, its target is not merely terrorists, but
by extension, ‘terrorism suspects’ and ‘potential terrorists,’ the upshot being
that entire populations — especially political activists — must be targeted by US intelligence
surveillance to identify active and future threats, and to be vigilant against
hypothetical populist insurgencies both at home and abroad.
Predictive analytics and behavioural profiles play a pivotal role here.
Mass
surveillance and data-mining also now has a distinctive operational purpose in assisting with the lethal
execution of special operations, selecting targets for the CIA’s drone strike
kill lists via dubious algorithms, for instance, along with providing
geospatial and other information for combatant commanders on land, air and sea,
among many other functions. A single social media post on Twitter or Facebook
is enough to trigger being placed on secret terrorism watch-lists solely due to
a vaguely defined hunch or suspicion; and can potentially even land a suspect
on a kill list.
The push
for indiscriminate, comprehensive mass surveillance by the military-industrial
complex — encompassing the Pentagon, intelligence agencies, defense
contractors, and supposedly friendly tech giants like Google and Facebook — is therefore not an end in itself, but an instrument of
power, whose goal is self-perpetuation. But there is also a self-rationalizing
justification for this goal: while being great for the military-industrial
complex, it is also, supposedly, great for everyone else.
The
‘long war’
No better
illustration of the truly chauvinistic, narcissistic, and self-congratulatory
ideology of power at the heart of the military-industrial complex is a book by
long-time Highlands Forum delegate, Dr. Thomas Barnett, The Pentagon’s New Map. Barnett was assistant for strategic futures
in the Pentagon’s Office of Force Transformation from 2001 to 2003, and had
been recommended to Richard O’Neill by his boss Vice Admiral Arthur Cebrowski.
Apart from becoming a New York Times bestseller,
Barnett’s book had been read far and wide in the US military, by senior defense
officials in Washington and combatant commanders operating on the ground in the
Middle East.
Barnett
first attended the Pentagon Highlands Forum in 1998, then was invited to
deliver a briefing about his work at the Forum on December 7th 2004, which was
attended by senior Pentagon officials, energy experts, internet entrepreneurs,
and journalists. Barnett received a glowing review in the Washington
Post from his Highlands Forum buddy David Ignatius a week later, and an
endorsement from another Forum friend, Thomas Friedman, both of which helped
massively boost his credibility and readership.
Barnett’s
vision is neoconservative to the root. He sees the world as divided into
essentially two realms: The Core, which consists of advanced
countries playing by the rules of economic globalization (the US, Canada, UK,
Europe and Japan) along with developing countries committed to getting there
(Brazil, Russia, India, China, and some others); and the rest of the world,
which is The Gap, a disparate wilderness of dangerous and lawless countries
defined fundamentally by being “disconnected” from the wonders of
globalization. This includes most of the Middle East and Africa, large swathes
of South America, as well as much of Central Asia and Eastern Europe. It is the
task of the United States to “shrink The Gap,” by spreading the cultural and
economic “rule-set” of globalization that characterizes The Core, and by
enforcing security worldwide to enable that “rule-set” to spread.
These two
functions of US power are captured by Barnett’s concepts of “Leviathan” and
“System Administrator.” The former is about rule-setting to facilitate the
spread of capitalist markets, regulated via military and civilian law. The
latter is about projecting military force into The Gap in an open-ended global
mission to enforce security and engage in nation-building. Not “rebuilding,” he
is keen to emphasize, but building “new nations.”
For
Barnett, the Bush administration’s 2002 introduction of the Patriot Act at
home, with its crushing of habeas corpus, and the National Security Strategy
abroad, with its opening up of unilateral, pre-emptive war, represented the
beginning of the necessary re-writing of rule-sets in The Core to embark on
this noble mission. This is the only way
for the US to achieve security, writes Barnett, because as long as The Gap
exists, it will always be a source of lawless violence and disorder. One
paragraph in particular sums up his vision:
“America as
global cop creates security. Security creates common rules. Rules attract
foreign investment. Investment creates infrastructure. Infrastructure creates
access to natural resources. Resources create economic growth. Growth creates
stability. Stability creates markets. And once you’re a growing, stable part of
the global market, you’re part of the Core. Mission accomplished.”
Much of
what Barnett predicted would need to happen to fulfill this vision, despite its
neoconservative bent, is still being pursued under Obama. In the near future,
Barnett had predicted, US military forces will be dispatched beyond Iraq and
Afghanistan to places like Uzbekistan, Djibouti, Azerbaijan, Northwest Africa,
Southern Africa and South America.
Barnett’s
Pentagon briefing was greeted with near universal enthusiasm. The Forum had
even purchased copies of his book and had them distributed to all Forum
delegates, and in May 2005, Barnett was invited back to participate in an
entire Forum themed around his “SysAdmin” concept.
The
Highlands Forum has thus played a leading role in defining the Pentagon’s
entire conceptualization of the ‘war on terror.’ Irving Wladawsky-Berger, a
retired IMB vice president who co-chaired the President’s Information
Technology Advisory Committee from 1997 to 2001, described his experience of one 2007 Forum
meeting in telling terms:
“Then there
is the War on Terror, which DoD has started to refer to as the Long War, a term
that I first heard at the Forum. It seems very appropriate to describe the
overall conflict in which we now find ourselves. This is a truly global
conflict… the conflicts we are now in have much more of the feel of a battle of
civilizations or cultures trying to destroy our very way of life and impose
their own.”
The problem
is that outside this powerful Pentagon-hosted clique, not everyone else agrees.
“I’m not convinced that Barnett’s cure would be any better than the disease,” wrote Dr. Karen Kwiatowski, a former senior
Pentagon analyst in the Near East and South Asia section, who blew the whistle
on how her department deliberately manufactured false information in the run-up
to the Iraq War. “It would surely cost far more in American liberty,
constitutional democracy and blood than it would be worth.”
Yet the
equation of “shrinking The Gap” with sustaining the national security of The
Core leads to a slippery slope. It means that if the US is prevented from
playing this leadership role as “global cop,” The Gap will widen, The Core will
shrink, and the entire global order could unravel. By this logic, the US simply
cannot afford government or public opinion to reject the legitimacy of its
mission. If it did so, it would allow The Gap to grow out of control,
undermining The Core, and potentially destroying it, along with The Core’s protector,
America. Therefore, “shrinking The Gap” is not just a security imperative: it
is such an existential priority, that it must be backed up with information war
to demonstrate to the world the legitimacy of the entire project.
Based on
O’Neill’s principles of information warfare as articulated in his 1989 US Navy
brief, the targets of information war are not just populations in The Gap, but
domestic populations in The Core, and their governments: including the US
government. That secret brief, which according to former senior US intelligence
official John Alexander was read by the Pentagon’s top leadership, argued that
information war must be targeted at: adversaries to convince them of their
vulnerability; potential partners around the world so they accept “the cause as
just”; and finally, civilian populations and the political leadership so they
believe that “the cost” in blood and treasure is worth it.
Barnett’s
work was plugged by the Pentagon’s Highlands Forum because it fit the bill, in
providing a compelling ‘feel good’ ideology for the US military-industrial
complex.
But
neoconservative ideology, of course, hardly originated with Barnett, himself a
relatively small player, even though his work was extremely influential
throughout the Pentagon. The regressive thinking of senior officials involved
in the Highlands Forum is visible from long before 9/11, which was ceased upon
by actors linked to the Forum as a powerful enabling force that legitimized the
increasingly aggressive direction of US foreign and intelligence policies.
