Why
Google made the NSA
- Part one
Inside
the secret network behind mass surveillance, endless war, and SkynetNafeez Ahmed
Medium.com
26 January, 2015
INSURGE
INTELLIGENCE,
a new crowd-funded investigative journalism project, breaks the
exclusive story of how the United States intelligence community
funded, nurtured and incubated Google as part of a drive to dominate
the world through control of information. Seed-funded by the NSA and
CIA, Google was merely the first among a plethora of private sector
start-ups co-opted by US intelligence to retain ‘information
superiority.’
The
origins of this ingenious strategy trace back to a secret
Pentagon-sponsored group, that for the last two decades has
functioned as a bridge between the US government and elites across
the business, industry, finance, corporate, and media sectors. The
group has allowed some of the most powerful special interests in
corporate America to systematically circumvent democratic
accountability and the rule of law to influence government policies,
as well as public opinion in the US and around the world. The results
have been catastrophic: NSA mass surveillance, a permanent state of
global war, and a new initiative to transform the US military into
Skynet.
THIS
IS PART ONE. READ PART
TWO HERE.
In
the wake of the Charlie Hebdo attacks in Paris, western governments
are moving fast to legitimize expanded powers of mass surveillance
and controls on the internet, all in the name of fighting terrorism.
US
and European politicians have
called to protect NSA-style snooping, and to advance the capacity to
intrude on internet privacy by outlawing encryption. One idea is to
establish a telecoms partnership that would unilaterally delete
content deemed to “fuel hatred and violence” in situations
considered “appropriate.” Heated discussions are going on at
government and parliamentary level to explore cracking down
on lawyer-client confidentiality.
What
any of this would have done to prevent the Charlie Hebdo attacks
remains a mystery,
especially given that we already know the terrorists were on the
radar of French intelligence for up to a decade.
There
is little new in this story. The 9/11 atrocity was the first of many
terrorist attacks, each succeeded by the dramatic extension of
draconian state powers at the expense of civil liberties, backed up
with the projection of military force in regions identified as
hotspots harbouring terrorists. Yet there is little indication that
this tried and tested formula has done anything to reduce the danger.
If anything, we appear to be locked into a deepening cycle of
violence with no clear end in sight.
As
our governments push to increase their powers, INSURGE
INTELLIGENCE can
now reveal the vast extent to which the US intelligence community is
implicated in nurturing the web platforms we know today, for the
precise purpose of utilizing the technology as a mechanism to fight
global ‘information war’ — a war to legitimize the power of
the few over the rest of us. The lynchpin of this story is the
corporation that in many ways defines the 21st century with its
unobtrusive omnipresence: Google.
Google
styles itself as a friendly, funky, user-friendly tech firm that rose
to prominence through a combination of skill, luck, and genuine
innovation. This is true. But it is a mere fragment of the story. In
reality, Google is a smokescreen behind which lurks the US
military-industrial complex.
The
inside story of Google’s rise, revealed here for the first time,
opens a can of worms that goes far beyond Google, unexpectedly
shining a light on the existence of a parasitical network driving the
evolution of the US national security apparatus, and profiting
obscenely from its operation.
The shadow network
For
the last two decades, US foreign and intelligence strategies have
resulted in a global ‘war on terror’ consisting of prolonged
military invasions in the Muslim world and comprehensive surveillance
of civilian populations. These strategies have been incubated, if not
dictated, by a secret network inside and beyond the Pentagon.
Established
under the Clinton administration, consolidated under Bush, and firmly
entrenched under Obama, this bipartisan network of mostly
neoconservative ideologues sealed its dominion inside the US
Department of Defense (DoD) by the dawn of 2015, through the
operation of an obscure corporate entity outside the Pentagon, but
run by the Pentagon.
In
1999, the CIA created its own venture capital investment firm,
In-Q-Tel, to fund promising start-ups that might create technologies
useful for intelligence agencies. But the inspiration for In-Q-Tel
came earlier, when the Pentagon set up its own private sector outfit.
Known
as the ‘Highlands Forum,’ this private network has operated as a
bridge between the Pentagon and powerful American elites outside the
military since the mid-1990s. Despite changes in civilian
administrations, the network around the Highlands Forum has become
increasingly successful in dominating US defense policy.
