  
	by Tim Shorrock 
	November 16, 2009 
	
	from
	
	Crocodyl Website 
			 
			
				
					
						
							
							  
							
							 
							Contents 
						 
						
					 
				 
			 
			
			
			
			
			 
  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			
			 
			
			
			SI International/Serco 
			
				
				Author/Researcher 
				Tim Shorrock 
  
				
				 
				Headquarters 
				1818 Library Street, Suite 1000 Reston, VA 20190 
  
				
				 
				Principal Agencies 
				National Security Agency (NSA), National Geospatial-Intelligence 
				Agency (NGA) 
				Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA), Office of Naval 
				Intelligence 
				Air Force Information Warfare Center, Department of Defense 
  
				
				 
				Top Executives 
				Edward J. Casey, Jr., Chairman and CEO 
				Harry Gatanas – Senior VP, Defense and Intelligence Group 
				(former NSA director of Acquisitions) 
  
				
				 
				Annual Revenue 
				$510 million (2006) 
  
				
				 
				Intelligence Percent of Revenue 
				48 percent 
				 
  
				
				 
				Summary 
				
				 
				Ratings 
				
					
				 
				
				SI International, Inc. of McLean, 
				Va., is a key NSA contractor now owned by Serco Inc. of the UK, 
				the world’s largest outsourcing company. SI runs some of the 
				NSA’s support and management functions. Its niche is advising 
				intelligence and defense agencies on their acquisition and 
				outsourcing strategies.  
				  
				
				It also helps intelligence agencies 
				as they shift from proprietary “stove-pipes” to integrating 
				their IT systems with sister agencies and the Pentagon’s 
				evolving Global Information Grid. GIG is the Internet-like 
				system that will theoretically link military commanders, 
				warfighters, and national collection agencies into a single 
				classified network. 
				 
				In August 2008, SI was acquired by Serco Inc., which describes 
				itself as a “a leading provider of professional, technology, and 
				management services focused on the federal government.” SI 
				International is now part of Serco’s North American division. 
				See Serco’s press release. 
				 
				SI bought into many of its contracts by acquiring smaller 
				companies holding specialized NSA contracts. Of particular 
				importance was SI’s $30 million acquisition in 2004 of Bridge 
				Technology Corporation, which had extensive contracts with 
				defense intelligence agencies.  
				  
				
				Bridge “really gave us name-brand 
				recognition within the intelligence community,” S. Bradford 
				“Bud” Antle, SI’s former president and CEO, told 
				investors during a 2006 Washington conference on defense 
				investing sponsored by the Friedman Billings Ramsey investment 
				firm.  
				
					
					“The IC wants other players. 
					They get a bit in-bred because they have a set of 
					contractors that are clean with capabilities they’ve known 
					forever.”  
				 
				
				For that reason, agencies are 
				pleased when they “see an acquisition like us buying Bridge.” 
  
				  
				
				Corporate Information 
				According to SI’s old website, the company specializes in 
				“mission critical outsourcing.”  
				  
				
				That means SI International, 
				 
				
					
					“is an expert in putting 
					together mission-critical business process outsourcing (BPO) 
					solutions for record management and processing, case 
					management, workflow management, human resource services, 
					and logistics operations.  
					  
					
					These outsourcing arrangements 
					increase efficiency, productivity and quality of service, 
					lower administrative costs, reduce office supply costs, 
					enhance supervisory oversight over personnel, minimize time 
					spent on unnecessary research and statistical analysis, and 
					enable civilian agency and Department of Defense personnel 
					to take on higher priority assignments.  
					  
					
					Given today’s global 
					environment, government employees are routinely asked to 
					take on more and more tasks with increasingly finite 
					resources, which makes the need for these BPO arrangements 
					even more acute.” 
				 
				
				 
				CorpWatch Analysis 
				Because of its high-visibility role as an adviser for the NSA, 
				SI has filled its management team and board of directors with 
				former high-ranking intelligence officials.  
				  
				
				Harry Gatanas, SI’s executive 
				vice president for strategic programs, oversees the company’s 
				business with the Pentagon and its intelligence agencies and 
				remains with the company as Serco’s Senior Vice President, 
				Defense & Intelligence Group. Gatanas came to SI directly from 
				the NSA, where he was the agency’s senior acquisition executive 
				and the contracting manager for Project Groundbreaker, one of 
				the largest outsourcing projects ever undertaken by a federal 
				government agency.  
				  
				
				Prior to coming to the NSA, Gatanas 
				spent 30 years in military intelligence, where his duties 
				included managing contracts for the Army. 
  
				  
				
				Recent Contracts/Events 
				In April 2008, SI announced that it was a member of an SAIC team 
				that won a multi-award, indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity 
				contract supporting the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA).
				 
				  
				
				Under the contract, SAIC wrote in a 
				press release,  
				
					
					“SAIC will support the DIA 
					mission with services in areas including foreign cultures, 
					regional dynamics, illicit drugs, infectious disease and 
					health, and emerging and disruptive technologies to provide 
					effective analysis for the Defense Intelligence Enterprise.”
					 
				 
				
				SI’s latest contract with the NSA 
				was signed in April 2008, when it won three “Enterprise Program 
				Management” contracts with a potential value of more than $300 
				million. Under the contracts, SI will help NSA “upgrade its 
				acquisition management services” and “modernize its information 
				technology, systems and programs” (major subcontractors on the 
				project include Booz Allen Hamilton and Lockheed Martin). 
				 
				  
				
				In 2005, SI signed a three-year 
				contract with the NSA to provide training in financial 
				management, and in 2006 added a five-year $6.9 million “task 
				order” to run the NSA’s human resources “welcome center” in Fort 
				Meade. 
  
				
				 
				SOURCES 
				Primary sourcing for this profile came from Tim Shorrock, ''Spies 
				for Hire: The Secret World of Intelligence Outsourcing'' 
				(Simon & Schuster/2008) and from DIA and company press releases. 
				
				 
				Email - Info@si-intl.com 
				Phone - +1-703.939-6000 
				Website - http://www.serco-na.com/ 
			 
			
			
			Back to Contents 
			 
			 
  
			
			 
			 
			
			
			Boeing Integrated Defense Systems 
  
			
				
				Author/Researcher 
				Tim Shorrock 
  
				
				 
				Headquarters 
				100 North Riverside, Chicago, Illinois 60606 (Boeing HQ), P. O. 
				Box 516, St. Louis, Missouri 63166 (Integrated Defense Systems) 
  
				
				 
				Principal Agencies 
				National Security Agency (NSA) 
				Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) 
				National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) 
				National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) 
				Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) 
				Department of Homeland Security (DHS) 
  
				
				 
				Top Executives 
				W. James McNerney, Jr., chairman of the board, president and CEO 
				of The Boeing Company 
				Jim Albaugh, executive vice president, Boeing; president and 
				CEO, Boeing Integrated Defense Systems (member, National 
				Security Telecommunications Advisory Committee) 
  
				
				 
				Annual Revenue 
				$66.4 billion (Boeing corporate) 
  
				
				 
				Intelligence Percent of Revenue 
				Not Disclosed 
				 
  
				
				 
				Summary 
				  
				
				BOEING’S NICHE 
				
				Boeing Integrated Defense Services 
				(IDS) is the intelligence unit of the Boeing Company. Based in 
				Chicago, Boeing is a $61.5 billion aerospace company with more 
				than 161,000 employees, and makes commercial jetliners and 
				military aircraft, satellites, and advanced information and 
				communications systems.  
				  
				
				IDS has close ties with the NSA and 
				the intelligence community’s signals intelligence units. It has 
				an important office about a mile from the agency’s headquarters 
				in Fort Meade, Maryland, in an industrial park filled with NSA 
				contractors. Boeing was involved in some of the Bush 
				administration’s most secretive programs: Jeppesen 
				International Trip Planning, a Boeing subsidiary, handled 
				computerized flights plans for the CIA when it kidnapped 
				(rendered) suspected terrorists and flew them to secret prisons 
				around the world.  
				  
				
				Boeing also has a major stake in 
				domestic intelligence as the prime contractor for the DHS 
				surveillance system, SBInet, which is designed to monitor the 
				U.S.-Mexico border with a “virtual fence” network of 
				surveillance systems and communications towers. 
  
				
				 
				FINANCES 
				
				Boeing IDS, with $32.1 billion in 
				revenues, earns slightly more than half of Boeing’s total annual 
				revenues. Its 71,000-person business unit provides solutions “to 
				meet the enduring needs of defense, space, and intelligence 
				customers in the United States and around the world,” according 
				to the company’s website.  
				  
				
				The division is headquartered in St. 
				Louis, and has “concentrated operations” in Southern California; 
				Seattle; Houston; Philadelphia; Mesa, Arizona; Huntsville, 
				Alabama; the Space Coast of Florida; San Antonio; and 
				Washington, D.C. 
				  
				  
				
				Corporate Information 
				
					
					INTELLIGENCE MISSION 
					
					According to Boeing’s website, 
					its most important intelligence unit is its Mission 
					System Group.  
					  
					
					This organization,  
					
						
						“provides the subject matter 
						expertise, technical excellence, and operational 
						experience required to lead Boeing's effort to support 
						the horizontal integration of the Intelligence Community 
						(IC).  
						  
						
						We are organized, not by 
						customer, but by capability to provide the NGA, CIA, DIA 
						and NSA an enterprise level approach to global 
						situational awareness, content management and knowledge 
						capture. Our architectural solutions facilitate the 
						seamless integration of military and intelligence 
						missions by leveraging open standards and commercial 
						technology.”  
					 
					
					Capabilities include: 
					 
					
						
							- 
							
							Mission Infrastructure 
							(“providing secure, integrated network solutions 
							that support intelligence and command systems”) 
							 
							- 
							
							Intelligence Analysis & 
							Services (“integrated, analytical intelligence 
							support to the warfighter”)  
							- 
							
							commercial imagery 
							solutions to “produce, manage and visualize 
							geospatial information.”   
						 
					 
					
					Key customers of the unit, the 
					company says, include the National Geospatial-Intelligence 
					Agency and the National Security Agency. 
					 
					Boeing’s geospatial intelligence offerings are provided 
					through Boeing’s Space and Intelligence Systems unit, which 
					also holds contracts with the NSA. It allows agencies and 
					military units to map global shorelines and create detailed 
					maps of cities and battlefields, complete with digital 
					elevation data that allow users to construct 
					three-dimensional maps.  
					  
					
					Other agencies are served 
					through Boeing’s Advanced Information Systems (AIS) unit 
					headquartered in Anaheim, California.  
					  
					
					AIS is part of the company’s 
					Intelligence and Security Systems, the Boeing division,
					 
					
						
						“that is dedicated to 
						providing ground-based and other integrated intelligence 
						and security solutions for a variety of U.S. government 
						customers. More than half of the work performed by AIS 
						supports classified government programs.” 
					 
					
					In December 2007, Boeing formed 
					a new Intelligence and Security Systems (I&SS) division that 
					appears to combine many of the company’s services for 
					foreign and domestic intelligence.  
					  
					
					Based in Washington, D.C., I&SS 
					has a workforce of about 2,000 people at nine locations 
					nationwide, and includes four program areas:  
					
						
							- 
							
							Advanced Information 
							Systems  
							- 
							
							Mission Systems 
							 
							- 
							
							Security Solutions, 
							which includes SBInet (the electronic wall being 
							built on the US-Mexico border)  
							- 
							
							Advanced I&SS 
							 
						 
					 
					
					According to a company press 
					release, the new division,  
					
						
						“enables increased focus on 
						the complex challenges faced by our homeland security 
						and intelligence community customers… I&SS will improve 
						our ability to bring comprehensive, net-enabled 
						capabilities to meet our customers' dynamic 
						requirements." 
  
					 
					
					DOMESTIC SECURITY 
					
					AIS is also home to Boeing’s 
					SBINet contract for the US government’s Secure Border 
					Initiative.  
					  
					
					As described by the company, SBI 
					is,  
					
						
						“a comprehensive plan by the 
						US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to gain 
						operational control of the US borders through the 
						integration of increased staffing; interior enforcement; 
						detection technology and infrastructure; and 
						coordination on federal, state, local, and international 
						levels.”  
					 
					
					Boeing’s contribution, through a 
					contract worth at least $2.5 billion, is SBINet,  
					
						
						“a program focused on 
						transforming border control through technology and 
						infrastructure. SBINet will provide frontline personnel 
						advantages in securing the nation's land borders through 
						the most effective integration of current and next 
						generation technology, infrastructure, staffing, and 
						response platforms.”  
					 
					
					SBINet is managed and executed 
					by the US Customs and Border Protection agency and 
					contracted out to the Boeing team, which includes key 
					intelligence contractors DRS Technologies, L-3 
					Communications, Unisys Global Public Sector, and USIS 
					(formerly a 
					Carlyle Group company). 
					 
					The Boeing consortium, the company says,  
					
						
						“will detect, monitor, and 
						classify potential and actual crossers [of the border]. 
						At that point, the system will enable sector command 
						centers to dispatch the right agents and resources to 
						respond to the scene.”  
					 
					
					The equipment will include 
					ground-based and tower-mounted sensors, cameras and radars; 
					fixed and mobile telecommunications systems; 
					ground-penetrating detecting systems; command and control 
					center equipment; and information database and intelligence 
					analysis systems. 
  
				 
				
				CorpWatch Analysis 
				
					
					SUMMARY 
					
					Boeing’s intelligence division, 
					while little known outside of the military establishment, 
					plays a critical role in the so-called war on terror. 
					 
					  
					
					In 2006, IDS began testing for 
					its defense and intelligence clients a new product that 
					downloads signals and imagery from military satellites and 
					sends the data instantly to analysts in ground stations.
					 
					
						
						“For the first time,” said 
						Boeing, “signal intelligence receivers proved that they 
						could automatically identify the target -- a mock 
						terrorist -- and trigger airborne surveillance assets to 
						track the target on the ground, while capturing 
						full-motion imagery and broadcasting it instantly to 
						analysts several hundred miles away.” [1] 
						 
					 
					
					The system will eventually 
					become part of the US Army’s array of high-tech weaponry.
					 
					  
					
					One of IDS’s most important 
					units is its Mission Systems group, which supports the 
					national collection agencies “with solutions that allow them 
					to acquire, manage, visualize and communicate intelligence 
					from multiple sources.” 
  
					
					 
					CIA OPERATIONS 
					
					A Boeing subsidiary played a key 
					role in the secret “extraordinary rendition” program that 
					sent many terrorist suspects to CIA-operated interrogation 
					cells outside the United States.  
					  
					
					According to New Yorker reporter
					Jane Mayer, Jeppesen International Trip Planning, a 
					wholly-owned subsidiary of Boeing, handled,  
					
						
						“many of the logistical and 
						navigational details for these trips, including flight 
						plans, clearance to fly over other countries, hotel 
						reservations, and ground-crew arrangements.” [2] 
					 
					
					In her 2008 book The Dark 
					Side (Doubleday/2008), Mayer added details.  
					  
					
					Quoting Sean Belcher, a 
					former Jeppesen employee, she reported that,  
					
						
						“while the Bush 
						administration was insisting that it did not render 
						suspects to be tortured, executives at Jeppesen had no 
						such illusions. [Belcher] described a meeting in which 
						one of his bosses, Bob Overby, the managing director of 
						Jeppesen International Trip Planning, said, ‘We do all 
						of the extraordinary-rendition flights – you know, the 
						torture flights. Let’s face it, some of these flights 
						end up that way.’” (Mayer, page 129). 
					 
					
					Jeppesen is also involved as a 
					contractor in geospatial intelligence.  
					  
					
					A Boeing handout at a 2007 
					intelligence symposium in San Antonio lists “Jeppesen 
					Government and Military Services” as one of four 
					subsidiaries of Boeing’s Space and Intelligence Systems 
					unit, which provides “prime contractor support to government 
					customers that require diverse geospatial intelligence 
					services.”  
					  
					
					That designation could include 
					the CIA as well as the NGA and other Pentagon agencies. 
					Jeppesen and the other subsidiaries, Boeing says, work “in 
					specialized organizations with broad resources to meet the 
					time-critical requirements of today’s warfighter.” 
  
					
					At GEOINT 2007, Boeing, one of 
					the intelligence community’s biggest suppliers of 
					satellites, displayed its “information sharing environment” 
					software.  
					  
					
					It is designed to meet the 
					Office of the Director of National Intelligence’s new 
					requirements that agencies stop buying “stovepiped” systems 
					that cannot talk to each other and start focusing on 
					products that allow the NGA and other agencies to easily 
					share their classified imagery with the CIA and other 
					sectors of the community.  
					
						
						“To ensure freedom in the 
						world, the United States continues to address the 
						challenges introduced by terrorism,” a Boeing handout 
						said. Its new software, the company said, will allow 
						information to be “shared efficiently and uninterrupted 
						across intelligence agencies, first responders, military 
						and world allies.” 
					 
				 
				
				 
				Recent Contracts/Events 
				In April 2008, Boeing and 
				CSC, another major intelligence contractor, joined forced to 
				pursue a multi-billion dollar contract with the US Special 
				Operations Command (USSOCOM) “to execute the Special Operations 
				Forces' global mission.”  
				
					
					"The combined technical, 
					integration, and sustainment strengths of Boeing and CSC 
					offer the best possible team to support USSOCOM worldwide, 
					and to bring SOFSA new capabilities that offer enhanced 
					performance while establishing cost-saving efficiencies for 
					operations," Jim Sheaffer, president of CSC's North American 
					Public Sector, wrote in a press release. 
  
				 
				
				SOURCES 
				
					
					[1] “Boeing Demonstrates 
					Anti-Terrorism Integrated Tactical Solutions,” Boeing 
					company press release, June 22 2006. 
					[2] Jane Mayer, “The CIA’s Travel Agent,” The New Yorker, 
					October 30, 2006. 
				 
				
				Email - forrest.s.gossett@boeing.com 
				(Boeing media relations) 
				Phone - +1-314-363-0650 
				Website - Boeing Integrated Defense Systems 
			 
			
			
			Back to Contents 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			
			
			BAE Systems/Global Analysis Unit 
  
			
				
				Author/Researcher 
				Tim Shorrock 
  
				
				 
				Headquarters 
				1601 Research Blvd., 
				Rockville MD 20850 
  
				
				 
				Principal Agencies 
				Central Intelligence 
				Agency, National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency 
				Office of the Director of National Intelligence, National 
				Counter-Terrorism Center 
				Department of Defense 
  
				
				 
				Top Executives 
				Walter P. Havenstein, 
				president and CEO 
				John Gannon, vice president of Global Analysis (former deputy 
				director for Intelligence at the Central Intelligence Agency) 
  
				
				 
				Annual Revenue 
				$28.2 billion (BAE U.S. 
				parent) 
  
				
				 
				Intelligence Percent of Revenue 
				Not disclosed 
  
				
				 
				 
				Summary 
				 
				Rankings (BAE Systems Inc.)
				 
				
					
				 
				
				BAE Systems Inc., is the U.S. 
				subsidiary of the British defense giant BAE. It is the 
				sixth-largest U.S. defense contractor and a major player in the 
				U.S. intelligence market.  
				  
				
				Its rise was fueled by a string of 
				strategic acquisitions of American companies, the largest of 
				which was United Defense Industries (UDI).  
				  
				
				BAE bought UDI in 2005 for $4.2 
				billion from the Carlyle Group, the well-connected 
				Washington-based private equity fund. UDI, which makes the 
				Bradley Fighting Vehicle and other weapons systems used by U.S. 
				forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, was a huge money-maker for
				
				Carlyle, and its acquisition 
				helped catapult BAE into third place in the global defense 
				market, just behind Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman. 
				  
				
				 
				Corporate Information 
				BAE Systems' website 
				explains how its Global Analysis intelligence unit operates:
				 
				
					
					“[It] is a leading provider of 
					skilled, fully cleared, and experienced intelligence and 
					geospatial analysts working directly with Government 
					agencies and U.S. military commands to satisfy regular and 
					surge requirements. Policymakers, intelligence officers, war 
					fighters, and law enforcement officers have come 
					increasingly to rely on the sophisticated intelligence 
					analysis provided by Global Analysis to help them understand 
					the threats, risks, and opportunities generated by today’s 
					rapidly evolving international environment. 
					 
					“Along with this on-site support, Global Analysis offers 
					outsourced studies and assessments. Through its own group of 
					‘in-house’ senior analysts, Global Analysis is prepared to 
					provide the intelligence community, the wider U.S. 
					Government, U.S. military commands, and the U.S. private 
					sector with customized strategic assessments and analysis on 
					political, economic, and security issues. 
					 
					“Our sophisticated, all-source analysis program is led by 
					Dr. John Gannon, vice president of Global Analysis 
					and former deputy director for intelligence at the Central 
					Intelligence Agency. Dr. Gannon is ably supported by a range 
					of seasoned senior analysts and managers from the 
					intelligence community as well as by analytic support 
					specialists. …”  
				 
				
				The unit provides professional and 
				analytic staffing; workforce development; technical and 
				tradecraft training; advanced analytic tools; strategic studies 
				and assessments; design, construction, and management of 
				analytic facilities. 
				 
				BAE Systems has extensive operations throughout the Washington, 
				D.C. area and operates numerous Sensitive Compartmented 
				Information Facilities (SCIF) for intelligence agencies. 
				 