Yoda and
the Soviets
The
ideology represented by the Highlands Forum can be gleaned from long before its
establishment in 1994, at a time when Andrew ‘Yoda’ Marshall’s ONA was the
primary locus of Pentagon activity on future planning.
A
widely-held myth promulgated by national security journalists over the years is
that the ONA’s reputation as the Pentagon’s resident oracle machine was down to
the uncanny analytical foresight of its director Marshall. Supposedly, he was
among the few who made the prescient recognition that the Soviet threat had
been overblown by the US intelligence community. He had, the story goes, been a
lone, but relentless voice inside the Pentagon, calling on policymakers to
re-evaluate their projections of the USSR’s military might.
Except the
story is not true. The ONA was not about sober threat analysis, but about
paranoid threat projection justifying military expansionism. Foreign Policy’s Jeffrey Lewis points out that far from offering a
voice of reason calling for a more balanced assessment of Soviet military
capabilities, Marshall tried to downplay ONA findings that rejected the hype
around an imminent Soviet threat. Having commissioned a study concluding that
the US had overestimated Soviet aggressiveness, Marshall circulated it with a
cover note declaring himself “unpersuaded” by its findings. Lewis charts how
Marshall’s threat projection mind-set extended to commissioning absurd research
supporting staple neocon narratives about the (non-existent) Saddam-al-Qaeda
link, and even the notorious report by a RAND consultant calling for re-drawing
the map of the Middle East, presented to the Pentagon’s Defense Policy Board on
the invitation of Richard Perle in 2002.
Investigative
journalist Jason Vest similarly found from Pentagon sources
that during the Cold War, Marshall had long hyped the Soviet threat, and played
a key role in giving the neoconservative pressure group, the Committee on the
Present Danger, access to classified CIA intelligence data to re-write the National Intelligence Estimate on Soviet
Military Intentions. This was a precursor to the manipulation of
intelligence after 9/11 to justify the invasion and occupation of Iraq. Former
ONA staffers confirmed that Marshall had been belligerent about an imminent
Soviet threat “until the very end.” Ex-CIA sovietologist Melvin Goodman, for
instance, recalled that Marshall was also instrumental in pushing for the
Afghan mujahideen to be provided with Stinger missiles — a move which made the war even more brutal, encouraging the
Russians to use scorched earth tactics.
Enron, the
Taliban and Iraq
The
post-Cold War period saw the Pentagon’s creation of the Highlands Forum in 1994
under the wing of former defense secretary William Perry — a former CIA director and early advocate of neocon ideas
like preventive war. Surprisingly, the Forum’s dubious role as a
government-industry bridge can be clearly discerned in relation to Enron’s
flirtations with the US government. Just as the Forum had crafted the
Pentagon’s intensifying policies on mass surveillance, it simultaneously fed
directly into the strategic thinking that culminating in the wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
On November
7th 2000, George W. Bush ‘won’ the US presidential elections. Enron and its
employees had given over $1 million to the Bush campaign in total.
That included contributing $10,500 to Bush’s Florida recount committee, and a
further $300,000 for the inaugural celebrations afterwards. Enron also provided
corporate jets to shuttle Republican lawyers
around Florida and Washington lobbying on behalf of Bush for the December
recount. Federal election documents later showed that since 1989, Enron had
made a total of $5.8 million in campaign donations, 73 percent to Republicans
and 27 percent to Democrats — with as many as 15 senior Bush
administration officials owning stock in Enron, including defense
secretary Donald Rumsfeld, senior advisor Karl Rove, and army secretary Thomas
White.
Yet just
one day before that controversial election, Pentagon Highlands Forum founding
president Richard O’Neill wrote to Enron CEO, Kenneth Lay, inviting him to give
a presentation at the Forum on modernizing the Pentagon and the Army. The email
from O’Neill to Lay was released as part of the Enron Corpus, the emails
obtained by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, but has remained unknown until
now.
The email
began “On behalf of Assistant Secretary of Defense (C3I) and DoD CIO Arthur
Money,” and invited Lay “to participate in the Secretary of Defense’s Highlands
Forum,” which O’Neill described as “a cross-disciplinary group of eminent
scholars, researchers, CEO’s/CIO’s/CTO’s from industry, and leaders from the
media, the arts and the professions, who have met over the past six years to
examine areas of emerging interest to all of us.” He added that Forum sessions
include “seniors from the White House, Defense, and other agencies of
government (we limit government participation to about 25%).”
Here,
O’Neill reveals that the Pentagon Highlands Forum was, fundamentally, about
exploring not just the goals of government, but the interests of participating
industry leaders like Enron. The Pentagon, O’Neill went on, wanted Lay to feed
into “the search for information/ transformation strategies for the Department
of Defense (and government in general),” particularly “from a business
perspective (transformation, productivity, competitive advantage).” He offered
high praise of Enron as “a remarkable example of transformation in a highly
rigid, regulated industry, that has created a new model and new markets.”
O’Neill
made clear that the Pentagon wanted Enron to play a pivotal role in the DoD’s
future, not just in the creation of “an operational strategy which has
information superiority,” but also in relation to the DoD’s “enormous global
business enterprise which can benefit from many of the best practices and ideas
from industry.”
“ENRON is
of great interest to us,” he reaffirmed. “What we learn from you may help the
Department of Defense a great deal as it works to build a new strategy. I hope
that you have time on your busy schedule to join us for as much of the
Highlands Forum as you can attend and speak with the group.”
That
Highlands Forum meeting was attended by senior White House and US intelligence
officials, including CIA deputy director Joan A. Dempsey, who had previously
served as assistant defense secretary for intelligence, and in 2003 was
appointed by Bush as executive director of the President’s Foreign Intelligence
Advisory Board, in which capacity she praised extensive information sharing by
the NSA and NGA after 9/11. She went on to become executive vice president at Booz
Allen Hamilton, a major Pentagon contractor in Iraq and Afghanistan
that, among other things, created the Coalition Provisional Authority’s database to track what we now know were highly corrupt reconstruction projects in Iraq.
Enron’s
relationship with the Pentagon had already been in full swing the previous
year. Thomas White, then vice chair of Enron energy services, had used his
extensive US military connections to secure a prototype deal at Fort Hamilton
to privatize the power supply of army bases. Enron was the only bidder for the
deal. The following year, after Enron’s CEO was invited to the Highlands Forum,
White gave his first speech in June just “two weeks after he
became secretary of the Army,” where he “vowed to speed up the awarding of such
contracts,” along with further “rapid privatization” of the Army’s energy
services. “Potentially, Enron could benefit from the speedup in awarding
contracts, as could others seeking the business,” observed USA Today.
That month,
on the authority of defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld — who himself held significant shares in Enron — Bush’s Pentagon invited another Enron executive and one of
Enron’s senior external financial advisors to attend a further secret Highlands
Forum session.
An email
from Richard O’Neill dated June 22nd, obtained via the Enron Corpus, showed
that Steven Kean, then executive vice president and chief of staff of Enron,
was due to give another Highlands presentation on Monday 25th. “We are
approaching the Secretary of Defense-sponsored Highlands Forum and very much
looking forward to your participation,” wrote O’Neill, promising Kean that he
would be “the centerpiece of discussion. Enron’s experience is quite important
to us as we seriously consider transformative change in the Department of
Defense.”
Steven Kean
is now president and COO (and incoming CEO) of Kinder Morgan, one of the
largest energy companies in North America, and a major supporter of the
controversial Keystone XL pipeline project.
Due to
attend the same Highlands Forum session with Kean was Richard Foster, then a
senior partner at the financial consultancy McKinsey. “I have given copies of
Dick Foster’s new book, Creative
Destruction, to the Deputy Secretary of Defense as well as the Assistant
Secretary,” said O’Neill in his email, “and the Enron case that he outlines makes
for important discussion. We intend to hand out copies to the participants at
the Forum.”