Giant
defense contractors like Booz Allen Hamilton and Science Applications
International Corporation are sometimes referred to as the ‘shadow
intelligence community’ due to the revolving doors between them and
government, and their capacity to simultaneously influence and profit
from defense policy. But while these contractors compete for power
and money, they also collaborate where it counts. The Highlands Forum
has for 20 years provided an off the record space for some of the
most prominent members of the shadow intelligence community to
convene with senior US government officials, alongside other leaders
in relevant industries.
I
first stumbled upon the existence of this network in November 2014,
when I reported for VICE’s Motherboard that
US defense secretary Chuck Hagel’s newly announced ‘Defense
Innovation Initiative’ was really about building
Skynet — or
something like it, essentially to dominate an emerging era of
automated robotic warfare.
That
story was based on a little-known Pentagon-funded ‘white paper’
published two months earlier by the National Defense University (NDU)
in Washington DC, a leading US military-run institution that, among
other things, generates research to develop US defense policy at the
highest levels. The white paper clarified the thinking behind the new
initiative, and the revolutionary scientific and technological
developments it hoped to capitalize on.
The Highlands Forum
The
co-author of that NDU white paper is Linton Wells, a 51-year veteran
US defense official who served in the Bush administration as the
Pentagon’s chief information officer, overseeing the National
Security Agency (NSA) and other spy agencies. He still
holds active
top-secret security clearances, and according to a report
by Government
Executive magazine
in 2006 hechaired
the ‘Highlands Forum’,
founded by the Pentagon in 1994.
"Linton
Wells II (right) former Pentagon chief information officer and
assistant secretary of defense for networks, at a recent Pentagon
Highlands Forum session. Rosemary Wenchel, a senior official in the
US Department of Homeland Security, is sitting next to him
New
Scientist magazine
(paywall) has compared the Highlands Forum to elite meetings like
“Davos, Ditchley and Aspen,” describing it as “far less well
known, yet… arguably just as influential a talking shop.” Regular
Forum meetings bring together “innovative people to consider
interactions between policy and technology. Its biggest successes
have been in the development of high-tech network-based warfare.”
Given
Wells’ role in such a Forum, perhaps it was not surprising that his
defense transformation white paper was able to have such a profound
impact on actual Pentagon policy. But if that was the case, why had
no one noticed?
Despite
being sponsored by the Pentagon, I could find no official page on the
DoD website about the Forum. Active and former US military and
intelligence sources had never heard of it, and neither did national
security journalists. I was baffled.
The Pentagon’s intellectual capital venture firm
In
the prologue to his 2007 book, A
Crowd of One: The Future of Individual Identity,
John Clippinger, an MIT scientist of the Media Lab Human Dynamics
Group, described how he participated in a “Highlands Forum”
gathering, an “invitation-only meeting funded by the Department of
Defense and chaired by the assistant for networks and information
integration.” This was a senior DoD post overseeing operations and
policies for the Pentagon’s most powerful spy agencies including
the NSA, the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), among others.
Starting from 2003, the position was transitioned into what is now
the undersecretary of defense for intelligence. The Highlands Forum,
Clippinger wrote, was founded by a retired US Navy captain named Dick
O’Neill. Delegates include senior US military officials across
numerous agencies and divisions — “captains, rear admirals,
generals, colonels, majors and commanders” as well as “members of
the DoD leadership.”
What
at first appeared to be the Forum’s main website describes
Highlands as “an informal cross-disciplinary network sponsored by
Federal Government,” focusing on “information, science and
technology.” Explanation is sparse, beyond a single ‘Department
of Defense’ logo.
But
Highlands also has another website
describing itself as an “intellectual capital venture firm” with
“extensive experience assisting corporations, organizations, and
government leaders.” The firm provides a “wide range of services,
including: strategic planning, scenario creation and gaming for
expanding global markets,” as well as “working with clients to
build strategies for execution.” ‘The Highlands Group Inc.,’
the website says, organizes a whole range of Forums on these issue.
For
instance, in addition to the Highlands Forum, since 9/11 the Group
runs the ‘Island Forum,’ an international event held in
association with Singapore’s Ministry of Defense, which O’Neill
oversees as “lead consultant.” The Singapore Ministry of Defense
website describes the Island Forum as “patterned
after the
Highlands Forum organized for the US Department of Defense.”