				  
				
				These facilities have special 
				windows that prevent outside infiltration of electronic spying 
				devices.  
				  
				
				According to BAE,  
				
					
					“Our newest facility in Herndon, 
					Virginia, known as the Information Analysis Center (IAC) is 
					a state-of-the-art workspace, built to stringent…customer 
					security, communications, and analytic requirements. This 
					facility, which was opened in July, 2005, provides over 
					150,000 square feet of accredited SCIF space accommodating 
					over 700 personnel.  
					  
					
					In addition to workspace, BAE 
					Systems provides the IAC with a 24 x 7 cleared armed guard 
					force, and an array of security services, including badging, 
					holding and passing clearances, and escorting.”  
				 
				
				BAE’s contractor staff at the IAC 
				specialize in counter-terrorism, counter-insurgency, 
				counter-proliferation, leadership analysis, electronic warfare, 
				infrastructure vulnerabilities analysis, medical intelligence, 
				underground facilities assessments and open-source intelligence 
				analysis training for the private sector. 
				  
				
				 
				CorpWatch Analysis 
				BAE Systems is one of the 
				prime beneficiaries of an outsourcing agenda under which the 
				U.S. Intelligence Community spent 70 percent of its estimated 
				$60 billion annual budget on contracts with private companies.
				 
				  
				
				BAE’s services to U.S. intelligence 
				- including the CIA and the National Counter-Terrorism Center - 
				are provided through its Global Analysis Business Unit, located 
				in McLean, Va., a stone’s throw from the CIA. The unit is headed 
				by Dr. John Gannon, a 25-year veteran of the CIA who 
				reached the agency’s highest analytical ranks as deputy director 
				of intelligence and chairman of the National Intelligence 
				Council.  
				  
				
				Today, as a private sector 
				contractor for the Intelligence Community, Gannon manages a 
				staff of more than 800 analysts with security clearances. 
				 
				In 2008 BAE added considerable depth to its intelligence 
				offerings by acquiring MTC Technologies, a Dayton-based supplier 
				of intelligence and technology systems to the NSA and other 
				agencies.  
				  
				
				It also acquired Detica Group, 
				another British intelligence consulting company that has been 
				making deep inroads into the U.S. defense intelligence market 
				and the CIA. 
  
				
					
					FOREIGN REQUIREMENTS 
					
					As a subsidiary of a foreign 
					corporation, BAE Systems Inc. operates under a Special 
					Security Agreement with the US government that requires the 
					company to appoint outside directors who are American 
					citizens to a Government Security Committee.  
					  
					
					These board members are 
					responsible for overseeing BAE’s compliance with US national 
					security and export regulations and vouch for the company 
					before US officials.  
					  
					
					According to BAE,  
					
						
						“Our long history of 
						successful compliance with the SSA allows BAE Systems to 
						supply products and services to the Department of 
						Defense, Intelligence Community and Homeland Security on 
						some of the Nation’s most sensitive programs.” 
						 
					 
					
					BAE Systems’ outside directors 
					all have extensive experience inside the American 
					intelligence and national security communities.  
					  
					
					They include:  
					
						
							- 
							
							Lee H. Hamilton, former 
							Speaker of the House and co-chair of the 9/11 
							Commission  
							- 
							
							Richard J. Kerr, former 
							deputy director of Central Intelligence 
							 
							- 
							
							Gen. Kenneth A. Minihan, 
							former director of the NSA  
							- 
							
							Gen. Anthony C. Zinni 
							(USMC, retired), former commander-in-chief U.S. 
							Central Command  
						 
					 
					
					 
					BAE SYSTEMS AND THE CIA 
					
					BAE’s role in U.S. national 
					security and, in the process, underscores the degree of 
					outsourcing in U.S. intelligence.  
					
						
						“The demand for experienced, 
						skilled, and cleared analysts - and for the best systems 
						to manage them - has never been greater across the 
						Intelligence and Defense Communities, in the field and 
						among federal, state and local agencies responsible for 
						national and homeland security,” according to a Global 
						Analysis unit brochure distributed in October at GEOINT 
						2007, an annual symposium sponsored by the prime 
						contractors for the National Geospatial-Intelligence 
						Agency.  
					 
					
					The mission of the Global 
					Analysis unit,  
					
						
						“is to provide policymakers, 
						warfighters, and law enforcement officials with analysts 
						to help them understand the complex intelligence threats 
						they face, and work force management programs to improve 
						the skills and expertise of analysts,” the brochure 
						states. 
					 
					
					At the bottom of the brochure is 
					a series of photographs illustrating BAE’s broad reach:
					 
					
						
							- 
							
							a group of analysts 
							monitoring a bank of computers  
							- 
							
							three employees studying 
							a map of Europe, the Middle East and the Horn of 
							Africa  
							- 
							
							the outlines of two 
							related social networks that have been mapped out to 
							show how their members are linked  
							- 
							
							a bearded man, 
							apparently from the Middle East and, presumably, a 
							terrorist  
							- 
							
							the fiery image of a the 
							aftereffects of a car bomb explosion in Iraq 
							 
							- 
							
							four white radar domes 
							(known as
							
							radomes) of the 
							type used by the National Security Agency to
							
							monitor global communications 
							from dozens of bases and facilities around the world 
							 
						 
					 
					
					 
					BAE AND HOMELAND SECURITY 
					
					The brochure may look and sound 
					like typical corporate PR.  
					  
					
					But amidst BAE’s spy talk, 
					strategically placed phrases alert intelligence officials to 
					BAE's active presence inside the United States.  
					  
					
					The tip-off language was, 
					
						
					 
					
					By including them, BAE was 
					broadcasting that it is not only a contractor for agencies 
					involved in foreign intelligence, but also for domestic 
					security agencies - a category that includes the Department 
					of Homeland Security (DHS), the FBI, as well as local and 
					state police forces stretching from Maine to Hawaii. 
					 
					One of BAE’s newest products is specifically tailored for 
					the homeland security market. “Geospatial Operations for a 
					Secure Homeland – Awareness, Workflow, Knowledge” (GOSHAWK) 
					is designed to provide geospatial intelligence – the 
					computerized mapping and imagery tools managed by the NGA – 
					to help law enforcement and state and local emergency 
					agencies prepare for, and respond to, “natural disasters and 
					terrorist and criminal incidents.”  
					  
					
					Under the GOSHAWK program, BAE 
					supplies “agencies and corporations” with data providers and 
					information technology specialists “capable of turning 
					geospatial information into the knowledge needed for quick 
					decisions.”  
					  
					
					A typical operation might 
					involve acquiring data from satellites, aircraft, and 
					sensors in ground vehicles, and integrating those data to 
					support an emergency or security operations center. 
					 
					  
					
					One of the program’s special 
					attributes, the company says, is its ability to 
					“differentiate levels of classification,” meaning that it 
					can deduce when data are classified and meant only for use 
					by analysts with security clearances. 
  
					
					 
					BAE IN IRAQ 
					
					During GEOINT 2007, three BAE 
					Systems employees, newly returned from a three-week tour of 
					Iraq and Afghanistan with the NGA, demonstrated a new 
					software package.  
					  
					
					SOCET GXP uses Google Earth 
					software as a basis for creating three-dimensional maps that 
					U.S. commanders and soldiers use to conduct intelligence and 
					reconnaissance missions.  
					  
					
					Eric Bruce, one of the 
					BAE employees back from the Middle East, said in the fall of 
					2007 that his team trained U.S. forces to use the GXP 
					software “to study routes for known terrorist sites” as well 
					as to locate opium fields. 
					
						
						“Terrorists use opium to 
						fund their war,” he said. Bruce also said Iraqi citizens 
						helped his team locating targets. “Many of the locals 
						can’t read maps, so they tell the analysts, ‘There is a 
						mosque next to a hill,’” he explained.  
					 
					
					The U.S. Army’s Topographic 
					Engineering Center bought earlier versions of the software 
					and used them to collect data on more than 12,000 square 
					kilometers of Iraq, primarily in urban centers and over 
					supply routes.  
					  
					
					Bruce said BAE’s new package is 
					designed for defense forces and intelligence agencies, but 
					can also be used for homeland security and by highway 
					departments and airports. 
				 
				  
				
				Recent Contracts/Events 
				In July 2008, Nicole 
				Suveges, a BAE Systems political scientist working in Iraq 
				as an intelligence contractor for the US 4th Infantry Division, 
				was killed in a bombing in Sadr City, Baghdad.  
				  
				
				Suveges had a masters degree in 
				political science from George Washington University, where she 
				had written a dissertation on “Markets and Mullahs: Global 
				Networks, Transnational Ideas and the Deep Play of Political 
				Culture.”  
				  
				
				She was working under a BAE contract 
				to the U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command to provide 
				“training, programmatic, and staffing support” to the Army’s 
				Human Terrain System program. (“BAE Systems statement regarding 
				the loss of employee in Iraq,” BAE Systems News Release, June 
				25, 2008). 
  
				
				 
				SOURCES 
				Primary sourcing for this profile came from Tim Shorrock, 
				''Spies for Hire: The Secret World of Intelligence Outsourcing'' 
				(Simon & Schuster/2008) and from company press releases. 
				
				 
				Email - greg.caires@baesystems.com (Greg Caires, director of 
				Media Relations, BAE Systems Inc.) 
				Phone - +1 (703) 907-8261, +1 (301) 738-4000 
				Website - 
				http://www.baesystems.com/ProductsServices/bae_prod_eis_global_analysis.html 
			 
			
			 
			 
			Back to Contents 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			
			
			Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) and 
			its Primary Contractors 
  
			
				
				Author/Researcher 
				Tim Shorrock 
  
				
				 
				Headquarters 
				The Pentagon/Department 
				of Defense, Virginia; Bolling Air Force Base, Washington, D.C. 
  
				
				 
				Principal Agencies 
				Pentagon 
				Joint Chiefs of Staff 
  
				
				 
				Top Executives 
				Lieutenant General Ronald 
				L. Burgess, Jr, Director 
  
				
				 
				Annual Revenue 
				$1 billion (estimated 
				2009) 
  
				
				 
				Intelligence Percent of Revenue 
				(N/A - DIA is a 
				contracting agency) 
				 
  
				
				 
				Summary 
				 
				The Defense Intelligence Agency has an estimated budget of $1 
				billion and employs more than 11,000 military and civilian 
				personnel, 35 percent of whom are contractors.  
				  
				
				It is the primary intelligence 
				agency for the Pentagon and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 
				integrates all information available from intelligence units of 
				the unified combatant commands, and ensures delivery of 
				intelligence from spy satellites and surveillance planes to 
				war-fighters on the ground in Iraq, Afghanistan, and other 
				battlegrounds.  
				  
				
				Despite DIA's recent award to a 
				private consortium of a contract worth more than $1 billion, the 
				agency's officials insist:  
				
					
					“We are not outsourcing 
					intelligence analysis,” says Donald Black, DIA chief of 
					public affairs. “A full-time government employee maintains 
					authority, direction, and control over the process and a 
					senior analyst/leader reviews all analytical products.” 
					[1]  
				 
				
				Several former high-ranking DIA 
				officials have left government to work for contractors (for 
				examples, see the CACI profile). 
  
				  
				
				Corporate Information 
				
					
						- 
						
						Principal contractors: BAE 
						Systems; Booz Allen Hamilton; SAIC, Inc.; CACI 
						International, Inc.; and L-3 Communications Inc. 
						 
						- 
						
						Percent of workforce 
						employed by contractors: 35  
					 
				 
				  
				
				CorpWatch Analysis 
				The Defense Intelligence 
				Agency was organized in 1961 to create a unified voice for the 
				intelligence branches within the armed forces, and is the 
				nation’s primary producer of foreign military intelligence.
				 
				  
				
				The DIA has a budget of about $1 
				billion and employs more than 11,000 military and civilian 
				personnel, many of whom work overseas as defense attachés at US 
				embassies. Its current director, Army Lt. Gen. Michael Maples, 
				previously served as director of management of the Joint Chiefs 
				of Staff. Historically, the DIA director has answered directly 
				to the military brass and then to the secretary of defense. 
				 
				The DIA describes its primary mission as providing,  
				
					
					“timely, objective, all-source 
					military intelligence to policy makers, war fighters, and 
					force planners to meet a variety of challenges across the 
					spectrum of conflict.”  
				 
				
				One of its most significant 
				assignments is to provide centralized management for all 
				national and defense activities related to MASINT, or measures 
				and signatures intelligence – the “sniffing” by sensors that 
				measures, detects, identifies, and tracks what the DIA calls 
				“unique characteristics of fixed and dynamic targets.” 
				 
				  
				
				MASINT and its related disciplines 
				is one of the most highly classified projects within the 
				intelligence community.  
				  
				
				It is,  
				
					
					“particularly important for 
					detecting ballistic missiles, directed energy weapons, and 
					weapons of mass destruction,” Maples told a defense 
					publication in 2006.  
					  
					
					“We’ve got to have the right 
					kinds of signature databases that we can compare against, 
					and the right kinds of collection capabilities to look into 
					those three areas.” 
				 
				
				The DIA’s requirements for 
				information technology and skilled analysts have made the agency 
				a major employer of contractors.  
				  
				
				According to DIA officials who spoke 
				to a May 2007 Defense Intelligence Acquisition Conference in 
				Colorado, DIA contractors are filling a “workforce gap” that 
				exists at DIA and most of the other agencies. During the 1990s, 
				as intelligence budgets contracted, hundreds of career DIA 
				officers retired and left the intelligence community. 
				 
				  
				
				When the DIA began hiring new people 
				after 9/11, the veteran officers who should have been around to 
				train and mentor them were gone. But because it takes five to 
				seven years to train a new officer, there was a “generational 
				hole” that could only be filled by former intelligence officers 
				with security clearances; and most of them were working in the 
				private sector.  
				  
				
				Contractors were the only solution, 
				officials said, to carry the agency through. 
				
					
					“Although we continuously review 
					our mix of government and contractor personnel to ensure we 
					have the right resources to accomplish our missions, 
					contractors are an integral part of our DIA team,” DIA 
					Director Maples, told the Washington Post in an August 2007 
					letter to the editor. 
				 
				
				 
				Previous DIA contracting: BPAs 
				The DIA’s latest 
				“Solutions for Intelligence Analysis” (SIA) contract is the 
				successor to a series of Blanket Purchase Agreements (BPAs) 
				through which the DIA has historically done most of its 
				contracting. 
				 
				A blanket purchase agreement is a simplified acquisition method 
				that allows government agencies to fill anticipated repetitive 
				needs for analytical services and other supplies.  
				  
				
				According to FedMarket.com, an 
				Internet site for government contractors,  
				
					
					“BPAs are like ‘charge accounts’ 
					set up with trusted suppliers. Both agencies and vendors 
					like BPAs because they help trim the red tape associated 
					with repetitive purchasing. Once set up, repeat purchases 
					are easy for both sides.” 
				 
				
				Under the BPA system that it 
				established in 2003, DIA selected seven teams of vendors to 
				compete against each other for outsourced work with the agency.
				 
				  
				
				Each agreement was worth about $300 
				million to the individual vendor teams, which were led by, 
				
					
						- 
						
						BAE Systems North America 
						 
						- 
						
						Booz Allen Hamilton 
						 
						- 
						
						Computer Sciences 
						Corporation  
						- 
						
						Lockheed Martin 
						 
						- 
						
						Northrop Grumman 
						 
						- 
						
						SRA International 
						 
						- 
						
						Titan Corporation, now a 
						subsidiary of L-3 Communications Inc.   
					 
				 
				
				Contrary to Maples’ assertion to the 
				Post, the agreements do incorporate analysis: A 2005 DIA report 
				says the BPAs,  
				
					
					“provide the full spectrum of 
					Information Technology (IT) planning, design, 
					implementation, Intelligence Analysis support services.”
					 
				 
				
				A similar system of BPAs was 
				established by the Office of the Director of National 
				Intelligence (ODNI) after Michael McConnell was sworn in as DNI 
				in February 2007. 
				 
				The DIA’s blanket purchase agreements are known collectively as 
				DIESCON 3, and are also open for bidding to other agencies in 
				the intelligence community. (If the NSA is looking for IT 
				expertise in a certain area, for example, it can ask for bids 
				from the DIA’s bidding consortiums.) Each team in the DIESCON 3 
				system has a specific focus. 
				 
				The Booz Allen team, for example, includes 10,000 analysts with 
				top secret, sensitive, compartmentalized information (TS/SCI) 
				security clearances, and its consortium includes Accenture, a 
				major outsourcing consultant to government agencies and private 
				corporations, as well as Attensity Inc., a data analysis company 
				initially funded by In-Q-Tel, the CIA’s venture capital firm.
				 
				  
				
				The Booz Allen team works closely on 
				issues related to MASINT for the DIA; another important line of 
				work, according to the Booz Allen BPA website, is data mining 
				and link analysis for the CIA, the NSA, and the FBI. 
				 
				BAE Systems, which captured 41 orders worth $105 million during 
				the first year of its agreement with the DIA, leads an industry 
				team that specializes in analyzing enemy military forces, 
				providing mapping and 3-D imagery to Pentagon intelligence 
				teams, and preparing finished intelligence on paramilitary 
				forces and insurgent and terrorist organizations operating in 
				Iraq and other countries of interest.  
				  
				
				BAE’s BPA team includes SAIC, Booz 
				Allen, Intellibridge Corporation, General Dynamics, Advanced 
				Concepts Inc., SpecTal, and 41 other companies (the last two 
				were acquired in 2007 by L-1 Identity solutions, the 
				intelligence conglomerate where George Tenet is a director). 
				 
				The Lockheed Martin BPA team claims to have the largest cleared 
				workforce in the nation and, according to its DIESCON 3 website, 
				provides, 
				
					
					“exceptional depth to respond to 
					both surge requirements and planned customers tasks.” 
					 
				 
				
				Its forte seems to be providing 
				large, agency-wide IT systems for the DIA and other agencies.
				 
				  
				
				The team includes three of the top 
				U.S. IT firms, Hewlett-Packard, Oracle, and Sun Microsystems, as 
				well as the consulting firm BearingPoint, which helped plan the 
				U.S. occupation of Iraq for the Department of Defense. 
				 
				  
				
				Another member of the team is The 
				Analysis Corporation, the intelligence contractor run by CIA 
				veteran John Brennan. 
				 
				Northrop Grumman, meanwhile, has put together a powerful 
				combination of companies that have made their way up the federal 
				contracting chain by managing the oversight of other 
				contractors. They manage the DIA’s system for processing bids 
				and awarding contracts. It includes CACI International, AT&T, 
				Mantech International, and four small, high-tech companies that 
				provide contract analysts to the CIA. 
				 
				A fifth consortium is managed by Computer Sciences 
				Corporation (CSC), one of the NSA’s most important 
				contractors. It manages global information networks, and 
				produces and disseminates intelligence products, including 
				specialized expertise in the area of imagery processing and 
				archiving.  
				  
				
				The CSC team includes CACI 
				International and L-3 MPRI.  
				  
				
				This last company is one of the 
				largest private armies in the world, and would have at its 
				disposal hundreds of paramilitary officers who would fit in 
				exceedingly well with the DIA’s secret intelligence teams in the 
				Middle East and North Africa. 
				  
				
				 
				Recent Contracts/Events 
				In April 2008, the DIA 
				awarded prime contracts to eight companies, giving them the 
				right to bid on $1 billion worth of work over a five-year 
				period.  
				  
				
				Companies hired under the “Solutions 
				for Intelligence Analysis” (SIA) contract will provide 
				intelligence analysis support to the DIA as well as to the Armed 
				Forces and the intelligence units of the military’s combatant 
				commands, such as the U.S. Central Command.  
				  
				
				According to SAIC, the intent of the 
				SIA contract is “to streamline the process of acquiring new 
				contractors for the Defense Intelligence Enterprise.” That 
				“enterprise,” it said, consists of the DIA, the intelligence 
				units of the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marines, as well as the 
				Combatant Commands. [2] 
				 
				These companies will perform the work: 
				
					
						- 
						
						BAE Systems (the U.S. 
						subsidiary of the British defense giant BAE) 
						 
						- 
						
						Booz Allen Hamilton 
						 
						- 
						
						CACI International 
						 
						- 
						
						Concurrent Technologies 
						Corp. - http://www.ctc.com  
						- 
						
						L-3 Communications Inc. 
						 
						- 
						
						Northrop Grumman Corp. 
						 
						- 
						
						Science Applications 
						International Corp. (SAIC)  
						- 
						
						SRA International Inc. 
						[3]  
					 
				 
				
				 
				SOURCES 
				Primary sourcing for this profile came from Tim Shorrock, 
				''Spies for Hire: The Secret World of Intelligence Outsourcing'' 
				(Simon & Schuster/2008) and from DIA and company press releases. 
				
					
					[1] Email interview with Tim 
					Shorrock, December 2007. 
					[2] SAIC, “Solutions for Intelligence Analysis,” http://www.saic.com/contractcenter/sia. 
					[3] SRA International specializes in providing engineering 
					and IT services to the Pentagon and intelligence agencies. 
					Through its Orion Center for Homeland Security, it provides 
					counterintelligence, counterterrorism, and analytical 
					services to the Department of Homeland Security and various 
					military intelligence units. 
				 