Foster’s
firm, McKinsey, had provided strategic financial advice to Enron since the mid-1980s.
Joe Skilling, who in February 2001 became Enron CEO while Kenneth Lay moved to
chair, had been head of McKinsey’s energy consulting business before joining
Enron in 1990.
McKinsey
and then partner Richard Foster were intimately involved in crafting the core
Enron financial management strategies responsible for
the company’s rapid, but fraudulent, growth. While McKinsey has always denied
being aware of the dodgy accounting that led to Enron’s demise, internal
company documents showed that Foster had attended an Enron finance committee
meeting a month before the Highlands Forum session to discuss the “need for
outside private partnerships to help drive the company’s explosive growth” — the very investment partnerships responsible for the
collapse of Enron.
McKinsey documents showed that the firm was “fully aware
of Enron’s extensive use of off-balance-sheet funds.” As The Independent’s economics editor Ben Chu remarks, “McKinsey fully endorsed the
dubious accounting methods,” which led to the inflation of Enron’s market
valuation and “that caused the company to implode in 2001.”
Indeed,
Foster himself had personally attended six Enron board meetings from October 2000 to
October 2001. That period roughly coincided with Enron’s growing influence on
the Bush administration’s energy policies, and the Pentagon’s planning for
Afghanistan and Iraq.
But Foster
was also a regular attendee at the Pentagon Highlands Forum — his LinkedIn profile describes him as member of the Forum
since 2000, the year he ramped up engagement with Enron. He also delivered a
presentation at the inaugural Island Forum in Singapore in 2002.
Enron’s
involvement in the Cheney Energy Task Force appears to have been linked to the
Bush administration’s 2001 planning for both the invasions of Afghanistan and
Iraq, motivated by control of oil. As noted by Prof. Richard Falk, a former
board member of Human Rights Watch and ex-UN investigator, Enron’s Kenneth Lay
“was the main confidential consultant relied upon by Vice President Dick Cheney
during the highly secretive process of drafting a report outlining a national energy
policy, widely regarded as a key element in the US approach to foreign policy
generally and the Arab world in particular.”
The
intimate secret meetings between senior Enron executives and high-level US
government officials via the Pentagon Highlands Forum, from November 2000 to
June 2001, played a central role in establishing and cementing the increasingly
symbiotic link between Enron and Pentagon planning. The Forum’s role was, as
O’Neill has always said, to function as an ideas lab to explore the mutual
interests of industry and government.
Enron and
Pentagon war planning
In February
2001, when Enron executives including Kenneth Lay began participating
concertedly in the Cheney Energy Task Force, a classified National
Security Council document instructed NSC staffers to work with the task force
in “melding” previously separate issues: “operational policies towards rogue
states” and “actions regarding the capture of new and existing oil and gas
fields.”
According
to Bush’s treasury secretary Paul O’Neill, as quoted by Ron Suskind in The Price of Loyalty (2004), cabinet
officials discussed an invasion of Iraq in their first NSC meeting, and had
even prepared a map for a post-war occupation marking the carve-up of Iraq’s
oil fields. The message at that time from President Bush was that officials
must “find a way to do this.”
Cheney
Energy Task Force documents obtained by Judicial Watch under
Freedom of Information revealed that by March, with extensive industry input,
the task force had prepared maps of Gulf state and especially Iraqi oilfields,
pipelines, and refineries, along with a list titled ‘Foreign Suitors for Iraqi
Oilfield Contracts.’ By April, a think-tank report commissioned by Cheney,
overseen by former secretary of state James Baker, and put together by a
committee of energy industry and national security experts, urged the US
government “to conduct an immediate policy review toward Iraq including
military, energy, economic and political/diplomatic assessments,” to deal with
Iraq’s “destabilizing influence” on oil flows to global markets. The report
included recommendations from Highlands Forum delegate and Enron chair, Kenneth Lay.
But
Cheney’s Energy Task Force was also busily pushing forward plans for
Afghanistan involving Enron, that had been in motion under Clinton. Through the
late 1990s, Enron was working with California-based US energy company Unocal to
develop an oil and gas pipeline that would tap Caspian basin
reserves, and carry oil and gas across Afghanistan, supplying Pakistan, India
and potentially other markets. The endeavor had the official blessing of the
Clinton administration, and later the Bush administration, which held several
meetings with Taliban representatives to negotiate terms for the pipeline deal
throughout 2001. The Taliban, whose conquest of Afghanistan had received covert
assistance under Clinton, was to receive formal recognition as the legitimate
government of Afghanistan in return for permitting the installation of the
pipeline. Enron paid $400 million for a feasibility study for the pipeline, a
large portion of which was siphoned off as bribes to Taliban leaders, and even
hired CIA agents to help facilitate.
Then in
summer 2001, while Enron officials were liaising with senior Pentagon officials
at the Highlands Forum, the White House’s National Security Council was running
a cross-departmental ‘working group’ led by Rumsfeld and Cheney to help
complete an ongoing Enron project in India, a $3 billion power plant in Dabhol.
The plant was slated to receive its energy from the Trans-Afghan pipeline. The NSC’s ‘Dabhol Working
Group,’ chaired by Bush’s national security adviser Condoleeza Rice, generated
a range of tactics to enhance US government pressure on India to complete the
Dabhol plant — pressure that continued all the way to early November. The
Dabhol project, and the Trans-Afghan pipeline, was by far Enron’s most
lucrative overseas deal.
Throughout
2001, Enron officials, including Ken Lay, participated in Cheney’s Energy Task
Force, along with representatives across the US energy industry. Starting from
February, shortly after the Bush administration took office, Enron was involved
in about half a dozen of these Energy Task Force meetings. After one of these
secret meetings, a draft energy proposal was amended to include a new provision
proposing to dramatically boost oil and natural gas production in India in a
way that would apply only to Enron’s Dabhol power plant. In other words,
ensuring the flow of cheap gas to India via the Trans-Afghan pipeline was now a
matter of US ‘national security.’
A month or
two after this, the Bush administration gave the Taliban $43 million, justified by its
crackdown on opium production, despite US-imposed UN sanctions preventing aid
to the group for not handing over Osama bin Laden.
Then in
June 2001, the same month that Enron’s executive vice president
Steve Kean attended the Pentagon Highlands Forum, the company’s hopes for the
Dabhol project were dashed when the Trans-Afghan pipeline failed to
materialize, and as a consequence, construction on the Dabhol power plant was
shut down. The failure of the $3 billion project contributed to Enron’s
bankruptcy in December. That month, Enron officials met with Bush’s commerce
secretary, Donald Evans, about the plant, and Cheney lobbied India’s main
opposition party about the Dhabol project. Ken Lay had also reportedly
contacted the Bush administration around this time to inform officials about
the firm’s financial troubles.
By August,
desperate to pull off the deal, US officials threatened
Taliban representatives with war if they refused to accept American terms:
namely, to cease fighting and join in a federal alliance with the opposition
Northern Alliance; and to give up demands for local consumption of the gas. On
the 15th of that month, Enron lobbyist Pat Shortridge told then White House
economic advisor Robert McNally that Enron was heading for a financial meltdown
that could cripple the country’s energy markets.
