The
Courage from Whistle-blowing
Courage, like cowardice, can grow when an action by one
person influences decisions by others, either toward
bravery or fear. Thus, the gutsy whistle-blowing by some
NSA officials inspired Edward Snowden to expose mass
data collection on all Americans, recalls ex-CIA analyst
Ray McGovern.
By Ray McGovernDecember
12, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Consortiumnews"
- When Edward Snowden in early June 2013 began to reveal
classified data showing criminal collect-it-all
surveillance programs operated by the U.S. government’s
National Security Agency, former NSA professionals
became freer to spell out the liberties taken with the
Bill of Rights, as well as the feckless,
counterproductive nature of bulk electronic data
collection.
On Jan. 7, 2014, four senior retired
specialists with a cumulative total of 144 years of work
with NSA – William Binney, Thomas Drake, Edward Loomis,
and Kirk Wiebe – prepared a
Memorandum for
the President providing a comprehensive
account of the problems at NSA, together with
suggestions as to how they might be best addressed.
The purpose was to inform President
Obama as fully as possible, as he prepared to take
action in light of Snowden’s revelations.
On Jan. 23, 2015 in Berlin, Binney was
honored with the annual Sam Adams Award for Integrity in
Intelligence. Ed Snowden was live-streamed-in for the
occasion, and said, “Without Bill Binney there would be
no Ed Snowden.” (Binney had been among the first to
speak out publicly about NSA abuses; apparently that
emboldened Snowden to do what he did.)
Snowden had already said when he fled
to Hong Kong in June 2013 that he had learned an
extremely important lesson from the four years of
government persecution/prosecution of Tom Drake; namely,
that he, Ed Snowden, had to leave the country in order
to fulfill his mission – and to have some reasonable
chance to avoid spending the rest of his life behind
bars. (Eventually, all the felony charges against Drake
were dismissed.)
An important take-away lesson from
Binney’s and Drake’s boldness and tenacity is that one
never knows what impetus courageous truth-tellers can
give to other, potential whistleblowers – like Ed
Snowden.
In 1998, Bill Binney, with some 35
years under his belt as a senior NSA mathematician and
cryptologist took on a staggering problem for NSA: how
to deal with the vast amount of data available on the
world wide web without burying intelligence analysts
under a haystack of data.
From Binney’s long experience, it
seemed clear that selecting information by using
metadata relationships was the smart way to go. As he
puts it, “Smart selection is smart collection.”
This approach was totally different
form the word/phrase dictionary-select type approach in
general use – even today. Binney’s technique was to use
metadata and some additional rules to define
relationships. This enabled discriminate selection of
data from the tens of terabytes twisting in the
ether. The approach focused the collected data around
known targets, plus some potential developmental
targets, and yielded much more manageable content for
analysts to deal with.
Missing the Needles
Experience had long since shown that
collecting everything in bulk, and using word/phrase
type queries, end up burying analysts in data and making
them dysfunctional. In some of the internal NSA memos
released by Snowden, NSA analysts complain of the kind
of analysis paralysis that makes it extremely difficult
for them to find and address the real threats.
As Snowden has quipped, “The problem
with mass surveillance is when you collect everything,
you understand nothing.”
The net result is that people die
first. Only then do detectives and law enforcement go
wading into their vast data, focus on possible
perpetrators of the crime and often find related
information. This is, of course, exactly the reverse of
how the security services should proceed – assuming the
main priority is to thwart terrorist or other attacks.
And yet the U.S. government proceeds willy-nilly with
its SOS (Stasi-On-Steroids) approach.
In sum, success can come only from a
focused, disciplined selection of data off the fiber
lines, yielding usable metadata, as Binney and his NSA
colleagues demonstrated. Indeed, there was quite enough
electronic intelligence collected by THINTHREAD, the
collection system Binney and his team created,
before 9/11 to have thwarted the attacks, as NSA
senior executive Thomas Drake learned, to his horror,
after the fact.
“Smart selection” techniques can also
protect individual privacy, as Binney and his colleagues
likewise showed. More to the point, this approach can
provide a rich but manageable data environment for
analysts to use toward one of the most important
intelligence objectives – predicting intentions and
capabilities.
This way, one is not reduced to
watching attack after attack – and then wiping up the
blood and searching data bases for clues to the
perpetrators – primarily the job of law enforcement.
Problems With Honesty
Sadly, recent history has shown that
the directors of U.S. intelligence services lie, and
that directors of the NSA lie blatantly – and suffer
zero consequences. On March 12, 2013 (less than two
months before the Snowden revelations),
National Intelligence Director James Clapper lied under
oath in denying that NSA was “wittingly” collecting “any
type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions
of Americans.”
Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Oregon, had put that
question to Clapper that day at a formal, open Senate
Intelligence Committee hearing.
Similarly, on June 27, 2013, three
weeks after the first Snowden revelations
started coming, then-NSA Director Keith Alexander lied
in telling the same Senate committee that NSA’s bulk
telephone surveillance program had thwarted 54 terrorist
“plots or events.” On Oct. 2, 2013, Gen. Alexander
admitted, in testimony before the Senate Judiciary
Committee, that the number of terrorist plots thwarted
was not 54, but one. (And that particular one cannot
bear close scrutiny.)
The failure to demand accountability
for these deceptions proves – as if further proof were
needed – that the Senate intelligence “oversight”
committees has long since become the Senate intelligence
“overlook” committee.
If democracy still means anything, we
the people need to devise some kind of replacement for
the sleepy “watchdogs” in Congress who have forfeited
their responsibility to oversee and verify what the
intelligence agencies are doing. Again, Bill Binney has
what seem the most sensible – and doable – suggestions
toward that end.
He has called for a properly cleared
technical team, responsible to the courts, with
clearly spelled-out authority to go into any
intelligence agency and look directly into and inspect
data bases and the tools in use. This would be a giant
step toward ensuring that we the people – through this
intrusive inspection regime – could monitor in some
rudimentary way what our intelligence agencies are
doing.
Binney suggests further that
intelligence agencies be required to implement software
to monitor their own networks to detect automatically
and to report immediately violations of law and
regulation.
Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, a
publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour
inner-city Washington. He is co-founder of Veteran
Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS), and is
indebted to VIPS member Bill Binney for much of the
substance of this article, which came from McGovern’s
prepared text for remarks at a conference on Thursday in
Moscow, marking the 10th anniversary of RT’s
founding.
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