				
				Email - DIA-PAO@dia.mil (Public 
				affairs) 
				Phone - +1-703-695-0071 (Public affairs) 
				Website - http://www.dia.mil 
			 
			
			
			Back to Contents 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			
			
			The Analysis Corporation (TAC) 
  
			
				
				Author/Researcher 
				Tim Shorrock 
  
				
				 
				Headquarters 
				1501 Farm Credit Drive, 
				Suite 2300, McLean, VA 22102-5000 
  
				
				 
				Principal Agencies 
				Central Intelligence 
				Agency (CIA), Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), Department of 
				State 
				National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC), Office of the Director 
				of National Intelligence (ODNI) 
  
				
				 
				Top Executives 
				Alexander Drew, President 
  
				
				 
				Annual Revenue 
				Not disclosed (privately 
				owned) 
  
				
				 
				Intelligence Percent of Revenue 
				Not disclosed 
				 
  
				
				 
				Summary 
				 
				The Analysis Corporation (TAC) specializes in providing 
				counterterrorism analysis and watchlists to U.S. government 
				agencies.  
				  
				
				It is best known for its connection 
				to John O. Brennan, its former CEO, a 35-year veteran of the CIA 
				and currently President Obama’s chief counterterrorism adviser. 
				Brennan, the first director of the National Counterterrorism 
				Center (NCTC), retired from government in November 2005 and 
				immediately joined TAC. 
				 
				TAC is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the defense and intelligence 
				contractor, Global Strategies Group/North America. As of 2008, 
				it employed more than 140 people who, according to company 
				literature, support the work of intelligence, law enforcement, 
				and homeland security agencies “with heavy emphasis on 
				counterterrorism.”  
				  
				
				Much of TAC’s business is with the 
				NCTC itself. In fact, the NCTC is one of the company’s largest 
				customers, and TAC provides counterterrorism (CT) support to 
				“most of the agencies within the intelligence community,” 
				according to a company press release.  
				  
				
				One of its biggest customers is the 
				Office of the Director of National Intelligence, which manages 
				the NCTC. 
				  
				
				 
				Corporate Information 
				On its website, TAC 
				states:  
				
					
					“TAC is at the forefront of the 
					effort to safeguard U.S. national security interests. Since 
					its start in 1990, TAC has provided mission critical 
					intelligence support and technical solutions to the U.S. 
					Government and non-governmental clients.  
					  
					
					Each and every day, TAC makes 
					important contributions in the counterterrorism (CT) and 
					national security realm by supporting national watch-listing 
					activities as well as other CT requirements.”  
				 
				
				An earlier posting said that TAC,
				 
				
					
					“has a strong cadre of cleared 
					intelligence analysts and specialists who have extensive 
					experience in CT and related fields.  
					  
					
					With a demonstrated record of 
					retaining quality CT analysts in a dynamic market, TAC 
					consistently provides skilled analysts intimately familiar 
					with the missions, roles, and responsibilities of the 
					Government's multifaceted CT Community.  
					  
					
					TAC employees are integrated 
					into intelligence, law enforcement, defense, and homeland 
					security work units, serve in Government operations centers, 
					and play a critical role in watch-listing efforts… TAC staff 
					consists of subject matter experts with extensive expertise 
					in a wide range of disciplines.  
					  
					
					This expertise is available to 
					assist clients in business process re-engineering, program 
					management, strategic planning, applied technology, 
					facilitation, and governance challenges.” 
				 
				
				 
				CorpWatch Analysis 
				During the 1990s, TAC 
				developed the U.S. government’s first terrorist database, “Tipoff,” 
				on behalf of the State Department.  
				  
				
				The database was initially conceived 
				as a tool to help U.S. consular officials and customs inspectors 
				determine if foreigners trying to enter the United States were 
				known or suspected terrorists. In 2003, management of the 
				database - which received information collected by a large 
				number of agencies including the CIA, NSA, and FBI - was 
				transferred to the CIA’s Terrorist Threat Integration Center (TTIC) 
				and, later, to the National Counterterrorism Center.  
				  
				
				In 2005, Tipoff was expanded and 
				renamed the Terrorist Identities Datamart Environment, or TIDES, 
				and fingerprint and facial recognition software was added to 
				help identify suspects as they crossed U.S. borders. 
				 
				TAC remains an important NCTC contractor: In 2005, it won a $2.3 
				million contract in a partnership with CACI International to 
				integrate information from the Defense Intelligence Agency into 
				the TIDES database.  
				  
				
				TIDES is now “the wellspring for 
				watch lists distributed to airlines, law enforcement, border 
				posts, and U.S. consulates.”  
				  
				
				With nearly half a million names in 
				its database, TIDES is also the first intelligence database to 
				include both foreigners and U.S. citizens, according to the 
				Washington Post. The Post also reported that TIDES has created 
				significant concerns about secrecy and privacy, with innocent 
				civilians frequently mistaken for terrorist sympathizers, and 
				some individuals remaining on the list long after their own 
				governments have cleared them. 
				 
				TAC has become a critical private sector player in the nation’s 
				counterterrorism efforts. In the five years after 9/11, its 
				income quintupled, from less than $5 million in 2001 to $24 
				million in 2006.  
				  
				
				In 2006, TAC increased its 
				visibility in the intelligence community by creating a “senior 
				advisory board” that included three heavy hitters from the CIA: 
				former Director George J. Tenet, former Chief Information 
				Officer Alan Wade, and former senior analyst John P. 
				Young. 
				
					
					“We will want to tap into their 
					expertise, they are part of the brain trust here,” Brennan 
					told the Washington Post (Tenet, in a statement released by 
					TAC, said he would help the company “address critical needs 
					as government and industry work together to fight 
					terrorism.”)  
				 
				
				According to a former contractor 
				familiar with TAC, Brennan is one of Tenet’s closest friends and 
				confidantes, and hired Tenet primarily as a “rainmaker” – 
				someone who brings new business and contracts to a firm. 
				 
				  
				
				A former CIA officer who served in 
				the Middle East said Brennan’s close ties with Tenet go back to 
				the early 1990s, when Brennan was the chief of station in 
				Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, a country that Tenet visited frequently as 
				director of Central Intelligence (DCI). 
  
				  
				
				Recent Contracts/Events 
				In March 2008, TAC was 
				one of two State Department contractors charged with illegally 
				accessing passport records of presidential contenders Barack 
				Obama, Hillary Clinton, and John McCain.  
				  
				
				In response, TAC issued a statement 
				on March 21:  
				
					
					“Late this morning, 
					representatives of the Department of State informed The 
					Analysis Corporation (TAC) for the first time that one of 
					the individuals who had been detected inappropriately 
					accessing passport files of prominent political figures was 
					a TAC employee.  
					  
					
					The individual was working on 
					contract at the Department of State. This individual's 
					actions were taken without the knowledge or direction of 
					anyone at TAC and are wholly inconsistent with our 
					professional and ethical standards. TAC has an exemplary 
					record of supporting the Department of State and other 
					elements of the U.S. Government for close to two decades. We 
					are fully cooperating with the Department of State in its 
					investigation.  
					  
					
					Specifically, we have honored 
					the Department's request to delay taking any administrative 
					action related to the employment of the individual in order 
					to give the Department's Office of the Inspector General the 
					opportunity to conduct its investigation. We deeply regret 
					that the incident occurred and believe it is an isolated 
					incident.”  
				 
				
				Ironically, TAC’s CEO at the time, 
				John Brennan, was an adviser to the Obama campaign (see CNN). 
				 
				In November 2007, TAC CEO John Brennan resigned from the 
				company and from his position as chairman of the Intelligence 
				National Security Alliance to take a position in the Obama 
				transition team (see the company’s announcement).  
				  
				
				Brennan, who served during the 
				presidential campaign as Obama’s chief intelligence adviser, was 
				a top candidate for the job of CIA director, but was passed over 
				after several national security bloggers reported that he was a 
				key part of the CIA team that reportedly engaged in torture and 
				enhanced interrogations of Guantanamo detainees.  
				  
				
				He remains Obama’s primary adviser 
				on intelligence issues. For more, see Washington Post, “Obama's 
				Battle Against Terrorism To Go Beyond Bombs and Bullets”. 
  
				
				 
				SOURCES 
				Primary sourcing for this profile came from Tim Shorrock, 
				''Spies for Hire: The Secret World of Intelligence Outsourcing'' 
				(Simon & Schuster/2008) and from DIA and company press releases. 
  
				
				Email - info@theanalysiscorp.com 
				Phone - +1.703.738.2840 
				Website - http://www.theanalysiscorp.com/ 
			 
			
			
			Back to Contents 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			
			
			Spectal LLC (L-1 Identity Solutions) 
  
			
				
				Author/Researcher 
				Tim Shorrock 
  
				
				 
				Headquarters 
				1875 Campus Commons 
				Drive, Suite 100, Reston, Virginia 20191 
  
				
				 
				Principal Agencies 
				Central Intelligence 
				Agency (CIA) 
				Unidentified government agencies 
  
				
				 
				Top Executives 
				Ann Holcomb – president 
				(former SpecTal vice president) 
				Ron Hammond – executive vice president 
				Ed Balint – executive vice president 
  
				
				 
				Annual Revenue 
				Latest annual revenue: 
				$47 million (2005), $60 million (2006). Note: Revenue not 
				disclosed for later years, following SpecTal’s acquisition by 
				L-1 Identity Solutions. 
  
				
				 
				Intelligence Percent of Revenue 
				100% (estimate) 
				 
  
				
				 
				Summary 
				 
				SpecTal was founded by a group of former CIA officers in the 
				late 1990s to take advantage of a sudden spike in intelligence 
				contracting during the last years of the Clinton administration.
				 
				  
				
				After 9/11, it found itself in high 
				demand. SpecTal employs more than 325 people, most of whom are 
				former CIA and defense intelligence officials (the company says 
				its employees are veterans of the CIA, the Defense Intelligence 
				Agency, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, the 
				National Reconnaissance Office, the FBI, the Department of 
				State, and other federal agencies).  
				  
				
				Ninety-five percent of them have 
				top-secret security clearances or higher. According to the 
				company’s website, its staff includes the former chief of 
				intelligence for the CIA Directorate of Operations and the 
				former CIA deputy director for development of policies for 
				collection, dissemination, and sharing of intelligence. 
				
					
					“After 9/11, SpecTal was there 
					with the right experts at the right time and the right 
					place,” VirginiaBusiness.com reported in 2006. [1]
					 
					  
					
					“Intelligence and federal law 
					enforcement agencies needed to rapidly gear up to fight a 
					global war on terrorism. Officials filled their gaps in 
					expertise by turning to companies with the right blend of 
					skills and resources. SpecTal fit the bill perfectly and 
					quickly became a preferred vendor.”  
				 
				
				In 2006, SpecTal shot to #1 in 
				VirginiaBusiness.com’s “Fantastic 50” annual list of the state's 
				fastest growing companies, with a 4002 percent increase in 
				revenue between 2001 and 2006 (that’s four thousand percent, not 
				four hundred!).  
				  
				
				It is now owned by L-1 Identity 
				Solutions Inc., the biometric specialist and intelligence 
				contractor run by defense investor Robert V. LaPenta. 
				  
				
				 
				Corporate Information 
				
					
					HISTORY 
					
					SpecTal was founded in 1999 by a 
					husband and wife team, John and Louise Cross. It functioned 
					“as a very small business providing consulting services to 
					the intelligence community” until the couple decided to slow 
					down in 2002. [2]  
					  
					
					They hired three executives from 
					Electronic Data Systems (EDS - the data processing firm once 
					owned by Texas investor Ross Perot). The new execs took the 
					company into new areas, including participating as 
					contractors in covert operations in Afghanistan. As part of 
					the larger company L-1 Identity Solutions, executives say, 
					SpecTal will “enhance” L-1’s “product line” for 
					counter-terrorism [3], for example, “assist[ing] 
					with future development of the HIDE device.  
					  
					
					Produced by L1's subsidiary, 
					Securimetrics, HIDE is used in Iraq by the U.S. government. 
					The mobile device captures biometric information and 
					transmits it back to a database to verify a person's 
					identity. (Securimetrics on Aug. 10 [2006] received a $10 
					million DoD contract for the devices.).” 
					 
					SpecTal’s website reads like something out of a spy novel:
					 
					
						
						“From the situation rooms of 
						Washington, D.C., to the back alleys of the Third World, 
						SpecTal employees have devoted their lives to handling 
						America’s most daunting security and intelligence 
						challenges,” it states. SpecTal explains that it 
						provides “a wide range of analytical, linguistic, 
						technical, and other support to intelligence, defense, 
						and law enforcement agencies. We can augment your team 
						with proven and cleared personnel and/or provide 
						specialized training to your current staff. In many 
						cases, we are veterans of your organization and 
						understand your needs and organizational culture.” 
					 
					
					In other words, many of its 
					employees are former intelligence officers who go back as 
					contractors to the same agencies they used to work. 
					 
					  
					
					SpecTal emphasizes that it 
					provides key expertise in the business and management of 
					intelligence.  
					  
					
					It recently established a 
					“SpecTal Center for Excellence in Intelligence Management (CEIM)” 
					to focus on training intelligence agents in disseminating 
					information.  
					
						
						“Our expert team has 
						experience in multiple IC agencies crafting new 
						intelligence dissemination procedures, training reports 
						and requirements personnel, validating and vetting 
						information and its sources, and ensuring the protection 
						of sources and methods.  
						  
						
						The CEIM is a company-wide 
						resource that can be called upon to provide ad hoc 
						consulting services or permanent staffing for any of our 
						customers at any time.” 
					 
				 
				  
				
				CorpWatch Analysis 
				SpecTal was an 
				interesting choice for L-1. Prior to its acquisition, SpecTal 
				was working closely with the CIA in Afghanistan on a number of 
				classified missions that George Tenet, as CIA director, was 
				apparently quite familiar with.  
				  
				
				In November, 2006, several L-1 
				executives met with Tenet to discuss potential business in 
				Afghanistan.  
				  
				
				During the course of that 
				conversation, LaPenta told investors, Tenet urged L-1 to, 
				 
				
					
					“call the SpecTal guys” because 
					“they know everybody in every one of these ministries that 
					you need to go talk to.” [4]  
				 
				
				Tenet is now an L-1 director. 
				 
				  
				
				In May, 2007, L-1 picked up another 
				intelligence contractor, Advanced Concepts Inc. (ACI), where 80 
				percent of the 300 employees have top-secret clearances. 
				 
				  
				
				ACI, according to LaPenta, is a 
				systems engineering firm that, among other things, protects 
				computer systems for the National Security Agency, making it “a 
				great compliment for SpecTal.” [5]  
				  
				
				By combining the two companies, 
				LaPenta told analysts, he hoped that SpecTal might get some of 
				its “training and analysis and ops people” hired at the NSA, and 
				get work for ACI’s IT and systems people at the CIA. 
				Recent Contracts/Events 
				 
				In October 2006, SpecTal was acquired by L-1 for $100 million. 
				SpecTal is now operating as an L-1 unit out of a 15,700 square 
				foot office building it leased in Reston, Virginia, in a deal 
				that expires in March 2012. 
  
				
				 
				SOURCES 
				
				Primary sourcing for this profile 
				came from Tim Shorrock, ''Spies for Hire: The Secret World of 
				Intelligence Outsourcing'' (Simon & Schuster/2008) and from DIA 
				and company press releases. 
				
					
					[1] “Government intelligence 
					needs spur SpecTal to the head of the list,” 
					VirginiaBusiness.com, May 2006. 
					[2] “Government intelligence needs spur SpecTal to the head 
					of the list,” VirginiaBusiness.com, May 2006. 
					[3] “L1 to acquire SpecTal for $100m,” Security Systems 
					News, Sept. 14, 2006. 
					[4] L-1 Identity Solutions, Inc., Analyst Meeting 
					transcript, November 2, 2006. 
					[5] L-1 Identity Solutions, Inc., Earnings Conference Call, 
					May 9, 2007 (available on the SEC website). 
				 
				
				Email - info@spectal.com 
				Phone - +1-866-SPECTAL (773-2825), +1-703-860-6186 
				Website - http://www.spectal.com/index.htm 
			 
			
			
			Back to Contents 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			
			
			Raytheon Intelligence and Information Systems 
  
			
				
				Author/Researcher 
				Tim Shorrock 
  
				
				 
				Headquarters 
				7700 Arlington Blvd M104, 
				Falls Church, VA 22042-2900; 1200 South Jupiter Road, Garland, 
				Texas, 75042 
  
				
				 
				Principal Agencies 
				Defense Intelligence 
				Agency 
				National Security Agency 
				National Reconnaissance Office 
				Central Intelligence Agency 
				National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency 
				Other “proprietary customers” 
  
				
				 
				Top Executives 
				William H. Swanson, 
				chairman and CEO, Raytheon 
				Michael D. Keebaugh, vice president (Raytheon) and president, 
				Raytheon IIS 
				Lynn A. Dugleis, vice president (Raytheon) and deputy general 
				manager, Raytheon IIS 
  
				
				 
				Annual Revenue 
				$23.2.3 billion 
				(Raytheon, 2008) 
  
				
				 
				Intelligence Percent of Revenue 
				20% of Raytheon total 
				(estimate) 
				 
  
				
				 
				Summary 
				 
				Rankings (Raytheon parent) 
				
					
				 
				
				Raytheon Intelligence and 
				Information Services (Raytheon IIS) is the primary spying unit 
				of defense industry giant Raytheon. In 2007, it earned revenues 
				of $2.7 billion and employed more than 9,000 workers, 80 percent 
				of whom held security clearances of top secret or higher. That 
				made Raytheon IIS one of the nation’s largest intelligence 
				contractors. 
				 
				According to the Raytheon [www.raytheon.com/businesses/riis/ 
				website],  
				
					
					“IIS is a leading provider of 
					intelligence and information solutions that provide the 
					right knowledge at the right time, enabling our customers to 
					make timely and accurate decisions to achieve mission goals 
					of national significance. When you need trusted intelligence 
					solutions, the clear choice is Raytheon.” 
				 
				
				On its intelligence unit, Raytheon 
				states:  
				
					
					“IIS has established itself as 
					the premier provider of command and control systems capable 
					of transforming data into actionable intelligence. Through 
					its ground integration initiative, IIS is helping to create 
					a more integrated and collaborative intelligence community.
					 
					  
					
					Using advanced software 
					technologies, IIS is integrating separate systems into a 
					highly effective enterprise solution - allowing customers to 
					rapidly adapt to their changing needs. IIS is also helping 
					the U.S. Air Force to develop the system design for the 
					next-generation Global Positioning System (GPS) Control 
					Segment for satellite communications.  
					  
					
					Through this effort, IIS is 
					providing command, control and mission support for current 
					GPS Block II and all future satellites as well as supporting 
					existing and new interfaces.” 
				 
				
				 
				Corporate Information 
				
					
					RAYTHEON’S NICHE 
					
					The unit provides many of the 
					tools used by the U.S. military and defense intelligence 
					agencies for their global intelligence, surveillance, and 
					reconnaissance (ISR) operations. Its most important clients 
					in the Intelligence Community are the NSA, NGA, and NRO, for 
					which it provides signals and imaging processing, as well as 
					information security software and tools.  
					  
					
					Raytheon’s IIS operations are 
					closely linked to the company’s Network Centric Systems 
					unit, which designs and operates many of the Pentagon’s 
					high-tech weapons and targeting systems. Raytheon IIS has 
					almost a monopoly hold on the market for command-and-control 
					of U-2 spy planes and Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) such 
					as the Predator, which has seen extensive action in Iraq and 
					Afghanistan.  
					  
					
					These systems were most recently 
					displayed at the “Empire Challenge ‘09” intelligence 
					exercise held annually with the UK. 
  
					
					 
					FINANCES 
					
					In the fourth quarter of 2007, 
					with the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan in full swing, 
					Raytheon’s intelligence unit had net sales of $808 million, 
					a 17 percent increase from the same period in 2006, when 
					sales were $690 million.  
					  
					
					In 2007, Raytheon IIS was the 
					company’s fastest growing unit (by comparison, sales for its 
					Network Centric Warfare unit rose 13 percent, and missile 
					systems rose by 8 percent).  
					  
					
					The intelligence unit’s 
					increase, the company said was “primarily due to new 
					programs,” including $538 million worth of new classified 
					contracts – and one “major classified contract” worth a 
					whopping $246 million.  
					  
					
					In 2007, intelligence systems 
					were responsible for about 15 percent of Raytheon’s total 
					revenue. 
  
					
					 
					HUBRIS 
					
					Raytheon loves to tout its work. 
					In July 2008, it re-posted a laudatory Slate.com story on 
					its website about its Universal Control System, which 
					directs military drones for the U.S. and British militaries.
					 
					  
					
					The article’s title: "Killing 
					Real People Becomes a Video Game". 
  
					
					 
					HISTORY 
					
					Raytheon’s record in the area of 
					intelligence and reconnaissance goes back decades, and 
					includes many international projects.  
					  
					
					During the 1990s, the company 
					(with the assistance of the Clinton administration) won the 
					prime contract to provide the Brazilian government with a 
					$1.4 billion System for the Vigilance of the Amazon (SIVAM).
					 