The Bush
administration must have anticipated the Taliban’s rejection of the deal,
because they had planned a war on Afghanistan from as early as
July. According to then Pakistani foreign minister Niaz Naik, who had
participated in the US-Taliban negotiations, US officials told him they planned
to invade Afghanistan in mid-October 2001. No sooner had the war commenced,
Bush’s ambassador to Pakistan, Wendy Chamberlain, called Pakistani’s oil
minister Usman Aminuddin to discuss “the proposed
Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan gas pipeline project,” according to the Frontier Post, a Pakistani
English-language broadsheet. They reportedly agreed that the “project opens up
new avenues of multi-dimensional regional cooperation particularly in view of
the recent geo-political developments in the region.”
Two days
before 9/11, Condoleeza Rice received the draft of a formal National Security
Presidential Directive that Bush was expected to sign immediately. The directive
contained a comprehensive plan to launch a global war on al-Qaeda, including an “imminent”
invasion of Afghanistan to topple the Taliban. The directive was approved by
the highest levels of the White House and officials of the National Security
Council, including of course Rice and Rumsfeld. The same NSC officials were
simultaneously running the Dhabol Working Group to secure the Indian power
plant deal for Enron’s Trans-Afghan pipeline project. The next day, one day
before 9/11, the Bush administration formally agreed on the plan to attack the
Taliban.
The
Pentagon Highlands Forum’s background link with the interests involved in all
this, show they were not unique to the Bush administration — which is why, as Obama was preparing to pull troops out of
Afghanistan, he re-affirmed his government’s support for the Trans-Afghan pipeline project, and
his desire for a US firm to construct it.
The
Pentagon’s propaganda fixer
Throughout
this period, information war played a central role in drumming up public
support for war — and the Highlands Forum led the way.
In December
2000, just under a year before 9/11 and shortly after George W. Bush’s election
victory, key Forum members participated in an event at the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace to explore “the impact of the information revolution, globalization, and
the end of the Cold War on the US foreign policy making process.” Rather than
proposing “incremental reforms,” the meeting was for participants to “build
from scratch a new model that is optimized to the specific properties of the
new global environment.”
Among the issues flagged up in the meeting was the ‘Global
Control Revolution’: the “distributed” nature of the information revolution was
altering “key dynamics of world politics by challenging the primacy of states
and inter-state relations.” This was “creating new challenges to national
security, reducing the ability of leading states to control global policy
debates, challenging the efficacy of national economic policies, etc.”
In other
words, how can the Pentagon find a way to exploit the information revolution to
“control global policy debates,” particularly on “national economic policies”?
The meeting
was co-hosted by Jamie Metzl, who at the time served on Bill Clinton’s National
Security Council, where he had just led the drafting of Clinton’s Presidential
Decision Directive 68 on International Public Information (IPI), a new
multiagency plan to coordinate US public information dissemination abroad.
Metzl went on to coordinate IPI at the State Department.
The
preceding year, a senior Clinton official revealed to the Washington Times that Metz’s IPI was really aimed at
“spinning the American public,” and had “emerged out of concern that the US
public has refused to back President Clinton’s foreign policy.” The IPI would
plant news stories favorable to US interests via TV, press, radio and other
media based abroad, in hopes it would get picked up in American media. The
pretext was that “news coverage is distorted at home and they need to fight it
at all costs by using resources that are aimed at spinning the news.” Metzl ran
the IPI’s overseas propaganda operations for Iraq and Kosovo.
Other
participants of the Carnegie meeting in December 2000, included two founding
members of the Highlands Forum, Richard O’Neill and SAIC’s Jeff Cooper — along with Paul Wolfowitz, another Andrew Marshall acolyte who was about to join the incoming Bush
administration as Rumsfelds’ deputy defense secretary. Also present was a
figure who soon became particularly notorious in the propaganda around
Afghanistan and Iraq War 2003: John W. Rendon, Jr., founding president of The Rendon Group
(TRG) and another longtime Pentagon Highlands Forum member.
John Rendon (right) at the Highlands
Forum, accompanied by BBC anchor Nik Gowing (left) and Jeff Jonas, IBM Entity
Analytics chief engineer (middle)
TRG is a
notorious communications firm that has been a US government contractor for
decades. Rendon played a pivotal role in running the State Department’s propaganda campaigns in Iraq and Kosovo under
Clinton and Metzl. That included receiving a Pentagon grant to run a news
website, the Balkans Information Exchange, and a US Agency for International
Development (USAID) contract to promote “privatization.”
Rendon’s
central role in helping the Bush administration hype up the non-existent threat
of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) to justify a US military invasion is now
well-known. As James Bamford famously exposed in his seminal Rolling Stone investigation, Rendon played an
instrumental role on behalf of the Bush administration in deploying “perception
management” to “create the conditions for the removal of Hussein from power”
under multi-million dollar CIA and Pentagon contracts.
Among
Rendon’s activities was the creation of Ahmed Chalabi’s Iraqi National Congress
(INC) on behalf of the CIA, a group of Iraqi exiles tasked with disseminating
propaganda, including much of the false intelligence about WMD. That process had begun concertedly
under the administration of George H W. Bush, then rumbled along under Clinton
with little fanfare, before escalating after 9/11 under George W. Bush. Rendon
thus played a large role in the manufacture of inaccurate and false news
stories relating to Iraq under lucrative CIA and Pentagon contracts — and he did so in the period running up to the 2003 invasion
as an advisor to Bush’s National Security Council: the
same NSC, of course, that planned the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq,
achieved with input from Enron executives who were simultaneously engaging the
Pentagon Highlands Forum.
But that is
the tip of iceberg. Declassified documents show that the Highlands Forum was
intimately involved in the covert processes by which key officials engineered
the road to war on Iraq, based on information warfare.
A redacted
2007 report by the DoD’s Inspector General reveals
that one of the contractors used extensively by the Pentagon Highlands Forum
during and after the Iraq War was none other than The Rendon Group. TRG was
contracted by the Pentagon to organize Forum sessions, determine subjects for
discussion, as well as to convene and coordinate Forum meetings. The Inspector
General investigation had been prompted by accusations raised in Congress about
Rendon’s role in manipulating information to justify the 2003 invasion and
occupation of Iraq. According to the Inspector General report:
“… the
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Networks and Information Integration/Chief
Information Officer employed TRG to conduct forums that would appeal to a
cross-disciplinary group of nationally regarded leaders. The forums were in
small groups discussing information and technologies and their effects on
science, organizational and business processes, international relations,
economics, and national security. TRG also conducted a research program and
interviews to formulate and develop topics for the Highlands Forum focus group.
The Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Networks and Information
Integration would approve the subjects, and TRG would facilitate the meetings.”
TRG, the
Pentagon’s private propaganda arm, thus played a central role in literally running the Pentagon Highlands
Forum process that brought together senior government officials with industry
executives to generate DoD information warfare strategy.
The
Pentagon’s internal investigation absolved Rendon of any wrongdoing. But this
is not surprising, given the conflict of interest at stake: the Inspector
General at the time was Claude M. Kicklighter, a Bush nominee who had directly overseen the
administration’s key military operations. In 2003, he was director of the
Pentagon’s Iraq Transition Team, and the following year he was appointed to the
State Department as special advisor on stabilization and security operations in
Iraq and Afghanistan.
The
surveillance-propaganda nexus
Even more
telling, Pentagon documents obtained by Bamford for his Rolling Stone story revealed that Rendon had been
given access to the NSA’s top-secret surveillance data to carry out its work on
behalf of the Pentagon. TRG, the DoD documents said, is authorized “to research
and analyze information classified up to Top Secret/SCI/SI/TK/G/HCS.”