Documents leaked by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden confirmed that
Singapore played a key role in permitting the US and Australia to
tap undersea
cables to
spy on Asian powers like Indonesia and Malaysia.
The
Highlands Group website also reveals that Highlands is partnered with
one of the most powerful defense contractors in the United States.
Highlands is “supported by a network of companies and independent
researchers,” including “our Highlands Forum partners for the
past ten years at SAIC; and the vast Highlands network of
participants in the Highlands Forum.”
SAIC
stands for the US defense firm, Science Applications International
Corporation, which changed its name to Leidos in 2013, operating SAIC
as a subsidiary. SAIC/Leidos is among the top
10
largest defense contractors in the US, and works closely with the US
intelligence community, especially the NSA. According to
investigative journalist Tim Shorrock, the first to disclose the vast
extent of the privatization of US intelligence with his seminal
book Spies
for Hire,
SAIC has a “symbiotic relationship with the NSA: the agency is the
company’s largest single customer and SAIC is the NSA’s largest
contractor.”
The
full name of Captain “Dick” O’Neill, the founding president of
the Highlands Forum, is Richard Patrick O’Neill, who after his work
in the Navy joined the DoD. He served his last post as deputy for
strategy and policy in the Office of the Assistant Secretary for
Defense for Command, Control, Communications and Intelligence, before
setting up Highlands.
The Club of Yoda
“He sat at the back of the room, expressionless behind thick, black-rimmed glasses. I never heard him utter a word… Andrew (Andy) Marshall is an icon within DoD. Some call him Yoda, indicative of his mythical inscrutable status… He had served many administrations and was widely regarded as above partisan politics. He was a supporter of the Highlands Forum and a regular fixture from its beginning.”
Since
1973, Marshall has headed up one of the Pentagon’s most powerful
agencies, the Office of Net Assessment (ONA), the US defense
secretary’s internal ‘think tank’ which conducts highly
classified research on future planning for defense policy across the
US military and intelligence community. The ONA has played a key role
in major Pentagon strategy initiatives, including Maritime Strategy,
the Strategic Defense Initiative, the Competitive Strategies
Initiative, and the Revolution in Military Affairs.
In
a rare 2002 profile in Wired,
reporter Douglas McGray described Andrew Marshall, now 93 years old,
as “the DoD’s most elusive” but “one of its most influential”
officials. McGray added that “Vice President Dick Cheney, Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, and Deputy Secretary Paul
Wolfowitz” — widely considered the hawks of the
neoconservative movement in American politics — were among
Marshall’s “star protégés.”
Speaking
at a low-key Harvard
University seminar a
few months after 9/11, Highlands Forum founding president Richard
O’Neill said that Marshall was much more than a “regular fixture”
at the Forum. “Andy Marshall is our co-chair, so indirectly
everything that we do goes back into Andy’s system,” he told the
audience. “Directly, people who are in the Forum meetings may be
going back to give briefings to Andy on a variety of topics and to
synthesize things.” He also said that the Forum had a third
co-chair: the director
of the Defense Advanced Research and Projects Agency (DARPA),
which at that time was a Rumsfeld appointee, Anthony J. Tether.
Before joining DARPA, Tether was vice president of SAIC’s Advanced
Technology Sector.
The
Highlands Forum’s influence on US defense policy has thus operated
through three main channels: its sponsorship by the Office of the
Secretary of Defense (around the middle of last decade this was
transitioned specifically to the Office
of the Undersecretary of Defense for Intelligence,
which is in charge of the main surveillance agencies); its direct
link to Andrew ‘Yoda’ Marshall’s ONA; and its direct link to
DARPA.
According
to Clippinger in A
Crowd of One,
“what happens at informal gatherings such as the Highlands Forum
could, over time and through unforeseen curious paths of influence,
have enormous impact, not just within the DoD but throughout the
world.” He wrote that the Forum’s ideas have “moved from being
heretical to mainstream. Ideas that were anathema in 1999 had been
adopted as policy just three years later.”
Although
the Forum does not produce “consensus recommendations,” its
impact is deeper than a traditional government advisory committee.