					  
					
					Press reports described it as a 
					“sophisticated web of sensory and communication devices” 
					including satellites, surveillance aircraft and dozens of 
					radar systems, that monitor the 3.1 million square miles of 
					the Amazon.  
					  
					
					At the time of the contract, it 
					was the largest radar system ever built. 
					  
				 
				
				CorpWatch Analysis 
				
					
					NETWORK CENTRIC WARFARE 
					
					Raytheon IIS is one of the most 
					important contractors in the Intelligence Industrial 
					Complex. Its role in U.S. intelligence and war-fighting is 
					best symbolized by a massive project the U.S. Air Force 
					launched in 2007: the Distributed Common Ground System (DCGS).
					 
					  
					
					Designed and built by Raytheon, 
					DCGS is the Pentagon’s first Internet-based portal to 
					combine tactical intelligence from military units with 
					signals intelligence and imagery from the national 
					collection agencies, the NSA, and NGA.  
					  
					
					When completed, it will link 
					fighter pilots with intelligence analysts and commanders on 
					the ground, giving them a common platform from which to 
					read, interpret, and act on intelligence data.  
					  
					
					Similar systems are being 
					developed for the Army and Navy by Raytheon and several of 
					its competitors in the defense industry, including Lockheed 
					Martin, Northrop Grumman, General Dynamics, and SAIC. 
					 
					The idea behind the DCGS-like systems is to give members of 
					the armed forces and their commanders the ability to import 
					raw sensor feeds from military satellites, U-2 spy planes, 
					and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), and thus see and hear 
					from a single screen the entire panoply of intelligence, 
					including imagery, signals, streaming video, and radio 
					communications.  
					  
					
					Eventually, the networks will be 
					linked together by a “Global Information Grid,” which will 
					offer U.S. forces a,  
					
						
						“seamless, secure, and 
						interconnected information environment, meeting 
						real-time and near real-time needs of both the 
						warfighter and the business user,” according to the NSA, 
						which is charged with protecting the grid from outside 
						tampering. 
					 
					
					Air Force officers involved in 
					DCGS planning describe their prototype as the military’s 
					equivalent to Travelocity, the Internet site used by 
					consumers to make airline and hotel reservations. 
					 
					
						
						“For the first time, on a 
						simple workstation, we’ll be able to guide all our ISR 
						(intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance) 
						products,” says Air Force Lieut. Col. Steven G. 
						Zenishek, who is managing DCGS development for the 
						Air Force.  
					 
					
					By using DCGS to create a 
					common,  
					
						
						“battlespace awareness,” he 
						says, warfighters will be able to find and track enemy 
						soldiers and insurgents, “making sure we target the bad 
						guys and not the good guys.”  
					 
					
					The ultimate object is to 
					“compress the kill chain” – the time it takes from 
					identifying a target to launching a strike – from hours into 
					minutes. 
  
					
					 
					GEOINT 
					
					Raytheon is one of the founders 
					of the United States Geospatial Foundation, an organization 
					of contractors that work for the National 
					Geospatial-Intelligence Agency.  
					  
					
					At GEOINT 2006 in Orlando, most 
					of the exhibitors were displaying technologies designed to 
					combat the Iraqi counterinsurgency. Raytheon’s Intelligence 
					and Information Systems was one of them: It was offering a 
					visualization software, Enterprise Modeling and Simulation, 
					that is loaded with data from airborne sensors that provide 
					three-dimensional views of urban centers. 
					 
					The program, said Raytheon, will,  
					
						
						“open up substantial new 
						possibilities for mission planning, rehearsal of 
						upcoming battles, and even tactical re-planning during 
						actual combat.”  
					 
					
					A U.S. commander will use the 
					simulation software,  
					
						
						“to roam about and see the 
						precise relationships among the various structures, 
						enemy forces, and his own force distribution,” allowing 
						him to search for signs of “incipient terrorist 
						activity” and even “look at the world from the 
						perspective of their enemy.”  
					 
					
					The Enterprise software is part 
					of the larger Distributed Common Ground System (described in 
					Spies for Hire, Chapter Five), which Raytheon has designed 
					to give Air Force commanders and fighter pilots instant 
					access to imagery, signals intelligence, and measures and 
					signature intelligence. 
  
					
					 
					DCGS 
					
					The Distributed Common Ground 
					System is a striking example of how national 
					intelligence collection agencies were incorporated into 
					military operations during the 
					
					George W. Bush 
					administration and the reign of his Secretary of Defense, 
					Donald Rumsfeld.  
					  
					
					DCGS was developed under the 
					direct supervision of Stephen Cambone, who served 
					from 2002 to 2007 as the nation’s first undersecretary of 
					defense for intelligence and was the top intelligence 
					advisor to Rumsfeld.  
					  
					
					During the first few years of 
					the Bush administration, the Pentagon became the dominant 
					force in U.S. intelligence, with vast new powers in human 
					intelligence and domestic counterterrorism. Its new powers 
					were partly a reflection of the fact that 85 percent of the 
					U.S. intelligence budget is allocated to Pentagon agencies. 
					 
					But they also flowed from a strong desire by Rumsfeld, 
					Cambone, and their allies in the Bush administration – most 
					notably Vice President Dick Cheney – to place 
					intelligence collection under the Pentagon’s command and 
					control system, and to create within the Department of 
					Defense a separate spy network that would provide an 
					alternative source of intelligence to the Central 
					Intelligence Agency, which had been the nation’s primary 
					source of human intelligence since its founding in 1947.
					 
					  
					
					Raytheon is therefore a key 
					player in the militarization of U.S. intelligence (for more 
					on DCGS, see Raytheon’s web page on the system). 
				 
				  
				
				Recent Contracts/Events 
				
				In April 2008, Raytheon added an 
				“information security practice” to its IIS business.  
				  
				
				According to Washington 
				Technology (5/12/08), the move will,  
				
					
					“allow the company to focus more 
					intently and bring more resources to bear on a long-standing 
					but still-emerging challenge for its federal customers.
					 
					  
					
					The decision was made partly 
					because Raytheon’s defense and intelligence customers, 
					particularly military installations, had an unprecedented 
					number of ever-changing cyber-attacks that are increasingly 
					sophisticated and complex.” 
				 
				
				In September 2009, Raytheon acquired 
				BBN Technologies, which it says,  
				
					
					“has a long history of 
					innovative products and solutions including the ARPANET 
					(forerunner of the Internet).”  
				 
				
				BBN’s current offerings, the company 
				said,  
				
					
					“include the Boomerang 
					acoustic-based shooter detection system currently deployed 
					with U.S. forces, and a broad range of technology 
					development programs, many considered mission-critical by 
					defense and intelligence customers.” 
  
				 
				
				SOURCES 
				Primary sourcing for this profile came from Tim Shorrock, 
				''Spies for Hire: The Secret World of Intelligence Outsourcing'' 
				(Simon & Schuster/2008) and from DIA and company press releases. 
				
				 
				Email - kdlittle@raytheon.com (IIS media) 
				Phone - +1-(703) 849-1675 (IIS media) 
				Website - http://www.raytheon.com/businesses/riis/ 
			 
			
			
			Back to Contents 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			
			
			Booz Allen Hamilton/Carlyle Group 
  
			
				
				Author/Researcher 
				Tim Shorrock 
  
				
				 
				Headquarters 
				8283 Greensboro Drive, 
				McLean, VA 22102 
  
				
				 
				Principal Agencies 
				National Security Agency 
				(NSA), Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) 
				Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) 
				National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA), National 
				Reconnaissance Office (NRO) 
  
				
				 
				Top Executives 
				Keith Shrader, chairman 
				and CEO (formerly with Western Union, where he was national 
				director of advanced systems planning, and RCA, where he was the 
				top executive in the government communications system division) 
				
				 
				J.M. “Mike” McConnell, Executive Vice 
				President and leader of Booz Allen Hamilton’s National Security 
				(former director of the National Security Agency and the Office 
				of the Director of National Intelligence) 
  
				
				 
				Annual Revenue 
				$4 billion (2006) 
  
				
				 
				Intelligence Percent of Revenue 
				25 percent (estimate/not 
				disclosed) 
				 
  
				
				 
				Summary 
				 
				Rankings 
				
					
				 
				
				Booz Allen Hamilton was founded in 
				1914 in Chicago by three businessmen who gave the firm its name.
				 
				  
				
				In 1940, after more than three 
				decades as a consultant to the top-ranking companies in 
				America’s manufacturing and service economy, including 
				Montgomery Ward, Goodyear Tire, and the Illinois State Railroad, 
				it started working for the U.S. military, where its clients 
				included the Navy, Army, and, after the war, the Air Force and 
				Department of Defense.  
				  
				
				Its initial contracts with the Navy 
				set the pace for its defense work: As a management consultant, 
				Booz Allen helped the Navy restructure for World War II, and 
				permeated its ranks with contractors (“Each Navy bureau had a 
				Booz rep,” Investors Daily reported in a 2005 profile of the 
				firm).  
				  
				
				That relationship served as a 
				template for Booz Allen’s later work in intelligence and 
				national security. 
				  
				
				 
				Corporate Information 
				Booz Allen Hamilton, like 
				its rival SAIC, is involved in virtually every aspect of the 
				modern intelligence enterprise, from advising top officials on 
				how to integrate the 16 agencies within the Intelligence 
				Community (IC), to detailed analysis of signals intelligence, 
				imagery and other critical collections technologies.  
				  
				
				The company’s strategic role in the 
				IC was best described in 2003 by Joan Dempsey, then the 
				top assistant to CIA Director George Tenet for community 
				management.  
				
					
					“I like to call Booz Allen the 
					Shadow IC," she said when receiving a lifetime achievement 
					award from a contractor group, because it has "more former 
					secretaries of this and directors of that" than the entire 
					government.  
				 
				
				Dempsey is now a senior vice 
				president at Booz Allen, responsible for many of the programs 
				she managed while at the CIA. Booz itself it now owned by
				
				the Carlyle Group, one of the 
				nation’s most politically-connected private equity funds. 
  
				
					
					THE CARLYLE GROUP 
					
					In July 2008 Booz Allen 
					completed a previously announced separation of its U.S. 
					government and global commercial businesses, and announced 
					the $2.54 sale of a majority stake in its government unit to 
					the Carlyle Group.  
					  
					
					The Carlyle unit retained the 
					name Booz Allen Hamilton, while the firm’s commercial and 
					international unit, still owned by Booz Allen executives, 
					now operates as Booz & Company. Booz Allen Hamilton earns 
					about $4 billion a year from its government contracts, the 
					firm claims.  
					  
					
					But company insiders say the 
					actual figure is closer to $5 billion, and that BAH earns at 
					least $1 billion a year from classified contracts. 
					 
					BAH is one of the NSA’s most important contractors, and owes 
					its strategic role there in part to Mike McConnell, who was 
					Bush’s director of national intelligence. McConnell was the 
					director of the NSA from 1992 to 1995, and on leaving 
					government, was hired by Booz Allen to run its military 
					intelligence programs.  
					  
					
					In that capacity, McConnell and 
					Booz Allen were involved in some of the Bush 
					administration’s most sensitive intelligence operations, 
					including the infamous Total Information Awareness (TIA) 
					program run by former Navy Admiral John Poindexter of 
					Iran-Contra fame. Now, after leaving the Bush 
					administration, McConnell is back at his old company running 
					its entire national security unit. 
					 
					Booz Allen is a key adviser and prime contractor to all of 
					the major US collection agencies – the CIA, NSA, NGA, NRO, 
					and Defense Intelligence Agency – as well as the Department 
					of Homeland Security, National Counterterrorism Center, 
					Department of Defense, and most of the Pentagon’s combatant 
					commands.  
					  
					
					Since the late-1990s, Booz Allen 
					has forged a particularly close relationship with the NSA, 
					which hired Booz Allen as its chief outside consultant on 
					Project Groundbreaker, a $4 billion project in which the NSA 
					outsourced its “non-mission critical” internal 
					communications systems to a private sector consortium led by 
					Computer Sciences Corporation and the IT unit of Northrop 
					Grumman. 
					 
					On its website, Booz Allen describes its intelligence work 
					as part of its broader expertise in information technology.
					 
					
						
						“Whether dealing with 
						homeland security, peacekeeping operations, or the 
						battlefield, success depends on the ability to collect, 
						safeguard, store, distribute, fuse, and share 
						information – on getting the right information to the 
						right place at the right time,” it says.  
						  
						
						“Our security professionals 
						work in partnership with clients to develop 
						capabilities, share best practices, and leverage the 
						best thinking and most effective integrated solutions 
						for protecting information and networks against cyber 
						and physical threats.” 
					 
					
					Among the many services Booz 
					Allen provides to intelligence agencies, according to the 
					website, are wargaming (simulated drills in which military 
					and intelligence officials test their response to potential 
					threats like terrorist attacks), as well as data-mining and 
					data analysis, signals intelligence systems engineering (an 
					NSA specialty), intelligence analysis and operations 
					support, the design and analysis of cryptographic or 
					code-breaking systems (another NSA specialty), and 
					“outsourcing/privatization strategy and planning.” 
					 
					  
					
					The company’s 2007 annual report 
					spells out several other areas of expertise, including “all 
					source analysis,” an intelligence specialty managed by the 
					CIA and the Office of the DNI that draws on public sources 
					of information, such as foreign newspapers and textbooks, to 
					add texture to data gathered by spies and electronic 
					surveillance. 
					 
					Booz Allen is also working on one of the most important 
					initiatives the intelligence community has launched in 
					recent years: the Cryptographic Modernization Program.
					 
					  
					
					It is a multiyear effort being 
					managed by the Air Force Intelligence, Surveillance and 
					Reconnaissance Agency, an affiliate of the NSA once known as 
					the Air Intelligency Agency.  
					  
					
					Last fall, during a presentation 
					to an intelligence conference in San Antonio, Air Force Gen.
					John C. Koziol, the commander of the agency, 
					described the project as an attempt to combine signals 
					intelligence, imagery, and measures and signatures 
					intelligence – a discipline known as MASINT that uses 
					sensors to pick up tell-tale signs of chemicals and other 
					substances – into a single electronic package that can be 
					used by combat and special operations commanders to track 
					the enemy. 
					 
					When completed, Koziol said, the modernization program will 
					improve intelligence gathered by unmanned aerial vehicles 
					and satellites and transmit it to “cryptographic centers” 
					that his agency manages around the world.  
					  
					
					Booz Allen, according to its 
					website, is contributing to the project by, 
					
						
						“analyzing design 
						trade-offs; planning acquisition programs; and 
						supporting the fielding of hundreds of thousands of 
						modernized air, space, and ground cryptographic 
						devices.”  
					 
					
					That makes Booz Allen a full 
					partner in the project, which, according to Koziol, has been 
					“fully endorsed” by Adm. McConnell at the Office of the DNI. 
				 
				
				 
				CorpWatch Analysis 
				To carry out its tasks at 
				the intelligence agencies, Booz Allen has hired a dazzling array 
				of former national security officials and foot soldiers. 
				 
				  
				
				In 2002, Information Week 
				reported that Booz Allen had more than 1,000 former intelligence 
				officers on its payroll. In 2007, as I was writing a chapter 
				about Booz Allen for Spies for Hire, my 2008 book on outsourced 
				intelligence, I asked the company if it could confirm that 
				number or provide a more accurate one.  
				  
				
				Spokesman George Farrar 
				e-mailed:  
				
					
					"It is certainly possible, but 
					as a privately held corporation we consider that information 
					to be proprietary and do not disclose." 
				 
				
				Unlike many of its competitors in 
				the intelligence industry, Booz Allen is a privately held 
				company whose shares are owned by its 300 vice presidents. The 
				vast majority of them work for the commercial division, about 80 
				are in "government support,” with the rest focused on Booz 
				Allen’s corporate and international work, Booz Allen’s Farrar 
				told CorpWatch. 
				 
				Most of these vice presidents have long and deep experience in 
				the intelligence community, and are beginning to act as a 
				training cadre for senior jobs back in government.  
				  
				
				Booz Allen’s most illustrious 
				alumnus, for example, is Michael McConnell, current 
				director of National Intelligence.  
				  
				
				Before President George W. Bush 
				appointed him to run the intelligence community in January 2007, 
				McConnell, the former director of the NSA during the Clinton 
				administration, spent more than 10 years as a Booz Allen senior 
				vice president in charge of the company’s extensive contracts in 
				military intelligence and information operations for the 
				Department of Defense. 
				 
				In that work, his official biography states, McConnell provided 
				intelligence support to,  
				
					
					"the U.S. Unified Combatant 
					Commanders, the director of National Intelligence Agencies, 
					and the Military Service Intelligence directors." 
					 
				 
				
				That made him a close colleague of 
				not only Donald Rumsfeld, Pentagon chief from 2001 to 
				2007, but of Vice President Dick Cheney, who served Bush 
				as a kind of intelligence godfather from the earliest days of 
				the administration.  
				  
				
				During the first Bush administration 
				and the first Gulf War, McConnell had worked for Cheney, then 
				the secretary of defense, as the chief intelligence adviser to 
				Gen. Colin Powell, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of 
				Staff. Cheney was so impressed with McConnell’s work during the 
				war that he appointed him to head the NSA in 1993. (He later 
				intervened personally to convince McConnell to take the DNI 
				job.)  
				  
				
				As Booz Allen’s chief intelligence 
				liaison to the Pentagon, McConnell was at the center of action, 
				both before and after 9/11. 
				 
				During the first six years of the Bush administration, Booz 
				Allen’s contracts with the US government rose dramatically, from 
				$626,000 in 2000 to $1.6 billion in 2006. And as I reported last 
				year in Salon, McConnell and his staff at Booz Allen were deeply 
				involved in some of the Bush administration’s most controversial 
				counterterrorism programs.  
				  
				
				They included the Pentagon’s 
				infamous Total Information Awareness (TIA) 
				data-mining scheme run, by former Navy Adm. John Poindexter. 
				TIA was an attempt to collect information on potential 
				terrorists in America from phone records, credit card receipts, 
				and other databases.  
				  
				
				Congress cancelled TIA over civil 
				liberties concerns, but much of the work was transferred to the 
				NSA, where Booz Allen continued to receive the contracts. 
				 
				  
				
				In 2002, when the CIA launched a 
				financial intelligence project to track terrorist financing with 
				the secret cooperation of SWIFT, the Brussels-based 
				international banking consortium, Booz Allen won a contract to 
				serve as an “outside” auditor of the project. 
  
				
					
					SHRADER/CEO 
					
					The man most responsible for 
					Booz Allen’s growth as an intelligence contractor is 
					Keith Shrader, who has been running the company as 
					chairman and CEO since 1998.  
					  
					
					Shrader, an electrical engineer 
					by training, came to Booz Allen in 1974 after serving at the 
					senior management level at two prominent telecommunications 
					firms: Western Union, where he was national director of 
					advanced systems planning; and RCA, where he served in the 
					company’s government communications system division. 
					 
					  
					
					These positions prepared him 
					well for his later work at Booz Allen as a consultant to the 
					telecom industry. According to his official biography, he 
					“led major assignments” for the industry as a Booz Allen 
					consultant, and was deeply involved in the company’s 
					“landmark work for AT&T” when the government broke up that 
					firm. 
					 
					In those assignments, Shrader may have been exposed to the 
					telecom industry’s close ties to U.S. intelligence. During 
					the years he worked for Western Union and RCA, those firms, 
					along with ITT World Communications, were part of a secret 
					surveillance program known as Minaret. Under that scheme, 
					telecom companies, with the concurrence of a handful of 
					high-ranking executives, handed over to the NSA information 
					on all incoming and outgoing U.S. telephone calls and 
					telegrams.  
					  
					
					Minaret was an early version of 
					the NSA’s warrantless surveillance program launched by the 
					Bush administration after 9/11.  
					  
					
					Minaret, and the involvement of 
					the private companies in NSA spying, was exposed by the 
					congressional committees investigating intelligence abuse in 
					the mid-1970s, and was the inspiration behind the 1978 
					Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which set the 
					rules - including the important requirement for warrants - 
					for the domestic surveillance of telephone traffic. 
					 
					None of this history is alluded to in Booz Allen’s official 
					propaganda, but Shrader, on his appointment as CEO in 1998, 
					mentioned in a rare press interview with the Financial Times 
					that the most relevant background for his new position of 
					chief executive was his experience working for 
					telecommunications clients and doing classified defense work 
					for the U.S. government – “something of a Booz specialty,” 
					the FT pointed out. 
					 
					Booz Allen adds on its website that Shrader, as CEO, has 
					also,  
					
						
						“led important programs for 
						the U.S. National Communications System and the Defense 
						Information Systems Agency,” two of the most important 
						classified intelligence networks in use by the federal 
						government.  
					 
					
					Under Shrader, Booz Allen also 
					became the NSA’s most important outside consultant, 
					culminating in its advisory role in Project Groundbreaker.
					 
					  
					
					That project, which awarded its 
					first contracts in the summer of 2001, put Booz Allen in a 
					prime position to capture NSA and other intelligence work in 
					the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, when intelligence 
					budgets, and NSA spying, increased substantially. 
					 
					After 9/11, by Booz Allen’s account, the firm helped the 
					Bush administration and the Intelligence Community reshape 
					their spying capabilities to match the new era of 
					counterinsurgencies and terrorist threats.  
					