‘SCI’ means
Sensitive Compartmented Information, data classified higher than Top Secret,
while ‘SI’ designates Special Intelligence, that is, highly secret
communications intercepted by the NSA. ‘TK’ refers to Talent/Keyhole, code
names for imagery from reconnaissance aircraft and spy satellites, while ‘G’
stands for Gamma, encompassing communications intercepts from extremely
sensitive sources, and ‘HCS’ means Humint Control System — information from a very sensitive human source. In Bamford’s
words:
“Taken
together, the acronyms indicate that Rendon enjoys access to the most secret
information from all three forms of intelligence collection: eavesdropping,
imaging satellites and human spies.”
So the
Pentagon had:
1.
contracted Rendon, a propaganda firm;
2. given
Rendon access to the intelligence community’s most classified information
including data from NSA surveillance;
3. tasked
Rendon to facilitating the DoD’s development of information operations strategy
by running the Highlands Forum process;
4. and
further, tasked Rendon with overseeing the concrete execution of this strategy
developed through the Highlands Forum process, in actual information operations
around the world in Iraq, Afghanistan and beyond.
TRG chief
executive John Rendon remains closely involved in the Pentagon Highlands Forum,
and ongoing DoD information operations in the Muslim world. His November 2014 biography for the Harvard Kennedy School
‘Emerging Leaders’ course describes him as “a participant in forward-thinking
organizations such as the Highlands Forum,” “one of the first thought-leaders
to harness the power of emerging technologies in support of real time
information management,” and an expert on “the impact of emerging information
technologies on the way populations think and behave.” Rendon’s Harvard bio
also credits him with designing and executing “strategic communications
initiatives and information programs related to operations, Odyssey Dawn
(Libya), Unified Protector (Libya), Global War on Terrorism (GWOT), Iraqi
Freedom, Enduring Freedom (Afghanistan), Allied Force and Joint Guardian
(Kosovo), Desert Shield, Desert Storm (Kuwait), Desert Fox (Iraq) and Just
Cause (Panama), among others.”
Rendon’s work on perception management and information
operations has also “assisted a number of US military interventions” elsewhere,
as well as running US information operations in Argentina, Colombia, Haiti, and
Zimbabwe — in fact, a total of 99 countries. As a former executive
director and national political director of the Democratic Party, John Rendon
remains a powerful figure in Washington under the Obama administration.
Pentagon
records show that TRG has received over $100 million from
the DoD since 2000. In 2009, the US government cancelled a ‘strategic
communications’ contract with TRG after revelations it was being used to weed
out reporters who might write negative stories about the US military in
Afghanistan, and to solely promote journalists supportive of US policy. Yet in
2010, the Obama administration re-contracted Rendon to supply services for
“military deception” in Iraq.
Since then,
TRG has provided advice to the US Army’s Training and Doctrine Command, the
Special Operations Command, and is still contracted
to the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the US Army’s Communications
Electronic Command, as well as providing “communications support” to the
Pentagon and US embassies on counter-narcotics operations.
TRG also
boasts on its website that it provides “Irregular Warfare Support,”
including “operational and planning support” that “assists our government and
military clients in developing new approaches to countering and eroding an
adversary’s power, influence and will.” Much of this support has itself been
fine-tuned over the last decade or more inside the Pentagon Highlands Forum.
Irregular war
and pseudo-terrorism
The
Pentagon Highlands Forum’s intimate link, via Rendon, to the propaganda
operations pursued under Bush and Obama in support of the ‘Long War,’
demonstrate the integral role of mass surveillance in both irregular warfare
and ‘strategic communications.’
One of the
major proponents of both is Prof John Arquilla of the Naval Postgraduate
School, the renowned US defense analyst credited with developing the concept of
‘netwar,’ who today openly advocates the need for mass surveillance and big
data mining to support pre-emptive operations to thwart terrorist plots.
It so happens that Arquilla is another “founding member” of the Pentagon’s
Highlands Forum.
Much of his
work on the idea of ‘networked warfare,’ ‘networked deterrence,’ ‘information
warfare,’ and ‘swarming,’ largely produced for RAND under Pentagon contract,
was incubated by the Forum during its early years and thus became integral to
Pentagon strategy. For instance, in Arquilla’s 1999 RAND study, The Emergence of Noopolitik: Toward an
American Information Strategy, he and his co-author David Ronfeldt express
their gratitude to Richard O’Neill “for his interest, support and guidance,”
and to “members of the Highlands Forum” for their advance comments on the
study. Most of his RAND work credits the Highlands Forum and O’Neill for their
support.
Prof. John
Arquilla of the Naval Postgraduate School, and a founding member of the
Pentagon Highlands Forum
Arquilla’s
work was cited in a 2006 National Academy of Sciences study on the future of
network science commissioned by the US Army, which found based on his research
that: “Advances in computer-based technologies and telecommunications are
enabling social networks that facilitate group affiliations, including
terrorist networks.” The study conflated risks from terror and activist groups:
“The implications of this fact for criminal, terror, protest and insurgency
networks has been explored by Arquilla and Ronfeldt (2001) and are a common
topic of discussion by groups like the Highlands Forum, which perceive that the
United States is highly vulnerable to the interruption of critical networks.”
Arquilla went on to help develop information warfare strategies “for the
military campaigns in Kosovo, Afghanistan and Iraq,” according to military
historian Benjamin Shearer in his biographical dictionary, Home Front Heroes (2007) — once again illustrating the direct role played by certain
key Forum members in executing Pentagon information operations in war theatres.
In his 2005
New Yorker investigation, the Pulitzer
Prize-winning Seymour Hersh referred to a series of articles by Arquilla
elaborating on a new strategy of “countering terror” with pseudo-terror. “It
takes a network to fight a network,” said Arquilla, drawing on the thesis he
had been promoting in the Pentagon through the Highlands Forum since its
founding:
“When
conventional military operations and bombing failed to defeat the Mau Mau
insurgency in Kenya in the 1950s, the British formed teams of friendly Kikuyu
tribesmen who went about pretending to be terrorists. These ‘pseudo gangs’, as
they were called, swiftly threw the Mau Mau on the defensive, either by
befriending and then ambushing bands of fighters or by guiding bombers to the
terrorists’ camps.”
Arquilla
went on to advocate that western intelligence services should use the British
case as a model for creating new “pseudo gang” terrorist groups, as a way of
undermining “real” terror networks:
“What
worked in Kenya a half-century ago has a wonderful chance of undermining trust
and recruitment among today’s terror networks. Forming new pseudo gangs should
not be difficult.”
Essentially,
Arquilla’s argument was that as only networks can fight networks, the only way
to defeat enemies conducting irregular warfare is to use techniques of
irregular warfare against them. Ultimately, the determining factor in victory
is not conventional military defeat per
se, but the extent to which the direction of the conflict can be calibrated
to influence the population and rally their opposition to the adversary.
Arquilla’s ‘pseudo-gang’ strategy was, Hersh reported, already being
implemented by the Pentagon:
“Under
Rumsfeld’s new approach, I was told, US military operatives would be permitted
to pose abroad as corrupt foreign businessmen seeking to buy contraband items
that could be used in nuclear-weapons systems. In some cases, according to the
Pentagon advisers, local citizens could be recruited and asked to join up with
guerrillas or terrorists…
The new
rules will enable the Special Forces community to set up what it calls ‘action
teams’ in the target countries overseas which can be used to find and eliminate
terrorist organizations. ‘Do you remember the right-wing execution squads in El
Salvador?’ the former high-level intelligence official asked me, referring to
the military-led gangs that committed atrocities in the early
nineteen-eighties. ‘We founded them and we financed them,’ he said. ‘The
objective now is to recruit locals in any area we want. And we aren’t going to
tell Congress about it.’ A former military officer, who has knowledge of the
Pentagon’s commando capabilities, said, ‘We’re going to be riding with the bad
boys.’”
