Berto Jongman: GAO – U.S. intelligence agencies can’t justify why they use so many contractors

Corruption, Government, Ineptitude
Berto Jongman
Berto Jongman

GAO – U.S. intelligence agencies can’t justify why they use so many contractors

Brian Fung

Washington Post, 14 February 2014

Private contractors play a huge role in the government, particularly in civilian intelligence services like the CIA. Contracting critics say it's an addiction whose overhead costs drive up the federal budget and leads to data breaches like the kind perpetrated by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.

In the wake of last year's NSA revelations, many agencies have been reviewing their contracting policies. But few people have a good grasp on just how many contractors the government employs. What's worse, the country's eight civilian intelligence agencies often can't sufficiently explain what they use those contractors for, according to a Government Accountability Office report.

Every year, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence is supposed to count how many contractors serve the intelligence community (IC). Due to differences in the way intelligence agencies define and assess their workers, however, the data are inconsistent and in some places incomplete. Out of hundreds of agency records, for example, GAO found that almost a fifth lacked enough paperwork to prove how much a contractor was paid. Another fifth of the records were found to have either over-reported or under-reported the actual cost of the contract work.

But the GAO reserves its harshest judgment for the agencies that couldn't fully explain why they resorted to contractors in the first place.

Continue reading “Berto Jongman: GAO – U.S. intelligence agencies can’t justify why they use so many contractors”

Mini-Me: BENGHAZI – Hillary Lied, CIA Complied?

Corruption, Government, Ineptitude
Who?  Mini-Me?
Who? Mini-Me?

Huh?

Did CIA official suppress Benghazi narrative? Accounts raise new questions

Then-Deputy Director Mike Morell, whose own agency lost two employees at Benghazi, former Navy Seals Ty Woods and Glen Doherty, was heavily involved in editing the administration’s internal narrative on what happened – known as the “talking points” – which served as the basis for then-U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice’s controversial claims about a protest on the Sunday talk shows after the attack.

According to the bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee report on Benghazi, on Sept. 15, four days after the attack and one day before Rice’s appearance, the CIA's most senior operative on the ground in Libya emailed Morell and others at the agency that the attack was “not/not an escalation of protests.”

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Winslow Wheeler: Who Really Runs the Pentagon?

Corruption, Idiocy, Ineptitude, Military
Winslow Wheeler
Winslow Wheeler

It's not Chuck Hagel.  I explain in a commentary at Foreign Policy at http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2014/02/13/the_men_who_really_run_the_pentagon_chuck_hagel, and below.

Bob Gates wrestled the defense budget back from the Joint Chiefs. Chuck Hagel is handing it back.
Winslow Wheeler Winslow T. Wheeler is the director of the Straus Military Reform Project at the Project On Government Oversight (POGO). Previously, he spent 31 years working for Republican and Democratic Senators and the Government Accountability Office on national security issues.
FEBRUARY 14, 2014

SchwartzReport: Mass Media Ignores Coal Industry Atrocities — Another West Virginia Water Poisoning

03 Environmental Degradation, 07 Health, 07 Other Atrocities, 12 Water, Commerce, Corruption, Government
Stephan A. Schwartz
Stephan A. Schwartz

I find it very telling that corporate media gives so little coverage to the ecological disasters that seem to be coming one a week. Did you even know this one had happened? We are destroying the environment and our own health and, it is virtually a secret.

Yet Another Coal Industry Spill Is Destroying West Virginia’s Water
LINDSAY ABRAMS – Salon

Chuck Spinney: Corruption in Congress – The Iron Triangle

Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, Government

Chuck Spinney
Chuck Spinney

Revolving Door Syndrome in the Military-Industrial-Congressional-Complex

The Best Government Money Can Buy

by FRANKLIN C. SPINNEY, COUNTERPUNCH, FEBRUARY 11, 2014

Those of you who think it is incorrect to attach “Congressional” onto the the end of Military – Industrial – Congressional Complex (MICC) would be well advised to read “Lawmaker holds stock in defense contractor he champions” (by Donovan Slack, USA Today, 8 Feb 2014) to see one reason why I always include the reference to Congress.