						
						“The nature of intelligence 
						changed dramatically in the wake of 9/11,” Christopher 
						Ling, a Booz Allen vice president, explained in the 
						company’s most recent annual report. “An entire analytic 
						production system geared to detect large-scale cold war 
						adversarial capabilities was suddenly required to 
						transform.”  
					 
					
					At Booz Allen, he added, 
					 
					
						
						“We are finding innovative 
						ways to integrate intelligence and operations, enabled 
						by advanced visualization and data management 
						capabilities, which has allowed us to pioneer tactics, 
						techniques, and procedures.” 
					 
					
					In addition to serving as a 
					prime contractor on Poindexter’s Total Information Awareness 
					project, Booz Allen was active on both the military and 
					economic fronts on the “war on terror.”  
					  
					
					For the Pentagon, it helped 
					develop the “blue force” tracking system that allows 
					soldiers and commanders in Iraq and other battlegrounds the 
					ability to electronically identify friendly troops. And in 
					the weeks leading up to the invasion of Iraq, Booz Allen 
					sponsored and organized several conferences aimed at helping 
					US corporations secure contracts in occupied Baghdad. 
					 
					  
					
					Former CIA Director James 
					Woolsey, one of the most ardent backers of the war, was 
					a keynote speaker at one of these conferences. 
  
					
					 
					KING OF THE REVOLVING DOOR 
					
					Booz Allen prides itself on its 
					dedication to the agencies it works for and on the personal 
					relationships it has forged between its personnel and their 
					defense and intelligence clients.  
					
						
						“We stay for a lifetime,” 
						Mark J. Gerencser, senior vice president in charge 
						of Booz Allen’s government contracting division, 
						remarked in 2006.  
					 
					
					The best guide to its 
					intelligence work, therefore, is its executive leadership – 
					the vice presidents who are each poised to profit personally 
					from a corporate takeover by the Carlyle Group. A quick 
					study of their biographies posted on Booz Allen’s website 
					provides an excellent guide to the company’s extensive 
					relationships with the intelligence community. 
					 
					As the director of Booz Allen’s U.S. government business, 
					for example, Gerencser serves in “several broad-based 
					roles,” including “representing industry” to the Office of 
					the secretary of defense and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 
					which manage the Pentagon’s vast intelligence operations.
					 
					  
					
					He is also a member of Booz 
					Allen’s leadership team that sets the strategic direction of 
					the company, and has run many of the war games Booz Allen 
					staged for its government clients. 
					 
					Just below Gerenscser in the company’s intelligence 
					hierarchy is Ken Wiegand, another senior vice 
					president.  
					  
					
					Weigand came to Booz Allen in 
					1983 after working for a decade in Air Force intelligence, 
					and he now leads the firm’s work for national intelligence 
					and law enforcement agencies and the Department of Homeland 
					Security.  
					  
					
					His specialty, the website says, 
					includes imagery intelligence operations, which are managed 
					by the NGA, one of Booz Allen’s most important clients. 
					 
					Senior Vice President Joseph W. Mahaffee, a veteran 
					of naval intelligence, is the leader of Booz Allen’s 
					Maryland procurement office business, which puts him in 
					charge of the company’s contracts with the National Security 
					Agency in Fort Meade.  
					  
					
					He focuses on “meeting the 
					SIGINT and Information Assurance mission objectives” of the 
					NSA with various technology services, including systems 
					engineering, software development, and “advanced 
					telecommunications analysis.” 
					 
					Another key Booz Allen figure at the NSA is Marty Hill, who 
					came to the company after a 35-year career in signals 
					intelligence and electronic warfare, and previously served 
					as an expert on “information operations capabilities and 
					policy” for Donald Rumsfeld’s Pentagon.  
					  
					
					He leads of team of 1,200 
					professionals engaged in all aspects of SIGINT, including 
					technical analysis, systems development and operations. 
					 
					Vice President Pamela Lentz is a former cryptology 
					officer with the Navy and once worked as a program manager 
					for TRW, one of the nation’s oldest intelligence 
					contractors. (It is now owned by Northrop Grumman) 
					 
					  
					
					She is Booz Allen’s “client 
					service officer” for the firm’s Defense Intelligence Agency 
					and military intelligence markets, which includes 
					intelligence units within the Navy, Air Force, Army, the 
					unified combatant commands and the undersecretary of defense 
					for intelligence.  
					  
					
					Among other tasks, Lentz manages 
					a 120-person Booz Allen team that supports the National 
					Reconnaissance Office, the Pentagon agency that manages the 
					nation’s military spy satellites. She also runs a task force 
					that supports human intelligence collection efforts at the 
					DIA. 
					 
					Vice President Laurene Gallo, a former intelligence 
					analyst at the NSA, leads a Booz Allen “intelligence 
					research and analysis” team that support several agencies, 
					including the CIA, the Office of the DNI and the National 
					Counterterrrorism Center.  
					  
					
					Vice President Richard Wilhelm, 
					whose job at Booz Allen is to work with the CIA and the ODNI, 
					came to the company after a long career in US intelligence 
					that included stints directing the Joint Intelligence Center 
					for Iraq during Operation Desert Storm and as the NSA’s 
					first director of information warfare. 
					 
					Vice President William Wansley, a former Army 
					intelligence officer, leads a team of experts in “strategic 
					and business planning” that supports the CIA’s National 
					Clandestine Service, the part of the CIA that conducts 
					covert operations and recruits foreign spies, as well as the 
					Office of the DNI.  
					  
					
					Another vice president, Robert 
					W. Noonan, a retired Army lieutenant general who once served 
					as the Army’s deputy chief of staff for intelligence and the 
					commanding general of the US Army’s Intelligence and 
					Security Command, is in charge of expanding Booz Allen’s 
					military intelligence business within all the armed 
					services, the combatant commands, the DIA, and the Office of 
					the Secretary of Defense. 
				 
				  
				
				Recent Contracts/Events 
				In spite of its 
				tremendous power as a contractor, Booz Allen has received very 
				little criticism or even scrutiny from Congress.  
				  
				
				In January 2007, the Senate, when it 
				held hearings on Admiral McConnell’s nomination as director of 
				National Intelligence, had a rare opportunity to inquire about 
				the company. Prior to the hearing, several senators said they 
				would question McConnell about Booz Allen’s role as a 
				contractor; but the hearing was a desultory affair, and senators 
				posed few questions to the new DNI about the high level of 
				contracting in the intelligence community or the specific role 
				of Booz Allen. 
				 
				In February 2007, a Booz Allen contract with the Department of 
				Homeland Security came under close scrutiny in the House. 
				 
				  
				
				In February 2007, Rep. Henry 
				Waxman, D-CA., the chairman of the House Committee on 
				Government Oversight and Reform, charged that Booz Allen had a 
				significant conflict of interest over its contract to oversee an 
				$8 billion contract with the DHS Secure Border Initiative known 
				as SBI-Net.  
				  
				
				Under the contract, Boeing and other 
				companies will build a “virtual fence” of cameras, radar, and 
				sensors that will transmit imagery and data to border patrol 
				agents working along the U.S. borders with Canada and Mexico. 
				 
				The conflict arose, said Waxman, because Booz Allen had a 
				long-standing relationship with Boeing, the prime contractor for 
				SBI-Net, and could therefore not provide objective oversight of 
				the program.  
				  
				
				At the hearing, Waxman pointed out 
				to DHS officials that they had hired 98 people to oversee the 
				SBI-Net contract.  
				
					
					“But the problem is that 65 of 
					these people don’t work for the government. They work for 
					the contractor,” he said. “You’re relying on them to do the 
					function that a government ordinarily would do.”  
				 
				
				DHS officials responded that Booz 
				Allen had been hired for advice, not for oversight. 
				 
				Waxman’s criticism could be made of a myriad of contracts Booz 
				Allen holds with intelligence agencies. At the NSA, for example, 
				it has advised the agency about several contracts that involve 
				companies with which Booz Allen has close business ties. That is 
				also true at the NRO, NGA and CIA. So far, however, no reports 
				of conflicts of interest have emerged from Congress, which in 
				any case exercises little oversight over intelligence contracts. 
				 
				In another damaging report issued in 2007, Congress’ General 
				Accounting Office found that the Department of Homeland Security 
				was spending nearly $16 billion a year on goods and services 
				from the private sector, making DHS the third-largest employer 
				of contractors in the federal government.  
				  
				
				Among the beneficiaries of DHS’s 
				spending mentioned in the report was Booz Allen Hamilton, which 
				in 2006 was awarded a $43 million no-bid contract to provide 
				services to the DHS intelligence unit.  
				  
				
				On reading the $16 billion DHS 
				figures in the GAO report in fall 2007, Sen. Joseph Lieberman, 
				I-Conn., angrily commented:  
				
					
					“plainly put, we need to know 
					who is in charge at DHS – its managers and workers, or the 
					contractors.” 
				 
				
				The Washington Post later found that 
				Booz Allen’s no-bid intelligence contract with DHS had ballooned 
				from $2 million in 2003 to more than $30 million in 2006 – 15 
				times its original value. When DHS lawyers first examined the 
				Booz Allen deal, the Post said, they found it was “grossly 
				beyond the scope” of the original contract, and had violated 
				government procurement rules.  
				  
				
				DHS lawyers ordered an open 
				competition, but it was delayed for a year.  
				  
				
				During that time, the Post said,
				 
				
					
					“the payments to Booz Allen more 
					than doubled again under a second no-bid arrangement, to $73 
					million.” 
				 
				
				Here is a short list of recent Booz 
				Allen unclassified contracts (2008): 
				
					
						- 
						
						A $6.3 million contract to 
						provide research on 3-D facial recognition biometric 
						software for the Information Assurance Technical 
						Analysis Center at Offut Air Force Base in Nebraska, 
						awarded in 2008. 
   
						- 
						
						A $48 million contract with 
						the U.S. Air Force to conduct research on “survivability 
						and lethality implications” of an Air Force vehicle 
						program, awarded in 2008. 
   
						- 
						
						In a partnership with CACI 
						International, EDS, Lockheed Martin, SAIC and SRA, the 
						right to bid on $12.2 billion worth of contracts for 
						telecom and IT services for the Defense Information 
						Systems Agency (DISA), awarded in 2007. 
   
						- 
						
						Participation in a 
						consortium of seven companies that will bid on up to $20 
						billion worth of work in Command, Control, 
						Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance 
						and Reconnaissance – a mouthful of a term usually 
						referred to as C4ISR – for the Army’s Communications 
						Electronics Command, which is based in Fort Monmouth, 
						New Jersey, awarded in 2006. 
   
						- 
						
						A five-year, $250 million 
						contract to provide “systems engineering technical 
						assistance” to the Science and Technology Directorate of 
						the Department of Homeland Security, signed in 2005. 
						 
					 
				 
				
				 
				SOURCES 
				Primary sourcing for this profile came from Tim Shorrock, 
				''Spies for Hire: The Secret World of Intelligence Outsourcing'' 
				(Simon & Schuster/2008) and from company press releases. 
				
				 
				Email - Farrar_George@bah.com (Media relations) 
				Phone - +1-(703) 902-4588 
				Website - http://www.boozallen.com/home 
			 
			
			
			Back to Contents 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			
			
			CACI International Inc. 
  
			
				
				Author/Researcher 
				Tim Shorrock 
  
				
				 
				Headquarters 
				1100 North Glebe Road, 
				Arlington, VA 22201 
  
				
				 
				Principal Agencies 
				National Security Agency 
				(NSA), Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Defense Intelligence 
				Agency (DIA) 
				National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA), National 
				Reconnaissance Office (NRO) 
				Department of Defense (DOD), Office of the Secretary of Defense 
				(SecDef) 
  
				
				 
				Top Executives 
				J.P “Jack” London, 
				chairman of the board 
				Paul M. Cofoni, president and CEO 
  
				
				 
				Annual Revenue 
				$2.4 billion 
  
				
				 
				Intelligence Percent of Revenue 
				Not disclosed 
				 
  
				
				 
				Summary 
				 
				CACI International Inc. is one of the world’s largest private 
				intelligence services providers and is deeply involved in 
				classified “black” operations everywhere on the globe where U.S. 
				military forces are active.  
				  
				
				It is best known to the American 
				public as one of two contractors involved in the U.S. 
				government’s abuse of Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib. 
				 
				The best way to describe CACI is as a private supplier of 
				signals intelligence, human intelligence, imagery, and black 
				ops, all rolled into one enterprise.  
				
					
					“We support all four of the 
					intelligence community’s priority focus areas: analysis, 
					collection, user outcomes, and management,” CACI stated in 
					its 2006 annual report.  
				 
				
				CACI’s intelligence contracts now 
				make up 35 percent of the company’s revenues, 95 percent of 
				which is earned from the federal government. 
				Corporate Information 
				 
				Longtime CEO Jack London rattled off the company’s 
				clients in a conference call with analysts in the spring of 
				2007:  
				
					
					“the Department of Defense, all 
					the military services, the intelligence community at the 
					strategic level. That'd be your CIA, your NRO, your NSA, DIA, 
					and NGA.”  
				 
				
				CACI’s primary intelligence 
				customer, he said, is the Army.  
				
					
					“We know what's happening out 
					there in terms of the global war on terrorism threat,” he 
					said. “And that is primarily being supported in the military 
					from the United States Army's perspective as well as the 
					United States Marine Corps.” 
				 
				
				CACI’s largest single contract, 
				worth $450 million, is with the U.S. Army’s electronics 
				communication command, which is responsible for electronic 
				warfare - command, control, communications, computers, 
				intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, also known as 
				C4ISR. [1] 
				 
				Other customers include the U.S. Navy’s littoral and mine 
				warfare program, the Air Force’s Pacific Command and Control 
				unit, and the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA), the 
				Pentagon unit responsible for network centric warfare. Elsewhere 
				in the Intelligence Community (IC), CACI holds major contracts 
				with the Department of Homeland Security and the DHS’s U.S. 
				Customs and Border Protection agency. 
				 
				But the contract that CACI will always be known for is the one 
				to provide interrogators at Abu Ghraib (see CorpWatch analysis, 
				below). 
				
					
					RUMSFELD ALLY 
					
					CACI’s services, London 
					constantly reminded investors during the Bush era, were 
					perfectly aligned with the Pentagon’s.  
					
						
						“As the fight against 
						terrorism and the Islamofascists continues, technologies 
						will keep evolving to collect, analyze and disseminate 
						vital intelligence to support the war fighter and the 
						national security authorities,” he said in CACI’s fourth 
						quarter financial report in 2006.  
						  
						
						“Information and 
						intelligence is where the growth is likely to be for the 
						simple reason that, in the final analysis, accurate 
						information from quality sources, communicated through 
						secure channels to the right people, will trump all 
						other weapons of war. In this environment, CACI is at 
						the forefront.” [2] 
					 
					  
					
					CACI’S NICHE 
					
					CACI’s most important asset is 
					its 10,000-person workforce, two-thirds of whom hold 
					security clearances.  
					  
					
					Of those 10,000, CACI’s website 
					says, “about 2,000 have top-secret sensitive 
					compartmentalized information clearances,” the highest 
					possible clearance attainable in the Intelligence Community.
					 
					  
					
					CACI’s employees are stationed 
					throughout the world, including in Iraq and Afghanistan, 
					Kosovo, Bahrain, Kuwait, Belgium, Bosnia, Hungary, Germany, 
					Italy, the UK and Japan. [3] Recent job postings 
					also show that CACI performs classified work in South Korea 
					and Colombia, where U.S. intelligence agencies have 
					extensive electronic warfare and eavesdropping operations. 
  
					
					 
					NSA/SIGNALS INTELLIGENCE 
					
					CACI has very close ties with 
					the NSA. During an interview in July 2006 with WMAL radio in 
					Washington, CEO Jack London elaborated. CACI, he said, helps 
					intelligence agencies monitor Internet traffic and terrorist 
					communications. He also described data-mining – an important 
					task for an agency that must sift through millions of bits 
					of date every day - as “one of our specialties.”  
					  
					
					CACI, he said, does 
					“forensic-type work” using information from,  
					
						
						“overhead imagery, 
						communications satellites and intercepts, pulling all 
						these things together in a forensic way, playing the 
						detective, if you will, and connecting the dots and 
						being able to determine connections among organizations 
						and among cells of people.” [4]  
					 
					
					Gail Phipps, a former NSA 
					official who was the executive vice president of CACI 
					International from 1999 until November 2008, refers to the 
					new science of espionage as “exquisite intelligence.” 
					 
					
						
						“We need to be able to 
						pinpoint a person or a cell and be 99 percent confident 
						that we know where they are, and in exact time,” she 
						says.  
						  
						
						“That’s very different from 
						the type of analysis systems we put together in the 
						past.” [5] 
					 
					
					CACI International has designed 
					an elaborate website to explain the services in provides in 
					the area of signals intelligence.  
					  
					
					On one page, CACI boasts that it 
					is a “dynamic provider of the nation’s SIGINT needs,” 
					providing SIGINT services "ranging from concept development 
					to system integration."  
					  
					
					Most of its NSA work, I was told 
					by industry executives familiar with CACI, is done through a 
					subsidiary called CACI Technologies. In Iraq, units from 
					this division have provided mobile, high-performance 
					computers to support the NSA’s interception of signals 
					emanating from enemy weapons systems, CACI officials told a 
					Washington-area military forum in 2004. 
					 
					They also help the NSA download data about insurgent 
					movements picked up by UAVs flying overhead. That program is 
					“effective, affordable and deployable” and provides “an 
					incredible amount of power down to the lowest echelon” of 
					the Army, Jeffrey Posdamer, a senior manager at CACI 
					Technologies told the forum. The system can be used 
					practically anywhere, and apparently has been deployed in 
					Iraq.  
					  
					
					According to CACI’s chairman, J. 
					P. “Jack” London, his company was instrumental in the joint 
					tracking by the NSA and the NGA that resulted in the 2006 
					capture and execution of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the former 
					commander of Al Qaeda in Iraq. 
					 
					CACI on its intelligence offerings, from its website: 
					 
					
						
						“CACI has rapidly grown into 
						a world leader in providing timely solutions to the 
						intelligence community.  
						  
						
						Engaged across a wide range 
						of national intelligence disciplines from the most 
						complex space-based operations to human source 
						intelligence, we help America's Intelligence Community 
						collect, analyze and share global information in the war 
						on terrorism; focus on two distinct customer categories, 
						national strategic and law enforcement and tactical and 
						military service; support multiple disciplines; and 
						uncover terrorist activity by providing capabilities 
						ranging from complex space-based operations to human 
						source intelligence.” 
					 
					
					CACI on signals intelligence (SIGINT), 
					from its website:  
					
						
						“The war on terrorism and 
						the rapidly evolving and expanding challenges of new 
						technologies have placed extraordinary demands on the 
						signals intelligence community. Surging to the new 
						threat while defeating the technology-based challenges 
						mitigating conventional signals intelligence methods 
						requires a company with a nuanced understanding of 
						SIGINT methods and procedures.  
						  
						
						CACI's more than 30 years of 
						experience with our world's best technical expertise and 
						commitment to the SIGINT mission ensure CACI will be a 
						dynamic provider of the nation's SIGINT needs for many 
						years to come.” 
					 
				 
				
				 
				CorpWatch Analysis 
				
					
					IDEOLOGY 
					
					Since 9/11, CACI defined itself 
					as a virtual extension of the Bush administration’s foreign 
					policy and the global war on terror.  
					
						
						“CACI supplies one of the 
						most vital weapons in the war on terrorism: cleared, 
						qualified experts in intelligence gathering, analysis, 
						operations and support,” the company declared in its 
						[2004 annual report.] 
						  
						
						“Working with the 
						intelligence community in its mission to preempt, 
						disrupt, and defeat terrorism worldwide" - notice the 
						careful placement of that word preempt, lifted directly 
						from the Bush lexicon - "our people provide 
						counter-terrorism intelligence analysis and terrorist 
						targeting support. They assist with intelligence 
						collection. And their unique skills help thwart 
						terrorist attacks against the United States." 
					 
					
					From the first days of the 
					invasion of Iraq, CACI positioned itself as utility player 
					for the Department of Defense, which provides the company 
					with more than 70 percent of its revenue.  
					  
					
					Days before U.S. troops rolled 
					into Iraq in 2003, London boasted to the Washington Post 
					that CACI is,  
					
						
						“playing a role in a large 
						choreography to make sure the president and Rumsfeld 
						have the right information at the right time and can 
						disseminate their decisions back to the battlefield. 
						We’ll be ahead of the enemy’s ability to outmaneuver 
						us.” [6]  
					 
					
					This included “enemies” at home 
					as well. 
  
					
					 
					CIFA 
					
					Until recently, one of CACI’s 
					key Pentagon clients was the Counterintelligence Field 
					Activity office (CIFA), 
					which uses CACI’s “Highview” document and records management 
					software to “help combat the growing foreign adversary 
					intelligence collection threat.”  
					  
					
					In 2005, Rumsfeld’s office 
					rewarded CACI for its contribution to the war effort with 
					two contracts worth nearly $20 million to streamline its IT 
					operations.  
					  