Official
corroboration that this strategy is now operational came with the leak of a
2008 US Army special operations field manual. The US military, the manual said,
can conduct irregular and unconventional warfare by using surrogate
non-state groups such as “paramilitary forces, individuals, businesses, foreign
political organizations, resistant or insurgent organizations, expatriates,
transnational terrorism adversaries, disillusioned transnational terrorism
members, black marketers, and other social or political ‘undesirables.’”
Shockingly, the manual specifically acknowledged that US special operations can
involve both counterterrorism and “Terrorism,” as well as: “Transnational
criminal activities, including narco-trafficking, illicit arms-dealing, and
illegal financial transactions.” The purpose of such covert operations is,
essentially, population control — they are “specifically focused on
leveraging some portion of the indigenous population to accept the status quo,”
or to accept “whatever political outcome” is being imposed or negotiated.
By this
twisted logic, terrorism can in some cases be defined as a legitimate tool of
US statecraft by which to influence populations into accepting a particular
“political outcome” — all in the name fighting terrorism.
Is this
what the Pentagon was doing by coordinating the nearly $1 billion of funding
from Gulf regimes to anti-Assad rebels, most of which according to the CIA’s
own classified assessments ended up in the coffers of violent Islamist
extremists linked to al-Qaeda, who went on to spawn the ‘Islamic State’?
The
rationale for the new strategy was first officially set out in an August 2002
briefing for the Pentagon’s Defense Science Board, which advocated the creation
of a ‘Proactive, Preemptive Operations Group’ (P2OG)
within the National Security Council. P2OG, the Board proposed, must conduct
clandestine operations to infiltrate and “stimulate reactions” among terrorist
networks to provoke them into action, and thus facilitate targeting them.
The Defense
Science Board is, like other Pentagon agencies, intimately related with the
Highlands Forum, whose work feeds into the Board’s research, which in turn is
regularly presented at the Forum.
According
to the US intelligence sources who spoke to Hersh, Rumsfeld had ensured that
the new brand of black operations would be conducted entirely under Pentagon
jurisdiction, firewalled off from the CIA and regional US military commanders,
and executed by its own secret special operations command. That chain of command would include, apart from the
defense secretary himself, two of his deputies including the undersecretary of
defense for intelligence: the position overseeing the Highlands Forum.
Strategic
communications: war propaganda at home and abroad
Within the
Highlands Forum, the special operations techniques explored by Arquilla have
been taken up by several others in directions focused increasingly on propaganda — among them, Dr. Lochard, as seen previously, and also Dr.
Amy Zalman, who focuses particularly on the idea of the US military using
‘strategic narratives’ to influence public opinion and win wars.
Like her
colleague, Highlands Forum founding member Jeff Cooper, Zalman was schooled in
the bowels of SAIC/Leidos. From 2007 to 2012, she was a senior SAIC strategist,
before becoming Department of Defense Information Integration Chair at the US
Army’s National War College, where she focused on how to fine-tune propaganda
to elicit the precise responses desired from target groups, based on complete
understanding of those groups. As of summer last year, she became CEO of the
World Futures Society.
Dr. Amy Zalman, an ex-SAIC
strategist, is CEO of the World Futures Society, and a long-time Pentagon
Highlands Forum delegate consulting for the US government on strategic
communications in irregular warfare
In 2005,
the same year Hersh reported that the Pentagon strategy of “stimulating
reactions” among terrorists by provoking them was underway, Zalman delivered a briefing
to the Pentagon Highlands Forum titled, ‘In
Support of a Narrative Theory Approach to US Strategic Communication.’ Since
then, Zalman has been a long-time Highlands Forum delegate, and has presented her
work on strategic communications to a range of US government agencies, NATO
forums, as well as teaching courses in irregular warfare to soldiers at the US
Joint Special Operations University.
Her 2005
Highlands Forum briefing is not publicly available, but the thrust of Zalman’s
input into the information component of Pentagon special operations strategies
can be gleaned from some of her published work. In 2010, when she was still
attached to SAIC, her NATO paper noted that a key component of
irregular war is “winning some degree of emotional support from the population
by influencing their subjective perceptions.” She advocated that the best way
of achieving such influence goes far further than traditional propaganda and
messaging techniques. Rather, analysts must “place themselves in the skins of
the people under observation.”
Zalman
released another paper the same year via the IO Journal, published
by the Information Operations Institute, which describes itself as a “special
interest group” of the Associaton of Old Crows. The latter is a professional
association for theorists and practitioners of electronic warfare and
information operations, chaired by Kenneth Israel, vice president of Lockheed
Martin, and vice chaired by David Himes, who retired last year from his
position as senior advisor in electronic warfare at the US Air Force Research
Laboratory.
In this
paper, titled ‘Narrative as an Influence
Factor in Information Operations,’ Zalman laments that the US military has
“found it difficult to create compelling narratives — or stories — either to express its strategic
aims, or to communicate in discrete situations, such as civilian deaths.” By
the end, she concludes that “the complex issue of civilian deaths” should be
approached not just by “apologies and compensation” — which barely occurs anyway — but by propagating narratives that
portray characters with whom the audience connects (in this case, ‘the
audience’ being ‘populations in war zones’). This is to facilitate the audience
resolving struggles in a “positive way,” defined, of course, by US military
interests. Engaging emotionally in this way with “survivors of those dead” from
US military action might “prove to be an empathetic form of influence.”
Throughout, Zalman is incapable of questioning the legitimacy of US strategic
aims, or acknowledging that the impact of those aims in the accumulation of
civilian deaths, is precisely the problem that needs to change — as opposed to the way they are ideologically framed for
populations subjected to military action.
‘Empathy,’
here, is merely an instrument by which to manipulate.
In 2012,
Zalman wrote an article for The Globalist seeking to demonstrate how the rigid
delineation of ‘hard power’ and ‘soft power’ needed to be overcome, to
recognize that the use of force requires the right symbolic and cultural effect
to guarantee success:
“As long as
defense and economic diplomacy remain in a box labeled ‘hard power,’ we fail to
see how much their success relies on their symbolic effects as well as their
material ones. As long as diplomatic and cultural efforts are stored in a box
marked ‘soft power,’ we fail to see the ways in which they can be used
coercively or produce effects that are like those produced by violence.”
Given
SAIC’s deep involvement in the Pentagon Highlands Forum, and through it the development
of information strategies on surveillance, irregular warfare, and propaganda,
it is hardly surprising that SAIC was the other key private defense firm
contracted to generate propaganda in the run up to Iraq War 2003, alongside
TRG.
“SAIC
executives have been involved at every stage… of the war in Iraq,” reported Vanity Fair,
ironically, in terms of deliberately disseminating false claims about WMD, and
then investigating the ‘intelligence failure’ around false WMD claims. David
Kay, for instance, who had been hired by the CIA in 2003 to hunt for Saddam’s
WMD as head of the Iraq Survey Group, was until October 2002 a senior SAIC vice
president hammering away “at the threat posed by Iraq” under Pentagon contract.
When WMD failed to emerge, President Bush’s commission to investigate this US
‘intelligence failure’ included three SAIC executives, among them Highlands
Forum founding member Jeffrey Cooper. The very year of Kay’s appointment to the
Iraq Survey Group, Clinton’s defense secretary William Perry — the man under whose orders the Highlands Forum was set-up — joined the board of SAIC. The investigation by Cooper and
all let the Bush administration off the hook for manufacturing propaganda to
legitimize war — unsurprisingly, given Cooper’s integral role in the very
Pentagon network that manufactured that propaganda.