“The ideas that emerge from meetings are available for use by
decision-makers as well as by people from the think tanks,”
according to O’Neill:
“We’ll include people from Booz, SAIC, RAND, or others at our meetings… We welcome that kind of cooperation, because, truthfully, they have the gravitas. They are there for the long haul and are able to influence government policies with real scholarly work… We produce ideas and interaction and networks for these people to take and use as they need them.”
My
repeated requests to O’Neill for information on his work at the
Highlands Forum were ignored. The Department of Defense also did not
respond to multiple requests for information and comment on the
Forum.
Information warfare
The
Highlands Forum has served as a two-way ‘influence bridge’: on
the one hand, for the shadow network of private contractors to
influence the formulation of information operations policy across US
military intelligence; and on the other, for the Pentagon to
influence what is going on in the private sector. There is no clearer
evidence of this than the truly instrumental role of the Forum in
incubating the idea of mass surveillance as a mechanism to dominate
information on a global scale.
In
1989, Richard O’Neill, then a US Navy cryptologist, wrote a paper
for the US Naval War College, ‘Toward
a methodology for perception management.’ In
his book, Future
Wars,
Col. John Alexander, then a senior officer in the US Army’s
Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM), records that O’Neill’s
paper for the first time outlined a strategy for “perception
management” as part of information warfare (IW). O’Neill’s
proposed strategy identified three categories of targets for IW:
adversaries, so they believe they are vulnerable; potential partners,
“so they perceive the cause [of war] as just”; and finally,
civilian populations and the political leadership so they “perceive
the cost as worth the effort.” A secret briefing based on O’Neill’s
work “made its way to the top leadership” at DoD. “They
acknowledged that O’Neill was right and told him to bury it.
Except
the DoD didn’t bury it. Around
1994,
the Highlands Group was founded by O’Neill as an official Pentagon
project at the appointment of Bill Clinton’s then defense
secretary William
Perry — who
went on to join SAIC’s board of directors after retiring from
government in 2003.
In
O’Neill’s own words, the group would function as the Pentagon’s
‘ideas
lab’.
According to Government
Executive,
military and information technology experts gathered at the first
Forum meeting “to consider the impacts of IT and globalization on
the United States and on warfare. How would the Internet and other
emerging technologies change the world?” The meeting helped plant
the idea of “network-centric warfare” in the minds of “the
nation’s top military thinkers.”
Excluding the public
Official
Pentagon records confirm that the Highlands Forum’s primary goal
was to support DoD policies on O’Neill’s specialism: information
warfare. According to the Pentagon’s 1997 Annual
Report to the President and the Congress under
a section titled ‘Information Operations,’ (IO) the Office of the
Secretary of Defense (OSD) had authorized the “establishment of the
Highlands Group of key DoD, industry, and academic IO experts” to
coordinate IO across federal military intelligence agencies.
The
following year’s DoD
annual report reiterated
the Forum’s centrality to information operations: “To examine IO
issues, DoD sponsors the Highlands Forum, which brings together
government, industry, and academic professionals from various
fields.”
Notice
that in 1998, the Highlands ‘Group’ became a ‘Forum.’
According to O’Neill, this was to avoid subjecting Highlands Forums
meetings to “bureaucratic restrictions.” What he was alluding to
was the Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA), which regulates the
way the US government can formally solicit the advice of special
interests.
Known
as the ‘open government’ law, FACA requires that US government
officials cannot hold closed-door or secret consultations with people
outside government to develop policy. All such consultations should
take place via federal advisory committees that permit public
scrutiny. FACA requires that meetings be held in public, announced
via the Federal Register, that advisory groups are registered with an
office at the General Services Administration, among other
requirements intended to maintain accountability to the public
interest.
But Government
Executive reported
that “O’Neill and others believed” such regulatory issues
“would quell the free flow of ideas and no-holds-barred discussions
they sought.” Pentagon lawyers had warned that the word ‘group’
might necessitate certain obligations and advised running the whole
thing privately: “So O’Neill renamed it the Highlands Forum and
moved into the private sector to manage it as a consultant to the
Pentagon.” The Pentagon Highlands Forum thus runs under the mantle
of O’Neill’s ‘intellectual capital venture firm,’ ‘Highlands
Group Inc.’