					
					The two one-year projects 
					supported the Pentagon’s transformation initiatives and 
					allowed Rumsfeld’s staff to manage its classified and 
					unclassified computer networks supporting homeland security 
					and the war on terror. [7] 
  
					
					 
					MANICHEAN VIEW OF THE WORLD 
					
					London’s political philosophy 
					closely matched the imperial visions of Rumsfeld 
					and the neocons he brought into the Pentagon. 
					 
					  
					
					His world is a Manichean one, 
					divided between the United States and the forces of evil. 
					He stands out among his peers in the business of 
					intelligence for his fanatical views on terrorism and his 
					almost religious allegiance to the Bush-Cheney agenda of 
					pre-emptive war and global military dominance.  
					  
					
					Like 
					
					George Bush, he sees 
					evil lurking throughout the developing world, where he 
					points to a “rising environment” of extremist individuals 
					and organizations.  
					
						
						“It seems that nobody (in 
						the Middle East) has organizational self-control; 
						everything flips into an aggressive violent reaction,” 
						he told Washington’s WMAL radio in 2006. [8] 
					 
					
					In 2002, London came up with a 
					“simpler way” to define the “asymmetric warfare” practiced 
					by the Palestinians and other Arab groups in their 
					resistance to the United States and Israel:  
					
						
						“Not fighting fair.” 
						 
					 
					
					He added:  
					
						
						“Precisely, asymmetric 
						warfare means facing a cunning and conniving adversary 
						of inferior strength, who finds ways to exploit 
						vulnerabilities to radical extreme, and frequently with 
						frightening psychological effect.”  
					 
					
					In a speech to the Northern 
					Virginia Technology Council, which has honored him twice for 
					his contributions to IT, London laid out his analysis of the 
					“war 
					on terror.”  
					  
					
					Today, he said,  
					
						
						“instead of warring against 
						a single empire, we’re facing” not only Al Qaeda but 
						“groups like the Islamic Resistance Group, or Hamas; the 
						Islamic Jihad; Hizbullah; the Liberation Tigers of Sri 
						Lanka” – as if they were all connected.  
					 
					
					He informed his audience that,
					 
					
						
						“some of the Al Qaeda 
						leadership is now believed to be in Lebanon with the 
						Hizbullah.”  
					 
					
					If so, that would be news to 
					U.S. intelligence, which has never mentioned any such 
					connection. 
					 
					London locates the origins of today’s troubles to the 
					Iranian revolution of 1979, and argues that the current 
					confrontation between the United States and Islamic groups 
					in the Middle is,  
					
						
						“not only a global war but a 
						culture clashing kind of situation.”  
					 
					
					He seems easily frightened by 
					the prospect of even peaceable protest.  
					  
					
					In 2006, alerted by a friend, he 
					watched a website broadcast from London of a demonstration 
					by Moslems carrying,  
					
						
						“incredible placards and 
						posters” about “what Islam meant and how it was going to 
						resist Western culture, and ‘don’t pick on us.’ It was a 
						very scary kind of thing. That’s a small group of 
						people, but it’s an idea that is taking hold and getting 
						some traction and is a serious concern for us going 
						forward.”  
					 
					
					CACI’s position as a contractor 
					in the Intelligence Community, he went on, is to, 
					 
					
						
						“provide solutions that the 
						politicians and military organizations can use to either 
						suppress or redirect some of those aggressive energies.”
						[9] 
  
					 
					
					HISTORY 
					
					CACI didn’t start out as an 
					intelligence company.  
					  
					
					From the time of its founding in 
					1962 until the late 1990s, CACI grew primarily by selling 
					proprietary software, including an optical scanning 
					technology it developed for the Navy, to various agencies of 
					the federal government, including the Departments of 
					Justice, Commerce and Transportation.  
					  
					
					In 1972, the company moved its 
					headquarters from California to Washington, D.C., and hired 
					London, a former Navy pilot, as a program manager. A year 
					later, it shortened its name from California Analysis Center 
					Inc. to CACI International. London moved steadily up the 
					company’s ranks and was named president and CEO in 1984.
					 
					  
					
					He moved methodically to capture 
					software markets in the areas of law enforcement and the 
					military. He also gave the company its motto: “Ever 
					Vigilant.” 
					 
					CACI’s optical scanning technology has been a particularly 
					profitable niche.  
					  
					
					Used extensively by the Justice 
					Department and the FBI, it can scan up to 26 million 
					documents a month, transform the data into digitized 
					information, translate foreign text into English, and then 
					search for concepts and ideas within the data.  
					
						
						“What it does is eliminate 
						the need for a person to actually look at the stuff and 
						try to interpret it,” says Dave Dragics, CACI’s vice 
						president for investor relations.  
						  
						
						“So they can do analysis a 
						lot quicker than they did before.” [10] 
						 
					 
					
					After U.S. forces invaded 
					Afghanistan in 2001, CACI’s technology was used to read and 
					analyze the thousands of Al Qaeda documents found in caves 
					and other hiding places, CACI has said. [11] 
					 
					London first began eyeing the intelligence market in the 
					late 1990s, when his company identified defense outsourcing 
					as a “business opportunity trend line” and made a specific 
					decision to move into the area of classified intelligence 
					contracts. [12]  
					  
					
					As he bought into the 
					intelligence market, London began hiring as advisers people 
					with extensive experience in defense and covert operations.
					 
					  
					
					His first big catch was 
					Richard Armitage, who served on CACI’s board of 
					directors from 1999 to 2001. At the time, Armitage was a 
					member of the Pentagon’s Defense Policy Board and had 
					recently joined the private sector after a long career in 
					defense, intelligence and covert operations. 
					 
					Once CACI was committed to defense, it changed the makeup of 
					its board of directors.  
					  
					
					London’s board recruits included
					 
					
						
							- 
							
							retired Navy Admiral 
							Gregory G. Johnson, the former commander in Chief of 
							NATO forces in Southern Europe  
							- 
							
							Arthur Money, a former 
							assistant secretary of defense for command, control, 
							communications and intelligence  
							- 
							
							Larry Welch, the former 
							chief of staff of the Air Force and former Commander 
							in chief of the Strategic Air Command 
							 
							- 
							
							former NSA deputy 
							director Barbara McNamara  
							- 
							
							retired Army General 
							Hugh Shelton, the former chairman of the Joint 
							Chiefs of Staff  
						 
					 
					
					(Shelton’s “unsurpassed 
					knowledge of our military markets and clients will be 
					extremely valuable as an asset to CACI,” London told 
					investors after his appointment in 2007. Shelton was also a 
					director of Anteon before it was sold to General Dynamics.) 
  
					
					 
					DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE AGENCY & THE 
					REVOLVING DOOR 
					
					Meanwhile, as the Defense 
					Intelligence Agency expanded its outsourced activities 
					during the Rumsfeld years, CACI concentrated heavily on 
					building relationships with that agency.  
					  
					
					In January 2006, CACI appointed 
					Lowell Jacoby, a former Navy admiral and former DIA 
					director, to be executive vice president for strategic 
					intelligence opportunities.  
					  
					
					A year later, CACI hired Louis 
					Andre, Jacoby’s chief of staff at the DIA, to be Jacoby’s 
					deputy – in effect, transferring the former top two 
					officials at the DIA to CACI. (Andre’s official title is 
					senior vice president of intelligence business strategy.) 
  
					
					 
					ABU GHRAIB 
					
					CACI got involved in Abu Ghraib 
					through an IT contract it obtained when it acquired a 
					company called Premier Technology Group in 2003. PTG was 
					formed in the late 1990s by a group of former Army 
					intelligence officers who had worked in Bosnia.  
					  
					
					By acquiring PTG, Defense News 
					reported, CACI expanded its activities,  
					
						
						“to a whole host of tactical 
						units in country and in other theaters of operations” 
						around the world. [13]  
					 
					
					Best of all for CACI, PTG had 
					existing contracts with the Pentagon for intelligence 
					analysis and security services, IT, training, program 
					management and logistics, and 360 employees with high-level 
					security clearances. 
					 
					At the time of CACI’s acquisition, all of PTG’s contracts 
					were being administered by the Department of Interior. Two 
					of the contracts, one worth $19.9 million, the other $21.8 
					million, required CACI to supply “screening, interrogation 
					and support functions” and “human intelligence” at an 
					unspecified site in Iraq.  
					  
					
					Because CACI was also being 
					asked to screen Iraqis captured by U.S. forces, the 
					contracts also called for biometric software that could 
					identify suspects through facial characteristics and 
					fingerprints.  
					  
					
					According to Frank Quimby, a 
					Department of Interior press officer, the Army justified 
					these IT requests because,  
					
						
						“enormous amounts of 
						information had to be integrated in order to prepare for 
						interrogations and make maximum use of the information 
						gathered.” [14]  
					 
					
					It was through this convoluted – 
					and virtually untraceable – route that CACI ended up at Abu 
					Ghraib prison. Altogether, CACI hired 31 interrogators under 
					its two IT contracts. 
					 
					The interrogators arrived at the prison at a critical time. 
					For the first few months after U.S. forces took control of 
					the prison, U.S. military intelligence officers conducted 
					interrogations. But their efforts didn’t yield the kind of 
					information on the insurgency sought by Rumsfeld and Cambone.
					 
					  
					
					Their solution, Seymour Hersh 
					reported in The New Yorker,  
					
						
						“was to get tough with those 
						Iraqis in the Army prison system who were suspected of 
						being insurgents.”  
					 
					
					Cambone ordered Major General 
					Geoffrey Miller, the commander of the detention center at 
					Guantanamo, to visit Baghdad to review interrogation 
					procedures. 
					 
					His solution “was to ‘Gitmoize’ the prison system in Iraq – 
					to make it more focused on interrogation” by using 
					techniques of sleep deprivation, exposure to extreme 
					temperatures and placing prisoners in stress positions for 
					lengthy periods of time. Miller and his new recruits, Hersh 
					wrote, brought “unconventional methods to Abu Ghraib.” 
					[15]  
					  
					
					CACI was brought in precisely at 
					the time that Miller’s “unconventional methods” were being 
					introduced. (NOTE: for the full story of CACI and Abu Ghraib, 
					consult Chapter Eight ("The Pure Plays") of Tim Shorrock,
					
					SPIES FOR HIRE: The Secret World of 
					Outsourced Intelligence. 
				 
				  
				
				Recent Contracts/Events 
				In August 2008, CACI made 
				a strategic appointment to its board of directors by adding 
				James L. Pavitt, the former Deputy Director of Operations 
				for the Central Intelligence Agency.  
				  
				
				According to CACI,  
				
					
					“Mr. Pavitt brings more than 30 
					years of experience in the Intelligence Community, with 
					proven expertise in homeland security and counterterrorism, 
					as well as financial risk assessment, defense, and 
					information technology. As the CIA's Deputy Director for 
					Operations, Mr. Pavitt managed the agency's globally 
					deployed personnel and nearly half of its 
					multibillion-dollar budget.  
					  
					
					He also served as the head of 
					America's Clandestine Service, leading the CIA's operational 
					response to the attacks of September 11, 2001. As Chief of 
					the CIA's Counter-proliferation Division, he managed and 
					directed intelligence operations against global 
					proliferation networks. From 1990-1993, Mr. Pavitt served as 
					Senior Intelligence Advisor on the National Security Council 
					team for President George H.W. Bush…  
					  
					
					Since 2004, Mr. Pavitt has 
					served as a Principal of the Scowcroft Group in Washington, 
					D.C., which provides clients with assistance and advice for 
					dealing in the international arena. In this role, he 
					provides strategic advice and risk assessments to clients in 
					the fields of homeland security, counterterrorism, financial 
					services, defense, and information technology.  
					  
					
					Mr. Pavitt also serves on the 
					board of directors of the Patriot Defense Group, LLC and 
					Advanced Blast Protection, Inc. as well as the advisory 
					board of Olton Solutions, Ltd, a company based in the United 
					Kingdom." 
				 
				
				Said CEO Jack London: Pavitt’s,
				 
				
					
					“30 years of intelligence 
					experience will be critical to our Board as we guide CACI's 
					ongoing growth as a premier provider of distinctive 
					intelligence offerings and innovative professional services 
					and information technology solutions. We will especially 
					rely on his expertise as we continue to evolve the unique 
					CACI tools and resources we provide to help the government 
					analyze data and ascertain and counter terrorist threats." 
				 
				
				Said CEO Jack London: Pavitt’s,
				 
				
					
					“30 years of intelligence 
					experience will be critical to our Board as we guide CACI's 
					ongoing growth as a premier provider of distinctive 
					intelligence offerings and innovative professional services 
					and information technology solutions. We will especially 
					rely on his expertise as we continue to evolve the unique 
					CACI tools and resources we provide to help the government 
					analyze data and ascertain and counter terrorist threats." 
				 
				
				 
				SOURCES 
				Most of the sourcing for this profile came from Tim Shorrock, 
				''Spies for Hire: The Secret World of Intelligence Outsourcing'' 
				(Simon & Schuster/2008). Other sources are as follows: 
				
					
					[1] Ellen McCarthy, 
					“Intelligence Work Comes to CACI Via Acquisitions,” 
					Washington Post, July 8, 2004. 
					[2] 2006 CACI International Earnings Conference Call, August 
					17, 2006. 
					[3] These figures, and the statistics on clearances, were 
					provided by CACI officials during a conference call with 
					analysts on March 8, 2007. 
					[4] A sound clip of this interview was posted for a time on 
					CACI’s website, www.caci.com. 
					[5] CACI presentation to Friedman Billings Ramsey conference 
					on defense investing, March 8, 2007. 
					[6] “Thousands of private contractors support US forces in 
					Persian Gulf,” Washington Post, March 3, 2003. 
					[7] “Rumsfeld’s office streamlines its IT,” UPI, November 
					10, 2005. 
					[8] “Dr. London’s radio interview with Brian Roberts,” on 
					CACI’s website at http://www.caci.com/announcement/radio_interview_7-06.shtml 
					[9] “Dr. London’s radio interview with Brian Roberts,” on 
					CACI’s website at http://www.caci.com/announcement/radio_interview_7-06.shtml. 
					[10] Company presentation, Friedman Billings Ramsey investor 
					conference, Washington, D.C., March 1, 2006. 
					[11] See the transcript of CACI’s analyst conference call of 
					February 28, 2007. 
					[12] Conference call with investors, May 5, 200X. 
					[13] CACI International Earnings conference call, April 22, 
					2004. 
					[14] Telephone interview with Dept of Interior, 2004. 
					[15] Seymour Hersh, “The Gray Zone: How a secret Pentagon 
					program came to Abu Ghraib,” The New Yorker, May 15, 2004. 
				 
				
				Email - jbrown@caci.com (Jodi Brown, 
				Executive VP – PR) 
				Phone - +1-(703) 841-7800 
				Website - http://www.caci.com/index.shtml 
			 
			
			
			Back to Contents 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			
			
			SAIC - Science Applications International 
			Corporation 
  
			
				
				Author/Researcher 
				Tim Shorrock 
  
				
				 
				Headquarters 
				1100 North Glebe Road, 
				Arlington, VA 22201 
  
				
				 
				Principal Agencies 
				National Security Agency 
				(NSA), Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Defense Intelligence 
				Agency (DIA) 
				National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA), Office of the 
				Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) 
				National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), Department of Defense (DoD) 
  
				
				 
				Top Executives 
				Ken Dahlberg, chairman of 
				the board and CEO 
				K. Stuart Shea, president, Intelligence, Security and Technology 
				Group 
  
				
				 
				Annual Revenue 
				$8.1 billion (2007) 
  
				
				 
				Intelligence Percent of Revenue 
				Substantial (not 
				disclosed) 
  
				
				 
				 
				Summary 
				 
				Together with Booz Allen Hamilton, San Diego-based SAIC stands 
				like a private colossus across the whole intelligence industry. 
				Of SAIC’s 42,000 employees, more than 20,000 hold U.S. 
				government security clearances, making it, with Lockheed Martin, 
				one of the largest private intelligence services in the world. 
				 
				SAIC’s largest and most well-known customer in the intelligence 
				community is the National Security Agency. Indeed, so many NSA 
				officials have gone to work at SAIC that intelligence insiders 
				call the company "NSA West."  
				  
				
				SAIC also does a significant amount 
				of work for the Central Intelligence Agency, where it is among 
				the top five contractors. 
  
				  
				
				Corporate Information 
				
					
					SAIC’S INTELLIGENCE NICHE 
					
					SAIC is deeply involved in the 
					operations of all the major collection agencies, 
					particularly the NSA, NGA and CIA. SAIC, for example, 
					managed one of the NSA’s largest efforts in recent years, 
					the $3 billion Project Trailblazer, which attempted (and 
					failed) to create actionable intelligence from the cacophony 
					of telephone calls, fax messages, and emails that the NSA 
					picks up every day.  
					  
					
					Launched in 2001, Trailblazer 
					experienced hundreds of millions of dollars in cost overruns 
					and NSA cancelled it in 2005. (See special section below). 
					SAIC’s Homeland Intelligence Solutions Operation unit holds 
					contracts with the controversial Counter-Intelligence Field 
					Activity office, now part of the DIA. 
					 
					More than 5,000 SAIC employees, or about one in every seven, 
					hold security clearances. They offer “domain expertise” 
					across a wide range of intelligence, including 
					counterterrorism, counter-proliferation, remote sensing and 
					imaging, intelligence analysis support, signal analysis and 
					processing, signal intelligence systems, surveillance and 
					reconnaissance systems, and unmanned aerial vehicles. 
					 
					  
					
					SAIC's extensive work for 
					intelligence agencies requires it to be constantly searching 
					for new employees with security clearances.  
					
						
						“We really are a hiring 
						machine,” CEO Ken Dahlberg told analysts during a recent 
						earnings conference call. “If you are a cleared 
						polygraph intel specialist, you command a lot of 
						activity. So we are doing our best to find ways to keep, 
						as well as hire, these kind of folks.” 
					 
					
					According to the SAIC website, 
					the company develops,  
					
						
						“solutions to help the US 
						defense, intelligence, and homeland security communities 
						build an integrated intelligence picture, allowing them 
						to be more agile and dynamic in challenging environments 
						and produce actionable intelligence.”  
					 
					
					Its website defines its role as 
					providing “mission-critical intelligence support in the war 
					on terror.”  
					  
					
					Interviewed in a SAIC internal 
					newsletter, Larry Prior, a 30-year veteran of U.S. 
					intelligence who runs the company’s Intelligence and 
					Security Group, explained:  
					
						
						“That’s where you have 
						anywhere from 10 to 100 employees and, oh, by the way, 
						the future of the nation rests on their backs.” 
					 
					
					 
					NSA 
					
					SAIC has a somewhat symbiotic 
					relationship with the NSA: The agency is the company's 
					largest single customer, and SAIC is the NSA’s largest 
					contractor.  
					  
					
					The company’s penchant for 
					hiring former intelligence officials played an important 
					role in its advancement. The story of
					
					Black William Black, Jr. is 
					another case in point.  
					  
					
					In 1997, the 40-year NSA veteran 
					was hired as an SAIC vice president "for the sole purpose of 
					soliciting NSA business," according to a published account.
					[1] Three years later, after NSA initially funded 
					Trailblazer, Black went back to the agency to manage the 
					program; within a year, SAIC won the master contract for the 
					program. 
					 
					Other key SAIC hires for its intelligence division include: 
					
						
							- 
							
							John Thomas, a retired 
							army major general and commander of the US Army 
							Intelligence Center  
							- 
							
							Larry Cox, an 11-year 
							NSA veteran and former director of Lockheed Martin's 
							SIGINT division  
							- 
							
							John J. Hamre, the 
							former deputy secretary of defense in the Clinton 
							administration *   
						 
					 
					
					* Hamre was a 
					fortuitous pick for SAIC. In October 2007, he was selected 
					by Secretary of Defense Robert Gates to chair the Pentagon’s 
					Defense Policy Board Advisory Committee. His term as an SAIC 
					director expired in 2008. 
					  
					
					Two former secretaries of 
					defense, William J. Perry and Melvin Laird, as well as the 
					current secretary, Bob Gates, have served on its board of 
					directors. For most of the Bush administration, SAIC’s top 
					intelligence man was Duane Andrews, SAIC’s corporate 
					executive vice president.  
					  
					
					For years, he ran SAIC’s NSA 
					programs, including its contract for Trailblazer (under that 
					project, he once declared that SAIC “will continue to 
					provide NSA with all the technology and systems support 
					needed to help them achieve their goals.” ). Before coming 
					to SAIC, Andrews had been a close aide to Vice President 
					Dick Cheney.  
					  
					
					Their ties dated back to the 
					first Gulf War, when he was an assistant secretary of 
					defense in Cheney’s Pentagon (Andrews is now the CEO of 
					QinetiQ’s North American operations). 
					 
					 
					IMAGERY 
					
					SAIC has a major contract with 
					NGA (the agency won’t put a dollar value on it) to produce 
					geospatial information transmitted to U.S. troops and 
					intelligence staff around the world.  
					  
					
					In 2004, the company received a 
					Meritorious Unit Citation from CIA Director George Tenet 
					for developing the imagery systems used by the Predators, 
					U-2s, and Global Hawk surveillance aircraft the CIA and NGA 
					deployed over Iraq.  
					  
					
					Tenet praised SAIC for, 
					 
					
						
						“developing and deploying a 
						capability making theater airborne imagery available to 
						a wide range of defense and intelligence users.” 
						 
