American intelligence and national defense 2.0

The Pentagon, 1980's. Wikicommons/ "DoD photo by Master Sgt. Ken Hammond, U.S. Air Force.". Public domain. On 06/17/11, I
wrote the first instalment of National intelligence and
national defense, published at the Campaign for Liberty, suggesting that we could both cut the secret
intelligence budget by three quarters, and radically increase the amount of
open source decision-support (as opposed to secret mass surveillance).

Of course
nothing happened, but now, to my enormous delight, I am hearing that there is a
very tentative discussion in some of the darkest corners of the US government
of a proposal to terminate three of the secret agencies that reside within the
Department of Defense (DoD) – the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), the
National Security Agency (NSA), and the National Geospatial Agency (NGA). This
should happen, if not in the closing year of the Obama Administration, then in
2017 under the first Independent president and a diversified Congress in which
Independents, Greens, and Libertarians and others (e.g. Constitution, Working
Families) win the 20-30 seats being vacated.

In proposing
the elimination of three secret agencies now costing $25 billion a year and
employing roughly 25,000 full-time government employees and perhaps another
25,000  contractors in one form or
another (with many double-dipping retirees in both groups), I am acutely
conscious of the political and economic implications.

I learned the
hard way, watching Senator John Warner (R-VA) single-handedly block the
National Security Act of 1992, that intelligence reform must be job and revenue
neutral from state to state if it is to have any hope of consideration. I have
also learned just how much of what we pay goes into overseas outsourcing,
overheads, and absolutely unwarranted profit on processes and products that do
not deliver as promised.

A ‘soft
landing’ for all those losing work as a result of this long-needed remediation
of the dysfunctional secret world would be provided with multi-year lay-off
plans that include paid participation in the retraining program outlined in the
Joint Defense-Labor Solution entitled “Building a Post-Cold War Workforce for
the 21st Century: Our Manpower Peace Deficit.” Veterans in
particular would be assured work for life. The only losers will be the banks
and corporations that have been bribing Congress and getting a 750 to 1 return
on their bribes.

Eliminate three secret agencies costing
$25 billion a year

The NRO, which
costs the US taxpayer roughly $10 billion a year, is responsible – criminally
irresponsible would be a better term – for the global satellite and
air-breather constellation of collection platforms, and well as the delivery of
that digital data from point of collection to point of processing.

Strike one is
its total failure to keep up with commercial break-throughs – as VICE Magazine has recently pointed out,
the secret world is like the old porn industry, unable to understand that what
is available in the open is now ten to a hundred times better than what can be
collected secretly. As VICE Magazine has recently pointed out, the secret world is like
the old porn industry, unable to understand that what is available in the open
is now ten to a hundred times better than what can be collected secretly.
Strike two is its failure to protect the satellites – not just collection
satellites but communications and geospatial positioning satellites – from ease
of attack by lasers and other means.

The US military
literally goes deaf, dumb, and blind – grinds to a halt and is defenseless – if
these unprotected satellites are disabled. Strike three is its total
obliviousness to the need for “feeds and speeds” consistent with twenty-first century
demands for massive big data processing in near real time. It takes three
years, using the current standard, to feed one day’s “take” from a collection
point to an agency across town. Enough already. Death to the NRO.

The NSA,
rightly denounced by multiple whistle-blowers, also costs the taxpayer roughly
$10 billion a year. For this princely amount it has turned its global
collection capabilities against our own public, processes less than 1% of what
it collects, and appears to have side businesses going in the areas of both
insider trading and political blackmail.

I personally
believe that if Edward Snowden, whose patriotic parents I have met, was not an
authorized operation ordered by the President to set the stage for taking down
NSA, it should have been and I would pardon Snowden on that basis alone. There is some great good to be harvested from NSA in the way of
multi-source processing magic combining massive relational databases and
selected geospatial information system applications, but the institution
over-all is toxic to the point of being comatose –ethically as well as
substantively comatose. We don’t need to kill it, it is already dead. Harvest
the organs (see my conclusion) and bury it deep.

The NGA,
perhaps the best-intentioned of the secret world elements, costs the taxpayer
roughly $5 billion a year. It is responsible for creating military combat
charts (maps with contour lines and cultural detail) for the entire world, and
has failed to do so for roughly 75% of the world, despite being given the 100%
mission in 1992 when I led the charge to put Mapping, Charting, & Geodesy
(MC&G) into the Foreign Intelligence Requirements and Capabilities Plan
(FIRCAP).