Slack describes the ethically-challenged influence peddling capers of Congressman Tom Petri (R-Wisconsin), a Harvard educated lawyer and one of longest serving and wealthiest members of Congress.  Petri used his position in Congress to enhance his political career (and power) as well as his personal wealth by promoting a controversial $3 billion dollar armored truck procurement contract to Oshkosh corporation that pushed dollars, jobs, and profits into his home district as well as wealth into his own stock portfolio.  Slack describes how Petri intervened to (1) fend off Oshkosh’s competitors, especially Texas based BAE corp, who had protested the contract award, accusing Oshkosh of low-balling its cost estimates and (2) how he worked to neutralize the rescue efforts by BAE’s friendly congressmen.  The story is complex, and I urge you to read Slack’s report at the link above.

Click on Image to Enlarge
Click on Image to Enlarge

Petri’s hijinks are old as our democracy (see this hilarious example of how the Navy’s Ship of the Line program was funded in the years after the War of 1812), but the intricacies of his maneuvers illustrate the subtle and deep-seated general nature of corruption and influence peddling now pervading our nation’s defense policy making machinery.  The threads of this influence peddling network are now woven deeply, almost invisibly, throughout the entire fabric of the contemporary American political economy.

Some political scientists use the metaphor Iron Triangle as a short hand for describing the structural aspects of this web of influence relationships.  The attached diagram depicts the triangle’s basic features for the MICC.  Note its principle idea: the two mutually-reinforcing circulations: (1) a counter-clockwise circulation of influence peddling fueling (2) a concomitant clockwise circulation of money.

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Winslow Wheeler: What Lays Beneath the Officer Ethics Scandals

Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, Idiocy, Military
Winslow Wheeler
Winslow Wheeler

The defense trade press and even some major media have recently produced reports about ethical problems in the US military officer corps.  Bill Hartung writes at Huffington Post that “Military Ethics Reform Should Start at the Top,” advocating a reduction in our astoundingly–even historically–high officer bloat.  Lt. Col. Danny Davis writes in Armed Forces Journal that our officers are “Seduced by Success” by winning, but only at the minor tactical level, against literally incompetent, almost unarmed enemies. 

These are important articles, and I urge you to read them, but retired Army Major Don Vandergriff (who has written about officer education, how our over-officered military means an ineffective military,  and more) brought to my attention an article that puts the disconnected media reports about individual examples of officer ethics problems into a broader and far more important perspective.  This article, “A Crisis in Command and the Roots of the Problem” explains-at least to me-the fundamental origin of the problem and its solution.  Written Jorg Muth (who has also written about the differences between German and American officer training before World War Two-a difference that hardly puts us in a good light), the “Crisis in Command” article explains how today's ethical problems started on the first day that West Point cadets showed up on that campus and how those problems will not go away until American military officers start listening to those they think they outrank–intellectually and morally as well as physically. 

Indeed, if you are interested in ending the military sexual harassment now so widely reported in the press and debated in Congress, if you want to eliminate “toxic” and financially corrupt military officers, and if you want to get rid of those who tolerate or just fail to report them all, understand that those behaviors are more likely reinforced, than eliminated, by most of the changes being advocated in the press and Congress.  The Jorg Muth article explains why I say this and what can be done to change the course our officer corps is on.  Be warned, however, as important as reducing the bloated size of our officer corps is, the solution to our problems is not just to have a smaller number of ethics-crippled officers; it is not to give them a new set of judicially independent ethics enforcers, and it is not to tell them to go to an ethics training course.  Muth explains; it is short but informative reading, I believe.

David Swanson: Convicting Protesters Instead of Pilots — So Similar to Convicting Occupy, Instead of Wall Street

Civil Society, Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, Ethics, Government
David Swanson
David Swanson

More Drone Protesters, Instead of Pilots, Convicted of a Crime

The following report comes in from Toby Blomé

Feb. 3, 2014:  “Wheatland 4” Trial:  Anti-Drone Protesters Convicted of Trespassing 

Sentenced to 10 hours of Community Service and a $10 fee.Judge Claire warns of harsher consequences next time due to “ban & bar” orders served to them at the time of arrest.

Read full post.

Phi Beta Iota: Over 7,000 Occupy protesters jailed — no bankers even arrested. A revolution vastly greater than anything the USA has seen since 1776, is emergent. The two-party tyranny and Wall Street are a precise parallel to King George and the East India Company. ENOUGH!

See Also:

REVOLUTION Graphic & Refs