					 
					
					This may have been Tenet’s way 
					of recognizing SAIC’s role in a famous incident during the 
					early stages of the war against Al Qaeda, when CIA officers, 
					with Tenet in the room, fired a missile from a CIA Predator 
					flying above Yemen, killing a key member of Al Qaeda and one 
					of his American accomplices.  
					  
					
					According to a 2007 profile of 
					SAIC in Vanity Fair, the CIA relies on SAIC to spy on its 
					own workforce.  
					
						
						“If the C.I.A. needs an 
						outside expert to quietly check whether its employees 
						are using their computers for personal business, it 
						calls on SAIC.”  
					 
					
					SAIC also plays a key role in 
					NGA activities as a result of its work as the principal 
					contractor for the Joint Intelligence Operations 
					Capability-Iraq, the Pentagon unit that transmits classified 
					intelligence to U.S. military forces engaged in battle.
					 
					  
					
					Managing SAIC’s work for the NGA 
					is Leo A. Hazlewood, a 23-year CIA veteran who served 
					as the NGA’s first deputy director. 
  
					
					 
					DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE 
					
					One of SAIC’s largest contracts 
					is with the DIA, which hired the company to manage 2,900 
					secure rooms known as Sensitive Compartmented Information 
					Facilities, or SCIFs, where DoD employees and contractors 
					handle classified information.  
					  
					
					SAIC is responsible for 
					designing, constructing, and maintaining security at these 
					facilities, which are located at defense offices around the 
					country. It also provides the DIA with “highly trained and 
					experienced professional security personnel” cleared at the 
					SCI leve - the highest possible in the intelligence 
					community - to manage the SCIFs. 
					 
					There is an intriguing detail about SAIC and its SCIFs 
					buried in Tenet's acknowledgements in At the Center of the 
					Storm, his book about his experiences with the Bush 
					administration:  
					
						
						"Arnold Punaro of SAIC 
						graciously provided me with a secure workspace to review 
						and work with classified material," Tenet wrote. 
						 
					 
					
					Punaro is identified on 
					the SAIC Web site as the company's executive vice president 
					for government affairs, communications, and support 
					operations, as well as general manager of its Washington 
					operations.  
					  
					
					Getting use of such a secure 
					room is no small feat.  
					  
					
					To prevent eavesdroppers from 
					picking up top-secret conversations, a typical SCIF has film 
					on the windows, walls fitted with soundproof steel plates, 
					and white-noise makers embedded in the ceiling. Punaro must 
					have had approval from SAIC and the CIA to allow Tenet such 
					access. 
					 
					SAIC describes itself, in the opening lines of its 2008 
					annual report, as,  
					
						
						“a provider of scientific, 
						engineering, systems integration and technical services, 
						and solutions to all branches of the US military, 
						agencies of the US Department of Defense (DoD), the 
						intelligence community, the US Department of Homeland 
						Security (DHS) and other US Government civil agencies, 
						state and local government agencies, foreign governments 
						and customers in selected commercial markets.” 
						 
					 
					
					SAIC’s private operatives, the 
					company says, work with U.S. defense and intelligence 
					agencies to,  
					
						
						"build an integrated 
						intelligence picture, allowing them to be more agile and 
						dynamic in chaotic environments and produce actionable 
						intelligence." 
					 
					
					 
					SAIC ACTION REPORT 
					
					SAIC operates many of the 
					Predators flown by the U.S. military over the skies of Iraq 
					and Afghanistan. These unmanned drones have become the most 
					lethal weapons in the U.S. arsenal.  
					  
					
					Here, from SAIC’s Fall/Winter 
					2006 in-house magazine is the company’s report:  
					
						
						SAIC's Predator Operations 
						Support: 
						
						On July 27, 2006, Taliban 
						extremists gathered inside a building in Kandahar, 
						Afghanistan, possibly to plot a terror strategy against 
						US forces. In Iraq, enemy forces traveled in a vehicle 
						near Ramadi, the southwest tip of the Sunni Triangle.
						 
						  
						
						Both targets were spotted by 
						Predator unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) flying above. 
						More than 7,000 miles away at the Predator Operations 
						Center in Nevada, Air Force pilots launched the 
						Predators' Hellfire missiles  -  destroying 
						the building in Kandahar and the vehicle near Ramadi, 
						according to a US Central Command Air Forces airpower 
						summary. 
						 
						Both the pilots flying the Predators and the military 
						analysts who identify threats rely on SAIC for 
						24-hour/7-day-a-week technical support at the Nellis Air 
						Force Base Predator Operations Center. SAIC helps ensure 
						that analysts have current intelligence to identify, 
						select, track and evaluate enemy targets.  
						  
						
						In fact, Predator has been 
						credited with dramatically shortening the 
						sensor-to-shooter cycle  -  the time between 
						target identification and attack  -  from 
						hours to minutes. 
						  
						
						SAIC also helps ensure that 
						analysts have current threat tracks to protect the 
						Predator from possible enemy retaliation… 
						  
						
						SAIC works to help ensure 
						that the network circuits delivering all of these 
						operate with little interference. Predator is also known 
						for its highly accurate targeting.  
						  
						
						SAIC experts helped by 
						writing software that extracts the Predator's telemetry 
						data and places it on maps for the air defense and route 
						planning functions. In addition, SAIC created chat-room 
						robots to monitor mission-relevant conversations and 
						record them in time-stamped sequence to establish the 
						decision timeline for post-mission analysis.  
						  
						
						According to an SAIC white 
						paper, U.S. senior decision makers have used these logs 
						to ascertain "ground truth" for vital missions. 
						 
					 
					
					 
					WEBSITE 
					
					Go to SAIC’s website and you’ll 
					hit one of four possible opening screens:  
					
						
							- 
							
							SAIC’s involvement in 
							“health solutions” (definitely not national health 
							care)  
							- 
							
							protecting “critical 
							infrastucture” (with a photograph of a key facility, 
							maybe a nuclear power plant, behind)  
							- 
							
							“integrating sustainable 
							environmental solutions” (an iceberg) 
							 
							- 
							
							“Supporting National 
							Security Efforts: SAIC provides scientific, 
							engineering, technical services and products to the 
							Warfighter”   
						 
					 
					
					The accompanying photo is of a 
					humvee in a cargo container - a symbol of the protracted 
					ground war that has marked the U.S. invasion of Iraq. 
					 
					But Iraq is hardly the only source of SAIC’s profits from 
					national security.  
					  
					
					According to its website: 
					 
					
						
						“We are a leading provider 
						of scientific, engineering, systems integration and 
						technical services and products to all branches of the 
						US military, agencies of the US Department of Defense (DoD), 
						the intelligence community, the US Department of 
						Homeland Security (DHS) and other US Government civil 
						agencies… 
						  
						
						SAIC's national security 
						efforts reach across all branches of the military and 
						support the full spectrum of military operations – from 
						peace keeping and humanitarian missions to major 
						conflicts. SAIC also helps the Department of Defense, 
						the FBI, and other agencies combat terrorism, cybercrime, 
						and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.” 
					 
					
					SAIC describes its key 
					contributions to national intelligence as follows: 
					
						
						“New Directions in 
						Information Sharing. In response to an Executive Order 
						from the president, our systems integration experts 
						helped prepare a plan for an information-sharing 
						environment to strengthen the intelligence community's 
						ability to find, track and stop terrorists. The efforts 
						of our employees garnered letters of appreciation from 
						President Bush. 
						 
						“Information Processing and Analysis. We also 
						strengthened our own capabilities in this critical area 
						with the acquisition of Object Sciences Corporation.
						 
						  
						
						OSC provides key technical 
						support to the Information Dominance Center, the premier 
						intelligence test bed for new technologies and concepts 
						developed for the US Army's Intelligence and Security 
						Command (the NSA’s Army unit).  
						  
						
						The Information Dominance 
						Center has helped reshape how intelligence, 
						surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) information is 
						processed and analyzed, and has provided critical 
						assistance to the warfighter in the overall global war 
						on terrorism. … 
						 
						“Central Management, Regional Delivery: To improve 
						information sharing and IT support to regional combatant 
						commands, services and agencies, SAIC is playing a key 
						role in transforming the intelligence IT infrastructure. 
						We are helping transform the DoD Intelligence 
						Information System architecture to a centrally managed 
						and regionally delivered IT infrastructure.  
						  
						
						Regional service centers 
						will provide common mission support capabilities to 
						intelligence users at all levels of command. The 
						benefits of this approach include better access to 
						emerging technologies and tested business practices, and 
						better use of limited resources. Better Access to 
						Geospatial Intelligence… 
						 
						“A new tool on the front line in Iraq - biometrics - has 
						helped military personnel identify builders of 
						improvised explosive devices (IEDs), potentially saving 
						the lives of civilians and soldiers alike.  
						  
						
						SAIC played a key role in 
						developing the portable Biometric Automated Toolset 
						(BAT), used by soldiers on patrol and base security 
						personnel to access fingerprint, iris and facial scans. 
						SAIC provided operational support for the system, which 
						is now deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan.  
						  
						
						Our efforts also helped the 
						US Coast Guard target and track multiple networks of 
						suspected terrorists and smugglers. For the Coast Guard 
						Intelligence Coordination Center, an SAIC team developed 
						a new 'holistic' approach to analyzing disparate 
						intelligence information.  
						  
						
						Those efforts provided 
						actionable intelligence that led to a number of arrests 
						and deportations.” 
					 
				 
				  
				
				CorpWatch Analysis 
				
					
					COUNTING ON CONTRACTING 
					
					SAIC calls itself a government 
					“pure-play” – a Wall Street term that refers to a company 
					that focuses on a single market. In SAIC’s case, that market 
					is the U.S. government, which is responsible for 93 percent 
					of the company’s sales.  
					  
					
					Most of its revenue, 75 percent, 
					comes specifically from national security contracts, and 
					intelligence is a key part of this business.  
					  
					
					In 2007, SAIC won 17 major 
					government contracts, each worth at least $100 million.
					 
					
						
						“Our internal revenue growth 
						for fiscal 2008 was favorably impacted by increased 
						activity on a number of new and continuing programs in 
						our intelligence, defense, and homeland security 
						business areas,” retired Army Gen. John D. Thomas, 
						SAIC’s senior vice president and general manager of 
						Operations, Intelligence and Security, said in a 
						prepared statement. 
					 
					
					SAIC sees a bright future for 
					itself: 40 percent of the federal work force is expected to 
					retire between 2007 and 2012.  
					  
					
					The government “must outsource 
					as a means of survival,” Kenneth C. Dahlberg, SAIC's 
					chairman and chief executive, assured investors in a 2007 
					conference call.  
					  
					
					Because the federal government 
					“must deliver safety to the people,” Dahlberg added, the 
					market for government outsourcing is likely to increase 
					three to five percent a year well into the decade. 
					 
					Much of this growth is expected in intelligence. As SAIC 
					notes in its 2008 annual report,  
					
						
						“Our reputation and 
						relationship with the US Government, and in particular 
						with the agencies of the Department of Defense (DoD) and 
						the US intelligence community, are key factors in 
						maintaining and growing revenues under contracts with 
						the US Government… 
						  
						
						The US Government’s 
						increased spending in recent years on homeland security, 
						intelligence, and defense-related programs has had a 
						favorable impact on our business in fiscal 2008, 2007, 
						and 2006. Our results have also been favorably impacted 
						by the US Government’s increased spending on information 
						technology (IT) outsourcing and other technical 
						services.” 
					 
					
					 
					FINANCES 
					
					SAIC’S government segment 
					revenues increased $881 million, or 12 percent, in fiscal 
					2008 to $8.3 billion, including internal revenue growth of 8 
					percent.  
					  
					
					The increase in the intelligence 
					business area was due to new program wins and higher levels 
					of activity on existing programs, including certain 
					classified and operational intelligence programs in fiscal 
					2008. 
  
					
					 
					HISTORY 
					
					SAIC was founded by J. Robert 
					“Bob” Brewster, a nuclear physicist who had worked at the 
					Los Alamos National Laboratory in the 1950s.  
					  
					
					In 1957, Brewster went to work 
					for General Atomics, a nuclear research company that was 
					later sold to Gulf Oil. In 1969, dissatisfied with the oil 
					business and Gulf’s plans for its subsidiary, Brewster 
					founded SAIC as a consultant to Los Alamos and other federal 
					labs.  
					  
					
					From the start, the company’s 
					stock was owned and sold by its own employees - a practice 
					that helped motivate workers to increase revenues and 
					profits, but also allowed the company to avoid filing public 
					reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission (it went 
					public in September, 2006). In 1970, SAIC set up a branch 
					office in Washington, D.C. to solicit work from the 
					government.  
					  
					
					Twenty years later, on the 
					strength of Pentagon contracts involving submarine warfare 
					and missile defense and work for the Federal Aviation 
					Administration and other agencies, SAIC revenues surpassed 
					the $1 billion mark. 
  
					
					 
					FORMER HIGH-RANKING OFFICIALS 
					
					SAIC employs large numbers of 
					former CIA officials. Leo Hazlewood, the senior vice 
					president for SAIC’s Mission Integration Business Unit, 
					which works with the NGA, joined the company in 2000 after a 
					23-year career with the CIA.  
					  
					
					His positions there included 
					comptroller, director of the National Photographic 
					Interpretation Center (later merged into the NGA) and deputy 
					director for Operations.  
					  
					
					Other former high-level CIA 
					officials working for SAIC include Chief Technology Officer 
					Andy Palowitch, who previously served as director of the 
					CIA’s Central Intelligence Systems Engineering Center, and 
					Vice President for Corporate Development Gordon Oehler, who 
					retired from the CIA in 1997 after 25 years, including a 
					stint as director of the CIA’s Non-Proliferation Center.
					 
					  
					
					That center was also an area 
					where SAIC held contracts. Peter Brookes, a senior fellow 
					for national security affairs at the conservative Heritage 
					Foundation, was detailed to the CIA’s NPC to work on issues 
					related to arms control, treaties, and the proliferation of 
					weapons of mass destruction while working for SAIC. 
					 
					  
					
					Other former CIA officials who 
					have worked for SAIC in the past include John M. Deutch, 
					President Clinton’s second CIA director, and Rear Adm. Bobby 
					Ray Inman, the CIA’s former deputy director. Both men served 
					for a time on SAIC’s board of directors. 
  
					
					 
					KEY ROLE IN THE US “WAR ON TERROR”
					 
					
					SAIC plays a critical role in 
					U.S. military operations in Iraq through a key institution 
					created to expand the reach of intelligence into military 
					operations: the Joint Intelligence Operations Centers 
					(JIOC). 
					 
					The JIOC link the Pentagon’s nine Unified Combatant Commands 
					and U.S. Forces in Korea with the Office of the Director of 
					National Intelligence. These centers were formally 
					established in April 2006 by Undersecretary of Defense for 
					Intelligence Stephen Cambone, after his office 
					completed a year-long study of the defense intelligence 
					system. These linked organizations have become the domain - 
					and a major profit center - for SAIC. 
					 
					The JIOC is jointly controlled by the Defense Intelligence 
					Agency and the Office of the DNI. They are designed to 
					integrate DoD intelligence with traditional military 
					operations and functions, with the ultimate aim of 
					increasing the speed, power, and combat effectiveness of 
					U.S. military forces.  
					  
					
					The Department of Defense 
					describes them as the “fulcrum” of a worldwide group of 
					joint intelligence organizations that gather, interpret, and 
					act on information collected by the DIA and its sister 
					agencies, the NSA, NGA, and NRO.  
					  
					
					During their first 18 months in 
					operation, the JIOC was commanded by Lt. Gen. William G. 
					Boykin, the deputy under secretary of defense for 
					intelligence. Boykin is an evangelical Christian who stirred 
					controversy in 2003 by making outlandish, anti-Muslim 
					remarks.  
					  
					
					The White House mildly 
					reprimanded him for referring to the U.S. battles in 
					Afghanistan and Iraq as part of a broader war against “a guy 
					named Satan.” 
				 
				
				(Despite his views, Boykin is highly 
				respected within the intelligence community for his long 
				military experience, which has included service in Vietnam, 
				Grenada, Somalia, and Iraq.  
				
					
					“What we're trying to do is move 
					toward operationalizing intelligence,” he said in a Pentagon 
					press briefing on the JIOC in April 2006.  
				 
				
				In a speech later that year to a 
				conference on geospatial intelligence, Boykin described the JIOC 
				as "coordinated, synergistic efforts" that are "running 
				intelligence as an operation.") 
				 
				Many details of the JIOC system are classified. But the first 
				operational tests of the concept may have taken place in 
				January, 2007, when commandos from the Pentagon's Joint Special 
				Operations Command launched air strikes against Al Qaeda bases 
				and personnel in Somalia, where the U.S.-supported Ethiopian 
				army had routed an Islamist government that had sheltered the 
				terrorist Al Qaeda army.  
				  
				
				The attacks, carried out by Air 
				Force C-130 gunships, were guided in part with intelligence 
				supplied by the CIA and the NSA. If public descriptions of the 
				joint intelligence system are to believed, the intelligence 
				would have flowed out of the JIOC, the highest level command for 
				sharing military intelligence.  
				  
				
				The JIOC in Iraq, meanwhile, is 
				serving as a "template" for other new centers around the world 
				and, according to the DNI, is “beginning to benefit operations 
				down to the battalion level.” 
				 
				As the JIOC becomes institutionalized within the military, 
				Pentagon documents show, they will slowly morph into the larger 
				Global Information Grid, which will eventually include the 
				Distributed Common Ground Systems being built for the armed 
				services by Raytheon and other companies, using standards set by 
				both the Department of Defense and the Director of National 
				Intelligence.  
				  
				
				And from the beginning, Pentagon 
				officials have stressed that the JIOC take its orders from the 
				DNI. 
				 
				In his April 2006 briefing, for example, Gen. Boykin explained 
				that DIA Director Michael Maples, will “take requirements” for 
				the JIOC directly from Deputy Director of Intelligence for 
				Collection Mary Margaret Graham, and pass them down to the 
				Combatant Commands, thus creating “an unprecedented level of 
				access to these commands” for the civilian directors of national 
				intelligence.  
				  
				
				As a result of this direct 
				interface, Boykin explained, analysts working out of the JIOC 
				will draw from the dozens of databases maintained by the NSA and 
				NGA without having to go through their respective chains of 
				command.  
				
					
					“What we’re trying to do is 
					create a situation where the analyst is talking to the 
					collector and there’s no filter in the middle,” he said.
					 
				 
				
				That’s a perfect job for a 
				contractor, particularly one that is as closely integrated with 
				defense intelligence as SAIC. 
				 
				In 2005, a few months after the JIOC was launched by Cambone’s 
				office at the Pentagon, SAIC was hired by the U.S. Army as 
				operations manager of the JIOC-Iraq under a two-year, $110 
				million contract. Since then, according to an SAIC briefing for 
				investors in May 2007, the company has signed similar contracts 
				for the JIOC established at the other major commands. 
				 
				  
				
				(SAIC is also involved as a 
				contractor in the construction of the Global Information Grid, 
				and is “helping achieve the netcentric warfare mission” at the 
				Defense Information Systems Agency, according to the briefing). 
				 
				An in-house SAIC publication describes the JIOC in Iraq as a,
				 
				
					
					“large interactive data 
					repository that allows analysts to pull in information from 
					a wide range of sources,” including imagery and 
					visualization tools.  
				 
				
				SAIC’s Intelligence and Security 
				Group, which manages the JIOC, had roughly 300 to 500 people 
				overseas working at the centers.  
				  
				
				SAIC provides more details in its 
				2007 annual report to shareholders. The JIOC-Iraq, it says, 
				draws on SAIC’s “Biometric Automated Toolset,” a portable system 
				that records an individual’s unique characteristics for iris, 
				fingerprint, and facial recognition; JIOC analysts use the 
				toolset to “break up terrorist cells and track and capture the 
				enemy.”  
				  
				
				SAIC has also worked with the Army 
				to “transition” the JIOC-Iraq capabilities into the Distributed 
				Common Ground System. It’s all in a day’s work for SAIC, which 
				is one of the most ubiquitous companies in the intelligence 
				industrial complex. 
				  
				
				 
				Recent Contracts/Events 
				In June 2008, SAIC was 
				awarded a prime contract by the Defense Advanced Research 
				Projects Agency (DARPA) to develop a,  
				
					
					“synergistic human/machine 
					system to help military officers and their staffs quickly 
					make command decisions and generate multiple options on the 
					battlefield.”  
				 
				
				The two-year contract is worth $42 
				million. 
  
				
				 
				Sources 
				Primary sourcing for this profile came from Tim Shorrock, 
				''Spies for Hire: The Secret World of Intelligence Outsourcing'' 
				(Simon & Schuster/2008), company information, and other sources 
				as follows: 
				
					
					[1] “SAIC team wins National 
					Security Agency Trailblazer contract,” SAIC press release, 
					October 21, 2002. 
				 