In
1995, a year after William Perry appointed O’Neill to head up the
Highlands Forum, SAIC — the Forum’s “partner”
organization — launched a
new Center for Information Strategy and Policy under the direction of
“Jeffrey Cooper, a member of the Highlands Group who advises senior
Defense Department officials on information warfare issues.” The
Center had precisely the same objective as the Forum, to function as
“a clearinghouse to bring together the best and brightest minds in
information warfare by sponsoring a continuing series of seminars,
papers and symposia which explore the implications of information
warfare in depth.” The aim was to “enable leaders and
policymakers from government, industry, and academia to address key
issues surrounding information warfare to ensure that the United
States retains its edge over any and all potential enemies.”
Despite
FACA regulations, federal advisory committees are already heavily
influenced, if not captured,
by corporate power.
So in bypassing FACA, the Pentagon overrode even the loose
restrictions of FACA, by permanently excluding any possibility of
public engagement.
O’Neill’s
claim that there are no reports or recommendations is disingenuous.
By his own admission, the secret Pentagon consultations with industry
that have taken place through the Highlands Forum since 1994 have
been accompanied by regular presentations of academic and policy
papers, recordings and notes of meetings, and other forms of
documentation that are locked behind a login only accessible by Forum
delegates. This violates the spirit, if not the letter, of FACA — in
a way that is patently intended to circumvent democratic
accountability and the rule of law.
The
Highlands Forum doesn’t need to produce consensus recommendations.
Its purpose is to provide the Pentagon a shadow social networking
mechanism to cement lasting relationships with corporate power, and
to identify new talent, that can be used to fine-tune information
warfare strategies in absolute secrecy.
Total
participants in the DoD’s Highlands Forum number over a thousand,
although sessions largely consist of small closed workshop style
gatherings of maximum 25–30 people, bringing together experts and
officials depending on the subject. Delegates have included senior
personnel from SAIC and Booz Allen Hamilton, RAND Corp., Cisco, Human
Genome Sciences, eBay, PayPal, IBM, Google, Microsoft, AT&T, the
BBC, Disney, General Electric, Enron, among innumerable others;
Democrat and Republican members of Congress and the Senate; senior
executives from the US energy industry such as Daniel Yergin of IHS
Cambridge Energy Research Associates; and key people involved in both
sides of presidential campaigns.
Other
participants have included senior media professionals: David
Ignatius, associate editor of the Washington
Post and
at the time the executive editor of the International
Herald Tribune;
Thomas Friedman, long-time New
York Times columnist;
Arnaud de Borchgrave, an editor at Washington
Times andUnited
Press International;
Steven Levy, a former Newsweek editor,
senior writer for Wired and
now chief tech editor at Medium;
Lawrence Wright, staff writer at the New
Yorker;
Noah Shachtmann, executive editor at the Daily
Beast;
Rebecca McKinnon, co-founder of Global
Voices Online;
Nik Gowing of the BBC; and John Markoff of the New
York Times.
Due
to its current sponsorship by the OSD’s undersecretary of defense
for intelligence, the Forum has inside access to the chiefs of the
main US surveillance and reconnaissance agencies, as well as the
directors and their assistants at DoD research agencies, from DARPA,
to the ONA. This also means that the Forum is deeply plugged into the
Pentagon’s policy research task forces.
Google: seeded by the Pentagon
In
1994 — the same year the Highlands Forum was founded under the
stewardship of the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the ONA, and
DARPA — two young PhD students at Stanford University, Sergey
Brin and Larry Page, made their breakthrough on the first automated
web crawling and page ranking application. That application remains
the core component of what eventually became Google’s search
service. Brin and Page had performed their work with funding from
the Digital
Library Initiative (DLI),
a multi-agency programme of the National Science Foundation (NSF),
NASA and DARPA.
Throughout
the development of the search engine, Sergey Brin reported regularly
and directly to two people who were not Stanford faculty at all: Dr.
Bhavani Thuraisingham and Dr. Rick Steinheiser. Both were
representatives of a sensitive US intelligence community research
programme on information security and data-mining.
Thuraisingham
is currently the Louis A. Beecherl distinguished professor and
executive director of the Cyber Security Research Institute at the
University of Texas, Dallas, and a sought-after expert on
data-mining, data management and information security issues. But in
the 1990s, she worked for the MITRE Corp., a leading US defense
contractor, where she managed the Massive Digital Data Systems
initiative, a project sponsored by the NSA, CIA, and the Director of
Central Intelligence, to foster innovative research in information
technology.
