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Het Space-Based Binnenlandse Spioneren: Het schoppen Burgerlijke Vrijheden aan de Rand
Woensdag, 12 November, 2008 Door Tom Burghardt | Vorige maand, I gerapporteerd dat het Ministerie van de Veiligheid van het Geboorteland? s (DHS) space-based binnenlands spionprogramma dat door dat agentschap in werking wordt gesteld? s het Nationale Bureau van Toepassingen (NAO) was 1 Oktober beschikbaar geworden. De federale Week van de Computer rapporten dat Charles Allen, DHS? De ondersecretaris voor Intelligentie en Analyse, vertelde 5de jaarlijks Symposium GEOINT op geospatial intelligentie in Nashville eind vorige maand dat? DHS? de beeldspraak vereisten zijn beduidend groter, in aantal en werkingsgebied, dan zij bij de afdeling waren? s de verwezenlijking, zal en aan een versnellend tarief als afdeling blijven groeien? s de opdracht-ruimte evolueert.? Tijdens Orkaan Ike, de V.S. De douane en de Bescherming van de Grens vlogen binnen voor het eerst het Roofdier onbemande luchtvoertuig van B? steun van het Federale Agentschap van het Beheer van de Noodsituatie? s hulpinspanningen? de insidergemelde technologie- publicatie. Aangezien de lezers goed bewust zijn, voert RoofdierB uit? gerichte moorden? van? terroristen verdachten? over Afghanistan, Irak en Pakistan. De plaatsing van de robotachtige dodende machines in de Verenigde Staten voor? rampen beheer? is om het zachtjes uit te drukken verontrustend en een harbinger van dingen om te komen. Ondanks bezwaren door Congres en burgerlijke vrijhedengroepen DHS, in nauwe samenwerking met het ultra-spooky Nationale Bureau van de Verkenning (NRO), het agentschap dat ontwikkelt en Amerika handhaaft? s vloot van militaire spionsatellieten, en Nationale het geospatial-Intelligentie Agentschap (NGA) dat analyseert militaire beeldspraak en produceert afbeeldingshulpmiddelen, te werk gaat met de eerste fase van het controversiële binnenlandse het spioneren programma. NAO zal hoe binnenlandse wetshandhaving coördineren en? rampen hulp? de agentschappen zoals FEMA zullen satellietbeeldspraakintelligentie (IMINT) die door militaire spionsatellieten gebruiken wordt geproduceerd. Als I schreef vroeger op het jaar, in tegenstelling tot commerciële satellieten, zijn hun militaire neven veel flexibeler, hebben grotere resolutie en bezitten daarom meer bevoegdheid om menselijke activiteit te controleren. Getuigend voor de commissie van de Veiligheid van het Geboorteland van het Huis in September, Barry Steinhardt, Directeur van ACLU? s Technologie en het Project van de Vrijheid, verzochten een moratorium op het binnenlandse gebruik van militaire spionsatellieten tot de zeer belangrijke vragen werden beantwoord. Steinhardt gezegd? Het congres moet handelen alvorens dit potentieel krachtige toezichthulpmiddel binnenwaarts op de Amerikaanse mensen wordt gedraaid. Het binnenlandse gebruik van spionsatellieten vertegenwoordigt een potentieel monster in het maken, en moeten wij sommige terughoudendheid op zijn plaats zetten alvorens het in iets groeit die Amerikanen zal vertrappelen? privacy rechten.? Needless to say, a feckless Congress has done virtually nothing to halt the program. As The Wall Street Journal reported in early October, Congress? ?partial funding? of the office ?in a little debated $634 billion spending measure,? means that NAO is now providing federal, state and local officials ?with extensive access to spy-satellite imagery.? Allen told the GEOINT Symposium that while ?geospatial efforts are being coordinated across agencies,? technical hurdles must be overcome in order to improve geospatial IT applications. Federal Computer Week avers,
What those ?variable modalities? are were not spelled out by Federal Computer Week. However, the Marino Report was released by Chesapeake Analytics Corporation, an under-the-radar Arlington, Virginia-based private defense contractor that describes itself ?as a ?boutique? consulting firm? for senior executives ?in the geospatial technology sector.? The report itself was written by Defense Group Inc. (DGI), a spooky Falls Church, Virginia defense contractor for NRO and NGA. According to their website, DGI ?customers? include the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of Defense and ?numerous Intelligence Agencies.? As we have seen however, the use of satellite imagery during ?national security events? such as last summer?s political conventions in Denver and St. Paul may have aided FBI and local law enforcement in their preemptive raids on protest organizers and subsequent squelching of dissent. One wonders if this is what DGI refers to when they write that the company ?performs work in the national interest, advancing public safety and national security through innovative research, analysis and applied technology?? NAO?s launch is all the more troubling since an independent review of the program by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) found that the department has been less than forthcoming that NAO complies with privacy laws and doesn?t violate the Posse Comitatus Act. The 1878 law prohibits the military from playing a role in domestic law enforcement. Since the 1990s however, Posse Comitatus has been eroded significantly by both Democratic and Republican administrations, primarily in the areas of ?drug interdiction,? ?border security? as well as ?Continuity of Government? planning by U.S. Northern Command (NORTHCOM). Despite objections by GAO auditors DHS securocrats held up the release of their 60-page report, citing its ?sensitive nature.? The September 15, 2008 report, entitled ?National Applications Office. Certification of Compliance With Legal, Privacy, and Civil Liberties Standards Needs to Be More Fully Justified,? is now in the public domain and was finally released November 6, two days after American national elections. It makes for a very troubling read. In their November 6 cover letter to congressional committees, the GAO writes:
However, the ?independent study group? cited by GAO was neither independent nor predisposed towards limiting the deployment of military spy satellites for domestic ?missions.? Indeed that report, ?Independent Study Group, Civil Applications Committee Blue Ribbon Study,? (September 2005), was the product of a panel comprised solely of securocrats and defense and security contractors who stand to make a bundle on NAO.?As investigative journalist Tim Shorrock revealed last year, the intelligence-sharing system to be managed by NAO,