				
				Email - laura.luke@saic.com (Laura 
				Luke/media contact) 
				Phone - +1-(703) 676-4300 (Washington operations) 
				Website - http://www.saic.com/natsec/intelligence.html 
			 
			
			
			Back to Contents 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			
			
			Project Groundbreaker (NSA Contract) 
  
			
				
				Author/Researcher 
				Tim Shorrock 
  
				
				 
				Headquarters 
				N/A 
				  
				
				 
				Principal Agencies 
				National Security Agency 
				(NSA) 
  
				
				 
				Top Executives 
				N/A 
  
				
				 
				Annual Revenue 
				N/A 
  
				
				 
				Intelligence Percent of Revenue 
				N/A 
				 
  
				
				 
				Summary 
				
					
						- 
						
						Agency: National Security 
						Agency (NSA)  
						- 
						
						Value: $5 billion 
						(classified)  
						- 
						
						Prime contractors: Computer 
						Sciences Corporation, Logicon/Northrop Grumman 
						 
						- 
						
						Implementation Date: 
						November 2001  
						- 
						
						Contract extended: June 2007 
						 
					 
				 
				
				Project Groundbreaker is a $5 
				billion project to rebuild and operate the NSA’s 
				“nonmission-critical” internal telephone and computer networking 
				systems.  
				  
				
				The project is managed by a vendor 
				team led by Computer Sciences Corporation and Logicon, the IT 
				subsidiary of Northrop Grumman. It is one of the largest 
				outsourcing projects the federal government has ever attempted. 
				 
				In managing the project for the NSA, CSC and Logicon created the 
				“Eagle Alliance” consortium that drew in practically every major 
				company involved in defense and intelligence outsourcing. 
				 
				  
				
				Subcontractors included: 
				
					
						- 
						
						General Dynamics 
						 
						- 
						
						BAE Systems  
						- 
						
						Titan Corp. (now L-3 
						Communications Inc.)  
						- 
						
						CACI International 
						 
						- 
						
						TRW (now part of Northrop 
						Grumman)  
						- 
						
						Mantech  
						- 
						
						Lockheed Martin 
						 
						- 
						
						Verizon (one of the 
						companies that allegedly granted the NSA access to its 
						consumer database under the Terrorist Surveillance 
						Program)  
						- 
						
						as well as Dell Computers, 
						Hewlett-Packard, and Nortel Networks  
					 
				 
				
				Under the NSA’s “employee-friendly 
				approach,” contractors received monetary incentives to hire NSA 
				employees.  
				
					
					“This type of outsourcing 
					program hits our sweet spot,” said Frank Derwin, Logicon’s 
					vice president at the time of the contract award. 
				 
				  
				
				Corporate Information 
				The NSA announced the 
				project in a July 31, 2001 press release.  
				  
				
				According to Air Force Gen. 
				Michael V. Hayden, then NSA director, the “outsourcing 
				partnership” with CSC and Northrop Grumman will allow the NSA to 
				“refocus assets” on its “core missions of providing foreign 
				signals intelligence and protecting U.S. national 
				security-related information systems” by turning over key IT 
				services “for industry's purview." [ ] 
				 
				Hayden added:  
				
					
					"The ability of NSA to perform 
					its mission depends on an efficient and stable Information 
					Technology Infrastructure, one that is secure, agile, and 
					responsive to evolving mission needs in balance with the 
					requirements to recapitalize and refresh technology.” 
					 
				 
				
				In describing the project, the NSA 
				said the “government-industry partnership” will, 
				
					
					“result in service quality 
					improvements, continuous modernization of NSA's Information 
					Technology Infrastructure (ITI), as well as cost avoidance 
					for the agency over the duration of the contract. It is also 
					an employee-friendly approach to redefining NSA's internal 
					corporate structure in that the contractors will receive 
					monetary incentives to hire a significant number of agency 
					employees, and offer them comparable or better pay, 
					benefits, and opportunities.  
					  
					
					Over the contract duration, 
					Eagle Alliance will manage the selective ITI areas while the 
					NSA provides continuous governance and monitoring based on 
					Service Level Agreements that identify the performance 
					levels required. NSA will continue to provide transition 
					services (e.g., career counseling, résumé preparation, and 
					seminars) for employees interested in moving to the private 
					sector under this contract.” 
				 
				
				 
				’Revolving door’  
				
				In September 2009, General Hayden 
				joined a CSC “Cyber Advisory Committee,” a  
				
					
					“panel of industry experts that 
					will inform the company on its cyber strategy. The committee 
					will provide senior company executives with strategic 
					counsel regarding national security and industry issues 
					related to cyber security, including CSC strategies, 
					offerings and positioning.” 
				 
				
				 
				CorpWatch Analysis 
				CSC had been in the 
				government contracting business for nearly half a century when 
				it was selected to manage the Groundbreaker project. It was 
				founded in 1959 to write software for defense manufacturers, and 
				in 1963 became the first software company to go public. 
				 
				  
				
				Over the years, it built a 
				multi-billion dollar business as a systems integrator for 
				companies and government agencies, starting with computer 
				contracts with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration 
				(NASA).  
				  
				
				After the 9/11 terrorist attacks on 
				the United States, CSC formed a new business unit to go after 
				homeland security and intelligence work.  
				
					
					“One reason we did this was the 
					wealth of discussion about sharing data among the agencies 
					and the first responders, especially when it comes to 
					terrorist threats,” said Pat Ways, CSC’s vice president for 
					federal sector business development. [ ] 
					 
				 
				
				By 2004, largely as a result of 
				Groundbreaker, CSC had become the nation’s third-largest 
				federal contractor, with prime contracts worth more than $4 
				billion. [ ] 
				 
				Northrop Grumman, CSC’s partner in the Groundbreaker project, is 
				best known as a designer and manufacturer of military 
				surveillance and combat aircraft, defense electronics and 
				systems, as well as large naval combat ships. It first became an 
				important intelligence contractor in 1999 when it acquired DPC 
				Technologies, a Maryland IT company with close contractual ties 
				to the NSA.  
				  
				
				It moved deeper into intelligence in 
				2002 when it acquired TRW, a long-time CIA and NSA contractor. 
				Those acquisitions, plus its 2007 takeover of Essex Corporation, 
				greatly expanded Northrop Grumman’s presence at NSA headquarters 
				in Fort Meade, Maryland. 
				 
				Project Groundbreaker was marred from the start by 
				technical and managerial problems. In 2006, Siobhan Gorman, 
				the Baltimore Sun’s intelligence reporter, interviewed dozens of 
				NSA officials and contractors involved in the project. 
				 
				  
				
				She found that Groundbreaker’s $2 
				billion price tag had doubled, and that technical problems with 
				the system were legion.  
				
					
					“Computers are integral to 
					everything NSA does, yet it is not uncommon for the agency’s 
					unstable computer system to freeze for hours, unlike the 
					previous system, which had a backup mechanism that enabled 
					analysts to continue their work,” she wrote.  
					  
					
					“When the agency’s 
					communications lines become overloaded, the Groundbreaker 
					system has been known to deliver garbled intelligence 
					reports.”  
				 
				
				Worse, agency linguists told Gorman 
				that the number of conversation segments they could translate in 
				a day had dropped significantly under Groundbreaker.  
				  
				
				The NSA, she concluded,  
				
					
					“has no mechanism to 
					systematically assess whether it is spending its money 
					effectively and getting what it has paid for.” [4] 
				 
				
				In June 2007, the NSA exercised its 
				options in the original contract and extended Project 
				Groundbreaker for another three years. The new contract is 
				worth $528 million. [5]  
				  
				
				The NSA’s action,  
				
					
					“underscores NSA's confidence in 
					the Eagle Alliance's experience and ability to deliver 
					state-of-the-art information technology solutions that 
					result in sound operational performance for the agency," 
					James W. Sheaffer, president of CSC’s North American Public 
					Sector division, announced in a press release. 
				 
				
				 
				Recent Contracts/Events 
				
				N/A 
  
				
				 
				SOURCES 
				Most of this information 
				comes from Chapter 6 of Tim Shorrock’s Spies for Hire (Simon & 
				Schuster/2008). Other sources are as follows: 
				
					
					[1] "National Security Agency 
					Outsources Areas of Non-Mission Information Technology to 
					CSC-Led Alliance Team,” NSA press release, July 31, 2001. 
					[2] Dennis McCafferty, “CSC has a lock on government 
					business,” VAR Business, September 30, 2002. 
					[3] Anitha Reddy, “Computer systems spur growth for 
					contractors,” Technews.com, May 10, 2004. 
					[4] Siobhan Gorman, “Computer ills hinder NSA,” Baltimore 
					Sun, February 26, 2006. 
					[5] “CSC-led alliance receives three-year option for NSA 
					Groundbreaker contract,” CSC press release, June 6, 2007. 
				 
				
				Email - N/A 
				Phone - N/A 
				Website - N/A 
			 
			
			
			Back to Contents 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			
			
			Lockheed Martin: Information Systems And 
			Global Services 
  
			
				
				Author/Researcher 
				Tim Shorrock 
  
				
				 
				Headquarters 
				6801 Rockledge Drive, 
				Bethesda, MD 20817 
  
				
				 
				Principal Agencies 
				Department of Defense (DoD), 
				National Security Agency (NSA) 
				National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA), National 
				Reconnaissance Office (NRO) 
				Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) 
  
				
				 
				Top Executives 
				Robert J. Stevens, 
				chairman of the board, president and CEO, Lockheed Martin 
				Linda Gooden, executive vice president, Information Systems & 
				Global Services 
  
				
				 
				Annual Revenue 
				$41.8 billion (Lockheed 
				Martin) 
  
				
				 
				Intelligence Percent of Revenue 
				Not disclosed 
				 
  
				
				 
				Summary 
				 
				Rankings (Lockheed Martin) 
				
					
					
					"Everyone talks about the 
					intelligence community as ‘those guys in government,’ 
					whether it’s the people in the military or the people in the 
					agencies. Well, guess what? You are all part of the 
					intelligence community. In fact, you probably make up the 
					largest part of it."  
					
					- Ben Romero, the director of 
					Intelligence and Homeland Security Programs for Lockheed 
					Martin, speaking to a roomful of contractors in Washington, 
					D.C., 2005. 
				 
				
				Lockheed Martin is the largest of 
				the top six systems integrators that dominate the intelligence 
				contracting industry, and is particularly significant in the 
				areas of surveillance, reconnaissance, signals intelligence, and 
				network-centric warfare.  
				  
				
				With $42 billion in revenue and more 
				than 52,000 cleared information technology personnel in its 
				workforce, Lockheed Martin is the world’s largest defense 
				contractor, and employs what may be the largest private 
				intelligence force on the globe. 
				 
				It is also the single largest contractor and the largest IT 
				provider to the U.S. federal government. Its slogan, repeated 
				frequently in television ads, is “We never forget who we’re 
				working for.”  
				  
				
				In intelligence, that would be all 
				the major collection agencies, particularly the National 
				Security Agency, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, 
				and the National Reconnaissance Office, as well as the 
				Department of Defense and the many military intelligence 
				agencies (see Tim Shorrock, Mother Jones, “Out of Service.”) 
  
				  
				
				Corporate Information 
				
					
					ORGANIZATION 
					
					Lockheed Martin employs more 
					than 140,000 people and is divided into three operating 
					units: aeronautics, including tactical aircraft and R&D; 
					space systems, including commercial and military satellites; 
					and systems and IT, which includes C4I – the military 
					acronym for intelligence and reconnaissance, and IT. 
					 
					  
					
					Intelligence is a key part of 
					all three divisions, but most of the company’s contracts are 
					held by the IT division, Information Systems & Global 
					Services, or IS&GS.  
					
						
						"Some of our work, you will 
						never hear about," the company website says.  
						  
						
						"Our classified work has 
						supported the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) and 
						National Security Agency (NSA) as they dealt with the 
						most high-visibility situations in recent US history and 
						many others you never saw on the news." 
					 
					
					 
					NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY 
					
					Lockheed Martin has extremely 
					close and long-standing ties with the NSA. In the mid-1950s 
					it built the U-2 spy plane that played a key role in the 
					Cold War and conducted some of the NSA’s initial research in 
					signals collection.  
					
						
						“The U-2 has been the 
						backbone of our nation’s airborne intelligence 
						collection operations for several decades and continues 
						to provide unmatched operational capabilities in support 
						of Operation Enduring Freedom,” Lockheed Martin states 
						in its 2008 annual report. The U-2 “is expected to 
						continue to provide leading-edge intelligence collection 
						capabilities for years to come.” 
					 
					
					The company’s extensive 
					contracts with the NSA first became public in 1997. 
					 
					  
					
					That year, Margaret Newsham, 
					a contract engineer working for Lockheed Space and Missile 
					Corporation at an NSA listening post in the United Kingdom, 
					disclosed to Congress the existence of Echelon. This global 
					surveillance network is run by the NSA and its counterparts 
					in Britain, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada.  
					  
					
					She made the disclosure after 
					hearing NSA intercepts of international calls placed by Sen. 
					Strom Thurmond, the conservative South Carolina Republican. 
					Her revelations sparked a spate of Congressional inquiries 
					into whether the NSA was illegally listening in on domestic 
					conversations.  
					  
					
					The discussions, led by a 
					Republican civil libertarian, Rep. Bob Barr of 
					Georgia, presaged the intense debate that would follow the 
					2005 revelations about President Bush’s “Terrorist 
					Surveillance Program.”  
					  
					
					In July 1998 a report 
					commissioned by the European Parliament confirmed that, 
					through Echelon, the United States, and its closest allies 
					had the capability to intercept most European phone calls, 
					emails, and data communications, as well as the technology 
					to decode almost any encrypted communication.  
					  
					
					This revelation sparked deep 
					suspicion in European capitals that NSA was using Echelon to 
					capture European business intelligence and trade secrets and 
					pass them to U.S. companies. 
					 
					Under a contract signed in 2005, Lockheed Martin provides an 
					integrated electronic security system to protect NSA 
					facilities in the Washington area.  
					  
					
					A similar system is in place at 
					the Pentagon and dozens of U.S. military facilities abroad. 
  
					  
					
					KEY AGENCIES 
					
					Lockheed Martin is an important 
					contractor for the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA).
					 
					  
					
					In one major project for the NGA, 
					Lockheed Martin is developing a “ground-based 
					infrastructure” designed to help users of the agency’s 
					satellite and imagery data better distribute, share, and 
					exploit the information.  
					  
					
					The contract, “Geo-Scout,” was 
					awarded in 2003 for an unspecified amount, and is proceeding 
					in four “blocks” that could take up to 10 years to complete. 
					The ultimate goal, NGA officials say, is to create a system 
					that seamlessly blends data from unclassified commercial and 
					classified military satellites.  
					  
					
					The project, now in Block Two, 
					is managed by Michael Thomas, a Lockheed Martin vice 
					president in its Integrated Systems & Solutions unit. Its 
					future, however, is uncertain: Geo-Scout is frequently cited 
					by intelligence analysts, along with the NSA’s Trailblazer, 
					as an overly expensive project in which government managers 
					ceded too much power to the contractor. 
					 
					At the Pentagon, Lockheed Martin was one of the contractors 
					that provided counterintelligence analysis for the 
					Counter-Intelligence Field Activity office (CIFA). 
					 
					  
					
					Its jobs included tracking 
					“logical combinations of keywords and personalities,” 
					estimating current or future threats, creating and 
					delivering reports, and monitoring current intelligence of 
					specified contracts. In 2006, the company was hiring 
					personnel for a “performance planner” who would “develop and 
					analyze missions, program goals, [and] objectives and 
					systems” for CIFA.  
					  
					
					At the Defense Intelligence 
					Agency, which now manages CIFA, Lockheed Martin runs a 
					bidding consortium that claims to have the largest cleared 
					workforce in the nation and, according to the Lockheed 
					Martin website, provides “exceptional depth to respond to 
					both surge requirements and planned customers tasks.” 
					 
					  
					
					The consortium’s forte seems to 
					be providing large, agency-wide IT systems for the DIA and 
					other agencies. The team includes three of the top U.S. IT 
					firms, Hewlett-Packard, Oracle, and Sun Microsystems, as 
					well as the consulting firm BearingPoint, which helped plan 
					the 2003 U.S. occupation of Iraq for the Department of 
					Defense.  
					  
					
					Another member of the team is 
					The Analysis Corporation, the intelligence contractor run by 
					CIA veteran John Brennan. 
  
					
					 
					NETWORK-CENTRIC WARFARE 
					
					As one of the prime suppliers of 
					reconnaissance and surveillance technology, Lockheed Martin 
					is deeply involved in the Pentagon’s Distributed Common 
					Ground System, or DCGS.  
					  
					
					On its website, Lockheed Martin 
					describes DCGS as, 
					
						
						“a global, internet-like 
						network where both military and national agencies have 
						access to time-sensitive intelligence, surveillance, and 
						reconnaissance data.” 
					 
				 
				  
				
				CorpWatch Analysis 
				Lockheed Martin was 
				created during the 1990s through a merger of Lockheed’s aircraft 
				division with Martin Marietta, Loral Defense, and the General 
				Dynamics combat aircraft division.  
				  
				
				In the end, five huge firms were 
				left standing: Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, 
				Boeing and General Dynamics. Lockheed Martin and other large 
				defense contractors have snatched up the rest. 
				 
				In 2004 and 2005 Lockheed Martin acquired the government IT unit 
				of Affiliated Computer Services Inc., inheriting several 
				contracts with defense intelligence agencies and Sytex, a $425 
				million Philadelphia-based company that held contracts with the 
				Pentagon's Northern Command and the NSA/Army Intelligence and 
				Security Command.  
				  
				
				By 2007 the company employed 52,000 
				IT specialists with security clearances, and intelligence made 
				up nearly 40 percent of its annual business, company executives 
				said. 
				 
				One of Lockheed Martin’s most important intelligence-related 
				acquisitions took place in the 1990s, when the conglomerate 
				bought Betac Corporation. Betac was one of the companies the 
				government hired during the late 1980s to provide communications 
				technology for the secret Continuity of Government program the 
				Reagan administration created to keep the U.S. government 
				functioning in the event of a nuclear attack.  
				  
				
				Under a 1982 presidential directive, 
				the outbreak of war could trigger the proclamation of martial 
				law nationwide, giving the military the authority to use its 
				domestic database to round up citizens and residents considered 
				threats to national security. The Federal Emergency 
				Management Agency (FEMA) 
				and the Army were to carry out the emergency measures for 
				domestic security. 
				 
				To build the communications system that would allow this secret 
				government to communicate,  
				
					
						- 
						
						FEMA hired the Harris 
						Corporation, an important Florida-based intelligence 
						contractor  
						- 
						
						the CIA hired 
						McDonnell-Douglas (this was before its merger with 
						Boeing)  
						- 
						
						the Pentagon hired TRW, an 
						important intelligence contractor that was acquired in 
						2002 by Northrop Grumman  
					 
				 
				
				The military’s contracting tasks 
				were assigned to the Information Systems Command based at Fort 
				Huachuca, Arizona, where the project was managed by Brig. Gen.
				Eugene Renzi, the deputy chief for operations at the base 
				and the senior national program officer at the Army systems 
				command. 
				 
				One of the biggest winners was Betac Corporation, a consulting 
				firm composed of former intelligence and communications 
				specialists from the Pentagon.  
				  
				
				Betac was one of the largest 
				government contractors of its day and, with TRW and Lockheed 
				itself, dominated the intelligence contracting industry from the 
				mid-1980s until the late 1990s. Its first project for the 
				Continuity of Government plan was a sole-source contract to 
				devise and maintain security for the system.  
				  
				
				Between 1983 and 1985, the contract 
				expanded from $316,000 to nearly $3 million, and by 1988 Betac 
				had multiple COG contracts worth $22 million. Betac was 
				eventually sold to ACS Government Solutions Group and is now a 
				unit of Lockheed Martin. 
				 
				Here’s how Lockheed Martin describes its “National Intelligence 
				Systems & Services” work on its website:  
				
					
					“Every day, the men and women of 
					the U.S. Intelligence Community stand guard at the gates of 
					our national security, diligently working to stay one step 
					ahead of those who would do us harm.  
					  
					
					They are supported by a 
					sophisticated network of systems and sensors that collects, 
					processes and distributes vital intelligence to the 
					analysts, warfighters, and leaders who need it most. 
					 
					  
					
					Lockheed Martin is proud to 
					deliver a wide range of systems and services that support 
					the Intelligence Community's mission of ensuring global 
					security.” 
				 
				  
				
				Recent Contracts/Events 
				In August 2008, Lockheed 
				Martin won a $32 million contract from the NGA to provide,
				 
				
					
					“specialized geospatial training 
					to analysts and officials across the Department of Defense 
					and the Intelligence Community.”  
				 
				
				Under the contract, Lockheed Martin 
				provides professional instructors to run classes and develop 
				curricula for courses offered by the NGA College based in 
				Washington, D.C., and St. Louis, Missouri.  
				  
				
				In April 2008, Lockheed Martin 
				provided technical support and communications networks for a 
				Cyber Defense Exercise war game conducted by the NSA. 
  
				
				 
				SOURCES 
				Most of the sourcing for 
				this profile came from Tim Shorrock, ''Spies for Hire: The 
				Secret World of Intelligence Outsourcing'' (Simon & 
				Schuster/2008).  
				  
				
				Other information came from the 
				Lockheed Martin website and press releases. 
				
				 
				Email - keith.mordoff@lmco.com (IS&GS Media Relations) 
				Phone - +1-(301) 240-5706 
				Website - http://www.lockheedmartin.com/isgs/index.html 
			 
			
			
			Back to Contents 
			  
			 |