SAIC was
also among the many contractors that profited handsomely from Iraqi
reconstruction deals, and was re-contracted after the war to promote pro-US
narratives abroad. In the same vein as Rendon’s work, the idea was that stories
planted abroad would be picked up by US media for domestic consumption.
Delegates at the Pentagon’s 46th
Highlands Forum in December 2011, from right to left: John Seely Brown, chief
scientist/director at Xerox PARC from 1990–2002 and an early board member of
In-Q-Tel; Ann Pendleton-Jullian, co-author with Brown of a manuscript, Design
Unbound; Antonio and Hanna Damasio, a neurologist and neurobiologist
respectively who are part of a DARPA-funded project on propaganda
But the
Pentagon Highlands Forum’s promotion of advanced propaganda techniques is not
exclusive to core, longstanding delegates like Rendon and Zalman. In 2011, the
Forum hosted two DARPA-funded scientists, Antonio and Hanna Damasio, who are
principal investigators in the ‘Neurobiology of Narrative Framing’ project at
the University of Southern California. Evoking Zalman’s emphasis on the need
for Pentagon psychological operations to deploy “empathetic influence,” the new
DARPA-backed project
aims to investigate how narratives often appeal “to strong, sacred values in
order to evoke an emotional response,” but in different ways across different
cultures. The most disturbing element of the research is its focus on trying to
understand how to increase the Pentagon’s capacity to deploy narratives that
influence listeners in a way that overrides conventional reasoning in the
context of morally-questionable actions.
The project
description explains that the psychological
reaction to narrated events is “influenced by how the narrator frames the
events, appealing to different values, knowledge, and experiences of the
listener.” Narrative framing that “targets the sacred values of the listener,
including core personal, nationalistic, and/or religious values, is
particularly effective at influencing the listener’s interpretation of narrated
events,” because such “sacred values” are closely tied with “the psychology of
identity, emotion, moral decision making, and social cognition.” By applying
sacred framing to even mundane issues, such issues “can gain properties of
sacred values and result in a strong aversion to using conventional reasoning
to interpret them.” The two Damasios and their team are exploring what role
“linguistic and neuropsychological mechanisms” play in determining “the
effectiveness of narrative framing using sacred values in influencing a
listener’s interpretation of events.”
The
research is based on extracting narratives from millions of American, Iranian
and Chinese weblogs, and subjecting them to automated discourse analysis to
compare them quantitatively across the three languages. The investigators then
follow up using behavioral experiments with readers/listeners from different
cultures to gauge their reaction different narratives “where each story makes
an appeal to a sacred value to explain or justify a morally-questionable
behavior of the author.” Finally, the scientists apply neurobiological fMRI
scanning to correlate the reactions and personal characteristics of subjects
with their brain responses.
Why is the
Pentagon funding research investigating how to exploit people’s “sacred values”
to extinguish their capacity for logical reasoning, and enhance their emotional
openness to “morally-questionable behavior”?
The focus
on English, Farsi and Chinese may also reveal that the Pentagon’s current
concerns are overwhelmingly about developing information operations against two
key adversaries, Iran and China, which fits into longstanding ambitions to
project strategic influence in the Middle East, Central Asia and Southeast
Asia. Equally, the emphasis on English language, specifically from American
weblogs, further suggests the Pentagon is concerned about projecting propaganda
to influence public opinion at home.
Rosemary Wenchel (left) of the US
Department of Homeland Security with Jeff ‘Skunk’ Baxter, a former musician and
now US defense consultant who has worked for contractors like SAIC and Northrup
Grumman. SAIC/Leidos executive Jeff Cooper is behind them
Lest one
presume that DARPA’s desire to mine millions of American weblogs as part of its
‘neurobiology of narrative framing’ research is a mere case of random
selection, an additional co-chair of the Pentagon Highlands Forum in recent
years is Rosemary Wenchel, former director of cyber capabilities and operations
support at the Office of the Secretary of Defense. Since 2012, Wenchel has been
deputy assistant secretary for strategy and policy in the Department of
Homeland Security.
As the
Pentagon’s extensive funding of propaganda on Iraq and Afghanistan
demonstrates, population influence and propaganda is critical not just in
far-flung theatres abroad in strategic regions, but also at home, to quell the
risk of domestic public opinion undermining the legitimacy of Pentagon policy.
In the photo above, Wenchel is talking to Jeff Baxter, a long-time US defense
and intelligence consultant. In September 2005, Baxter was part of a supposedly
“independent” study group (chaired by NSA-contractor Booz Allen
Hamilton) commissioned by the Department of Homeland Security, which
recommended a greater role for US spy satellites in monitoring the domestic population.
Meanwhile,
Zalman and Rendon, while both remaining closely involved in the Pentagon
Highlands Forum, continue to be courted by the US military for their expertise
on information operations. In October 2014, both participated in a major
Strategic Multi-Layer Assessment conference sponsored by the US Department of
Defense and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, titled ‘A New Information Paradigm? From Genes to “Big Data” and Instagram to
Persistent Surveillance… Implications for National Security.’ Other
delegates represented senior US military officials, defense industry
executives, intelligence community officials, Washington think-tanks, and academics.
John Rendon, CEO of The Rendon
Group, at a Highlands Forum session in 2010
Rendon and
SAIC/Leidos, two firms that have been central to the very evolution of Pentagon
information operations strategy through their pivotal involvement in the
Highlands Forum, continue to be contracted for key operations under the Obama
administration. A US General Services Administration document, for instance, shows that Rendon was
granted a major 2010–2015 contract providing general media and communications
support services across federal agencies. Similarly, SAIC/Leidos has a $400
million 2010–2015 contract with the US Army Research Laboratory for
“Expeditionary Warfare; Irregular Warfare; Special Operations; Stabilization
and Reconstruction Operations” — a contract which is “being prepared
now for recomplete.”
The empire
strikes back
Under
Obama, the nexus of corporate, industry, and financial power represented by the
interests that participate in the Pentagon Highlands Forum has consolidated
itself to an unprecedented degree.
Coincidentally,
the very day Obama announced Hagel’s resignation, the
DoD issued a media release highlighting how Robert O. Work,
Hagel’s deputy defense secretary appointed by Obama in 2013, planned to take
forward the Defense Innovation Initiative that Hagel had just announced a week
earlier. The new initiative was focused on ensuring that the Pentagon would
undergo a long-term transformation to keep up with leading edge disruptive
technologies across information operations.
Whatever
the real reasons for Hagel’s ejection, this was a symbolic and tangible victory
for Marshall and the Highlands Forum vision. Highlands Forum co-chair Andrew
Marshall, head of the ONA, may indeed be retiring. But the post-Hagel Pentagon
is now staffed with his followers.
Robert
Work, who now presides over the new DoD transformation scheme, is a loyal
Marshall acolyte who had previously directed and analyzed war games for the
Office of Net Assessment. Like Marshall, Wells, O’Neill and other Highlands
Forum members, Work is also a robot fantasist who lead authored the study, Preparing for War in the Robotic Age,
published early last year by the Center for a New American Security (CNAS).
Work is
also pitched to determine the future of the ONA, assisted by his
strategist Tom Ehrhard and DoD undersecretary for intelligence Michael G.
Vickers, under whose authority the Highlands Forum currently runs. Ehrard, an
advocate of “integrating disruptive technologies in DoD,”
previously served as Marshall’s military assistant in the ONA, while Mike
Vickers — who oversees surveillance agencies like the NSA — was also previously hired by Marshall to consult for the
Pentagon.