Indeed, the ?independent study group? was appointed by Mike McConnell, the Director of National Intelligence who himself was a senior vice president for ten years with the spooky Booz Allen Hamilton corporation. McConnell oversaw that firm?s extensive contracts in military intelligence and information operations for the Pentagon, Shorrock reported in March 2008. GAO investigators have determined that while DHS ?has established procedures for legal review, it has not yet fully addressed all outstanding issues regarding how the planned operations of the NAO, as described in the department?s certification documents, are to comply with legal requirements. Specifically, DHS has not resolved legal and policy issues associated with NAO support for law enforcement.? As investigators outlined:
While paltry recommendations towards mitigating potential civil liberties? and privacy abuses by NAO were submitted to the DHS Undersecretary of Intelligence and Analysis (Charles Allen), GAO found that ?specific measures have not yet been developed to address the potential for improper use or retention of information provided by the NAO and the potential for impermissible requests to be accepted as a result of a reliance on broad annual memorandums as justifications.??In other words at NAO, as at other intelligence agencies across the war on terror?s domestic ?battlespace,? it?s business as usual. Three categories of classified satellite information are to be provided law enforcement by the National Applications Office:
While DHS has yet to resolve legal and policy issues associated with NAO support for law enforcement operations, the Office still continues to identify such support as a key element of its ?mission.? Indeed, DHS? Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Office did not resolve how NAO will comply with the applicability of the 4th Amendment to the Constitution which prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures, Posse Comitatus and the Reagan-era Executive Order 12333 that limits how federal intelligence agencies collect information on U.S. citizens and legal residents. Citing lax standards in NAO?s legal review process, GAO found that ?the process for developing and approving annual memorandums for MASINT and ELINT has not been delineated. Such procedures are an important control in assuring that access, retention, and sharing of information is properly constrained.? However, as the eight long years of the Bush administration have demonstrated, any and all measures to ?constrain? out of control federal spy agencies and their privatized assets in the corporate world have been rebuffed. Indeed, congressional oversight of the ?intelligence community? and the Executive Branch is a joke?at the expense of an informed citizenry and democratic institutions accountable to the American people. While DHS claims that data gathered for law enforcement purposes will be ?in compliance with privacy and civil liberties laws and policies of the United States,? the GAO found that ?by broadly sharing information with non-federal users, who are not bound by the Privacy Act, personal information could be at risk of being used in ways not specified when it was originally collected.? Considering that some 70% of U.S. intelligence assets are employees of private security and defense contractors, NAO is a civil liberties disaster waiting to happen. GAO revealed four key areas where privacy risks have been identified:
DHS claims these issues will be mitigated by ?providing appropriate oversight? and by ?building a process to identify and correct inaccurate information, and ensuring that the DHS Privacy Office and DHS Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties remain critical components of all review processes as new and improved technology is developed.? In other words, we?re to rely on DHS to police itself and that agencies critical to Office operations such as the National Reconnaissance Office and the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency will simply hand over America?s most closely-guarded intelligence secrets to federal civil rights attorneys for appropriate ?oversight.? Talk about a blind leap into the darkness! Let?s be clear here and shed whatever illusions one may have about the outcome of last Tuesday?s election. Despite the overwhelming rejection of the Bush administration and their surrogates by the American people, the incoming Obama administration will pay lip-service to civil liberties and the rule of law. This however, will amount to no more than a better public relations campaign, image management and product roll-out. America rebranded. But as we have seen throughout the unfolding disaster that is the ?war on terror,? the Democrats have been fully complicit with the crimes of the Bush regime. From the USA Patriot Act, warrantless wiretapping, immunity for criminal telecoms, ?preemptive policing,? torture, financial fraud and the looting of the economy by capitalist grifters, not to mention the invasion and occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq, threats against Russia, China, Iran, Pakistan, Bolivia, Cuba and Venezuela?indeed any nation that doesn?t toe the imperialist line?the Democrats have been Bush?s most faithful and reliable partners. While the GAO?s report is a welcome addition to the already voluminous catalogue of Bushist horrors, one can expect that NAO?s law enforcement ?mission? will quickly?and quietly?come on line. After all there?s bundles of cash, courtesy of the American people, that need to be spread far and wide! Tom Burghardt is a researcher and activist based in the San Francisco Bay Area. In addition to publishing in Covert Action Quarterly, Love & Rage and Antifa Forum, he is the editor of Police State America: U.S. Military “Civil Disturbance” Planning, distributed by AK Press. Have Your Say: Space-Based Domestic Spying: Kicking Civil Liberties to the Curb Please read our posting guidelines before posting. Alternatively you can discuss this report here. Related News
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