Today in
Somalia we are still using Russian military maps at the 1:100,000 level because
NGA simply does not ‘do’ what is called Global Coverage. They also do not ‘do’
all source near-real-time data fusion. While they have experimented with
‘activity based intelligence’ and what they mistakenly call geospatial
intelligence, the fact is that NGA is unable to understand the concept of
analytic cooperation between agencies or indeed between disciplines such as
cartography and imagery analysis, even within NGA. Nor does NGA have a clue
when it comes to the reality that 90% or more of what we need to know is not
secret, not online, not in English, and held by foreigners without clearances who
really do not like the US Government generally and the US secret world
particularly. Kill it, harvest the organs (20% at most) and move on. If Edward Snowden, whose patriotic parents I have met, was not an authorized operation ordered by the President to set the stage for taking down NSA, it should have been and I would pardon Snowden on that basis alone.

Consolidate defense intelligence capabilities

In my view,
because all three of these dysfunctional agencies are defense agencies, there
is an opportunity for the Secretary of Defense to serve the President and the
Republic by directing their radical down-sizing and eventual elimination. The
NRO – and its service parent the US Air Force – have proven incompetent at secure
feeds and speeds. The time has come for a prototypical defense activity focused
on securing satellites that matter mostly to the US Army, where locational
precision in land warfare is everything, while exploring dark fiber (fiber not
contracted from an intermediary) and high bandwidth high speed air, sea, and
ground relay options as alternatives to the satellites.

This critical
vulnerability and need is shared by all the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) nations, hence it occurs to me that this would be an excellent mission
for the existing NATO Transformation Command based in Norfolk. 20% of the
existing NRO budget should be reallocated to the Transformation Command, which
should have pick of the litter – no more than 20% — of the existing manpower
now working for the NRO.

The other two
agencies – the NSA and the NGA – are no less than 60% wasted facilities and
manpower and contracted dollars, and probably closer to 80%.  NGA is particularly permeated by retirees
found wanting by their parent services and sent to the NGA on their final tours,
where they burrowed in. A surprising number of NGA Senior Executive Officers
are also unqualified, lacking educational and other credentials, some promoted
during the tour of one particularly unethical director who handed out executive
jobs as party favors. Roughly 20% of these two agencies should be transferred
to an expanded Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), which should become a
four-star billet with three three-star Directorates: Human Collection, Technical
Collection & Processing, and All-Source Analysis, the latter in turn
divided into divisions dedicated to Strategic, Acquisition, Operational, and
Tactical Intelligence.

For those
unfamiliar with the fullness of Human Collection, it includes fifteen types,
only four of which are classified, all of which are done badly today, and none
of which are managed in an integrated fashion. DIA itself needs a flushing of a
third of the senior executives, and more tough love.

I am avoiding a
detailed discussion of Information Assurance and Cyber-Command, two of NSA’s
most dysfunctional elements. NSA has been dishonest about cyber-security for a
quarter century. I know of no one in the US Government that is competent at
cyber-security, all of that talent is outside the wire – it may be that these
areas should be placed firmly in the charter of the new agency I am proposing
below, an Open Source (Technologies) Agency. I know of
no one in the US Government that is competent at cyber-security, all of that
talent is outside the wire – it may be that these areas should be placed firmly
in the charter of the new agency I am proposing below, an Open Source
(Technologies) Agency.

I have avoided
addressing the pathologies of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) where I
served six tours (three of them overseas, one as the first Spanish-speaking
case officer assigned terrorism as a full-time target) – suffice to say that
they are worthless in relation to defense strategy, policy, acquisition, and
tactics. They kill people with drones and without due process, with a 98%
collateral damage ratio, and produce no decision-support worthy of note.

What they are
doing in the way of destabilization operations (including the funding of
Uighurs against China and Chechens against Russia – acts of undeclared war) is in
my view grounds for impeaching the Director of that agency and shutting down
its covert operations aspect. If defense – and diplomacy as well as development
– are to achieve intelligence with integrity, they must do so without relying
on the CIA for anything. I would like to reconstitute the CIA one day, honoring
President Harry Truman’s original vision for a Whole of Government
decision-support capability, but that is in the “too hard’ box right now. 