Vickers is
also a leading proponent of irregular warfare. As assistant defense secretary
for special operations and low intensity conflict under former defense
secretary Robert Gates in both the Bush and Obama administrations, Vickers’s
irregular warfare vision pushed for “distributed operations across the world,”
including “in scores of countries with which the US is not at war,” as part of
a program of “counter network warfare” using a “network to fight a network” — a strategy which of course has the Highlands Forum all over
it. In his previous role under Gates, Vickers increased the budget for special
operations including psychological operations, stealth transport, Predator
drone deployment and “using high-tech surveillance and reconnaissance to track
and target terrorists and insurgents.”
To replace
Hagel, Obama nominated Ashton Carter, former deputy defense secretary from 2009
to 2013, whose expertise in budgets and procurement according to the Wall Street Journal is “expected to boost some of the
initiatives championed by the current Pentagon deputy, Robert Work, including
an effort to develop new strategies and technologies to preserve the US
advantage on the battlefield.”
Back in
1999, after three years as Clinton’s assistant defense secretary, Carter
co-authored a study with former defense secretary William J.
Perry advocating a new form of ‘war by remote control’ facilitated by “digital
technology and the constant flow of information.” One of Carter’s colleagues in
the Pentagon during his tenure at that time was Highlands Forum co-chair Linton
Wells; and it was Perry of course that as then-defense secretary appointed
Richard O’Neill to set-up the Highlands Forum as the Pentagon’s IO think-tank
back in 1994.
Highlands
Forum overlord Perry went on to join the board of SAIC, before eventually
becoming chairman of another giant defense contractor, Global Technology
Partners (GTP). And Ashton Carter was on GTP’s board under Perry, before being
nominated to defense secretary by Obama. During Carter’s previous Pentagon
stint under Obama, he worked closely with Work and current undersecretary of
defense Frank Kendall. Defense industry sources rejoice that the new Pentagon
team will “dramatically improve” chances to “push major reform projects” at the
Pentagon “across the finish line.”
Indeed,
Carter’s priority as defense chief nominee is identifying
and acquiring new commercial “disruptive technology” to enhance US military
strategy — in other words, executing the DoD Skynet plan.
The origins
of the Pentagon’s new innovation initiative can thus be traced back to ideas
that were widely circulated inside the Pentagon decades ago, but which failed
to take root fully until now. Between 2006 and 2010, the same period in which
such ideas were being developed by Highlands Forum experts like Lochard, Zalman
and Rendon, among many others, the Office of Net Assessment provided a direct
mechanism to channel these ideas into concrete strategy and policy development
through the Quadrennial Defense Reviews, where Marshall’s input was primarily responsible for the expansion of the
“black” world: “special operations,” “electronic warfare” and “information
operations.”
Andrew Marshall, now retired head of
the DoD’s Office of Net Assessment and Highlands Forum co-chair, at a Forum
session in 2008
Marshall’s
pre-9/11 vision of a fully networked and automated
military system found its fruition in the Pentagon’s Skynet study released by the National Defense
University in September 2014, which was co-authored by Marshall’s colleague at
the Highlands Forum, Linton Wells. Many of Wells’ recommendations are now to be
executed via the new Defense Innovation Initiative by veterans and affiliates of
the ONA and Highlands Forum.
Given that
Wells’ white paper highlighted the Pentagon’s keen interest in monopolizing AI
research to monopolize autonomous networked robot warfare, it is not entirely
surprising that the Forum’s sponsoring partners at SAIC/Leidos display a
bizarre sensitivity about public use of the word ‘Skynet.’
On a
Wikipedia entry titled ‘Skynet (fictional)’, people using
SAIC computers deleted several paragraphs under the ‘Trivia’ section pointing
out real-world ‘Skynets’, such as the British military satellite system, and
various information technology projects.
Hagel’s
departure paved the way for Pentagon officials linked to the Highlands Forum to
consolidate government influence. These officials are embedded in a
longstanding shadow network of political, industry, media and corporate
officials that sit invisibly behind the seat of government, yet literally write
its foreign and domestic national security policies whether the administration
is Democrat of Republican, by contributing ‘ideas’ and forging
government-industry relationships.
It is this
sort of closed-door networking that has rendered the American vote pointless.
Far from protecting the public interest or helping to combat terrorism, the
comprehensive monitoring of electronic communications has been systematically
abused to empower vested interests in the energy, defense, and IT industries.
The state
of permanent global warfare that has resulted from the Pentagon’s alliances
with private contractors and unaccountable harnessing of information expertise,
is not making anyone safer, but has spawned a new generation of terrorists in
the form of the so-called ‘Islamic State’ — itself a Frankenstein by-product of the putrid combination of Assad’s
brutality and longstanding US covert operations in the region. This
Frankenstein’s existence is now being cynically exploited by private contractors seeking to
profit exponentially from expanding the national security apparatus, at a time
when economic volatility has pressured governments to slash defense spending.
According
to the Securities and Exchange Commission, from 2008 to 2013, the five largest
US defense contractors lost 14 percent of their employees, as the winding down
of US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan led to lack of business and squeezed
revenues. The continuation of the ‘Long War’ triggered by ISIS has, for now,
reversed their fortunes. Companies profiting from the new war include many connected to the Highlands Forum, such as
Leidos, Lockheed Martin, Northrup Grumman, and Boeing. War is, indeed, a
racket.
No
more shadows
Yet in the
long-run, the information imperialists have already failed. This investigation is based
entirely on open source techniques, made viable largely in the context of the
same information revolution that enabled Google. The investigation has been
funded entirely by members of the public, through crowd-funding. And the
investigation has been published and distributed outside the circuits of
traditional media, precisely to make the point that in this new digital age,
centralized top-down concentrations of power cannot overcome the power of
people, their love of truth and justice, and their desire to share.
What are
the lessons of this irony? Simple, really: The information revolution is
inherently decentralized, and decentralizing. It cannot be controlled and
co-opted by Big Brother. Efforts to do so will in the end invariably fail, in a
way that is ultimately self-defeating.
The latest
mad-cap Pentagon initiative to dominate the world through control of
information and information technologies, is not a sign of the all-powerful
nature of the shadow network, but rather a symptom of its deluded desperation
as it attempts to ward off the acceleration of its hegemonic decline.
But the
decline is well on its way. And this story, like so many before it, is one
small sign that the opportunities to mobilize the information revolution for
the benefit of all, despite the efforts of power to hide in the shadows, are stronger than ever.
Dr Nafeez Ahmed is an investigative journalist, bestselling
author and international security scholar. A former Guardian writer, he writes
the ‘System Shift’ column for VICE’s Motherboard, and is also a columnist for
Middle East Eye. He is the winner of a 2015 Project Censored Award for
Outstanding Investigative Journalism for his Guardian work.
Nafeez has also written for The
Independent, Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, The Scotsman, Foreign Policy, The
Atlantic, Quartz, Prospect, New Statesman, Le Monde diplomatique, New
Internationalist, Counterpunch, Truthout, among others. He is the author of A User’s Guide to the Crisis of Civilization: And How to
Save It (2010), and the scifi
thriller novel ZERO POINT,
among other books. His work on the root causes and covert operations linked to
international terrorism officially contributed to the 9/11 Commission and the
7/7 Coroner’s Inquest.
This exclusive is being released for
free in the public interest, and was enabled by crowdfunding. I’d like to thank
my amazing community of patrons for their support, which gave me the
opportunity to work on this in-depth investigation. Please support independent, investigative journalism for the global
commons.
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Investigative
journalist, recovering academic, tracking the Crisis of Civilization
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