An open source (technologies) agency

The Secretary
of Defense is sponsoring a D3 Innovation Summit (D3 stands for defense,
diplomacy, and development) focusing on the convergence of technological
innovation with the frighteningly complex and ever-changing challenges faced by
the DoD and the objectives of the Department of State that includes the US
Agency for International Development (USAID). The D3 Innovation Summit could
well be a crowning achievement for the Secretary of Defense, its outcomes a
legacy achievement for the Obama-Biden Administration.

An Open Source
(Technologies) Agency is proposed that is far removed from the secret
intelligence world – the J-7 is the appropriate sponsor and the National
Defense University (NDU) the best-suited host for the Initial Operating
Capability (IOC). This new proposed agency would be a comprehensive innovation
engine that addresses nine distinct open source technology groups itemized
below, each with three subordinate examples (there are over sixty open source
technologies with many more likely to develop in the near term).

Two Bureaus are proposed – a D3 Information Bureau
that makes it possible to digitize other people’s open source information (most
of it not digital now) and harmonize the constructive investment of other
people’s money at the village level (eliminating the 80% or more lost to
intermediaries) while delivering open source innovation blueprints; and a D3
Innovation Bureau with a Division for each of the nine open technology areas,
all directly relevant to achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development
Goals (SDG).

I
would like to reconstitute the CIA one day, honoring President Harry Truman’s
original vision for a Whole of Government decision-support capability, but that
is in the “too hard’ box right now.

Funded by
defense, under diplomatic auspices, and focused on a mix of Whole of Government
and multinational information-sharing and sense-making with a digital Marshall
Plan emphasizing Open Source Provisioning (energy, water, shelter, food) as
well as Open Infrastructures (free cellular and Internet), this new agency will
quickly and radically enable leap-frog innovation that stabilizes and
reconstructs at a local to global scale. Easily affordable in relation to the
savings achieved by shutting down 80% of three agencies costing $25 billion a
year (savings = $20 billion a year), this new agency solves three big problems:

First, it makes
it possible to create a secure open local to global network for
information-sharing and sense-making across all boundaries, including secure
geospatial positioning. This is not something anyone else in the US Government
can do, least of all the secret world that excludes all “uncleared” foreigners
and ignores all analog and unpublished information, but the General Services Administration (GSA) is starting to think
along these lines and could be an excellent partner in pursuing this
initiative.

Second, it
provides the White House with both desperately needed savings (the President
has asked for a 30% reduction in the defense budget), while also directly
addressing the interest of the White House in finding ways to extend American
development assistance and particularly Internet and information-related
technologies into what are called “digital deserts” – areas also coincident
with energy, water, and food scarcity while being a primary point of origin for
illegal immigrants inclusive of criminals and terrorists.

Third, and
finally, it establishes, for the first time in US Government history, a Whole
of Government engine for innovation that is also able to integrate
multinational, multiagency partners, each assured of the rights of anonymity,
identity, privacy, and security that the current systems fail to provide. This
in turn enables evidence-based multinational decision-making and localized
sustainability innovation, such that we stabilize the five billion people at
the bottom of the current economic pyramid with capabilities that directly
address the top three threats to humanity: poverty, infectious disease, and
environmental degradation. As Alvin Toffler was the first to point out, information is a substitute for violence, wealth, time, and space. 

In passing,
this new agency will both harvest, legally and ethically, all open source
information in all languages and mediums, and provide for its near-real-time
processing in geospatial context, while making a copy – not the original –
available to the secret world in real-time as received. The original
information will remain an open public good that can be shared without
restraint and be converted into free online education – one cell call at a time
– in 33 languages including 11 dialects of Arabic. As Alvin Toffler was the
first to point out, information is a substitute for violence, wealth, time, and
space. 

At Full
Operational Capability (FOC), the new agency should be funded at no less than
$3 billion a year, and it should allow the President and the Secretaries of
State and Defense to influence how other people spend $1 trillion a year in
defense, diplomacy, and development funds. That is, roughly, a 333 times Return
on Investment (ROI).

Perhaps most
significantly, the success of this new agency would radically reduce wars and
illegal immigration, increase trade and shared prosperity, and convert the USA
into a “Smart Nation” in which all of the open source technologies create jobs,
eliminate waste, and generally restore the health of the Republic.

There is no
down side – from a Constitutional or public perspective – of getting this
right.