“We
funded Stanford University through the computer scientist Jeffrey
Ullman, who had several promising graduate students working on many
exciting areas,” Prof. Thuraisingham told me. “One of them was
Sergey Brin, the founder of Google. The intelligence community’s
MDDS program essentially provided Brin seed-funding, which was
supplemented by many other sources, including the private sector.”
This
sort of funding is certainly not unusual, and Sergey Brin’s being
able to receive it by being a graduate student at Stanford appears to
have been incidental. The Pentagon was all over computer science
research at this time. But it illustrates how deeply entrenched the
culture of Silicon Valley is in the values of the US intelligence
community.
In
an extraordinary document hosted
by the website of the University of Texas, Thuraisingham recounts
that from 1993 to 1999, “the Intelligence Community [IC] started a
program called Massive Digital Data Systems (MDDS) that I was
managing for the Intelligence Community when I was at the MITRE
Corporation.” The program funded 15 research efforts at various
universities, including Stanford. Its goal was developing “data
management technologies to manage several terabytes to petabytes of
data,” including for “query processing, transaction management,
metadata management, storage management, and data integration.”
At
the time, Thuraisingham was chief scientist for data and information
management at MITRE, where she led team research and development
efforts for the NSA, CIA, US Air Force Research Laboratory, as well
as the US Army’s Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command (SPAWAR)
and Communications and Electronic Command (CECOM). She went on to
teach courses for US government officials and defense contractors on
data-mining in counter-terrorism.
In
her University of Texas article, she attaches the copy of an abstract
of the US intelligence community’s MDDS program that had been
presented to the “Annual Intelligence Community Symposium” in
1995. The abstract reveals that the primary sponsors of the MDDS
programme were three agencies: the NSA, the CIA’s Office of
Research & Development, and the intelligence community’s
Community Management Staff (CMS) which operates under the Director of
Central Intelligence. Administrators of the program, which provided
funding of around 3–4 million dollars per year for 3–4 years,
were identified as Hal Curran (NSA), Robert Kluttz (CMS), Dr. Claudia
Pierce (NSA), Dr. Rick Steinheiser (ORD — standing for the
CIA’s Office of Research and Devepment), and Dr. Thuraisingham
herself.
Thuraisingham
goes on in her article to reiterate that this joint CIA-NSA program
partly funded Sergey Brin to develop the core of Google, through a
grant to Stanford managed by Brin’s supervisor Prof. Jeffrey D.
Ullman:
“In fact, the Google founder Mr. Sergey Brin was partly funded by this program while he was a PhD student at Stanford. He together with his advisor Prof. Jeffrey Ullman and my colleague at MITRE, Dr. Chris Clifton [Mitre’s chief scientist in IT], developed the Query Flocks System which produced solutions for mining large amounts of data stored in databases. I remember visiting Stanford with Dr. Rick Steinheiser from the Intelligence Community and Mr. Brin would rush in on roller blades, give his presentation and rush out. In fact the last time we met in September 1998, Mr. Brin demonstrated to us his search engine which became Google soon after.”
Brin
and Page officially incorporated Google as a company in September
1998, the very month they last reported to Thuraisingham and
Steinheiser. ‘Query Flocks’ was also part of Google’s patented
‘PageRank’
search system, which Brin developed at Stanford under the
CIA-NSA-MDDS programme, as well as with funding from the NSF, IBM and
Hitachi. That year, MITRE’s Dr. Chris Clifton, who worked under
Thuraisingham to develop the ‘Query Flocks’ system, co-authored a
paper with Brin’s superviser, Prof. Ullman, and the CIA’s Rick
Steinheiser. Titled ‘Knowledge Discovery in Text,’ thepaper was
presented at an academic conference.
“The
MDDS funding that supported Brin was significant as far as
seed-funding goes, but it was probably outweighed by the other
funding streams,” said Thuraisingham. “The duration of Brin’s
funding was around two years or so. In that period, I and my
colleagues from the MDDS would visit Stanford to see Brin and monitor
his progress every three months or so. We didn’t supervise exactly,
but we did want to check progress, point out potential problems and
suggest ideas. In those briefings, Brin did present to us on the
query flocks research, and also demonstrated to us versions of the
Google search engine.”
Brin
thus reported to Thuraisingham and Steinheiser regularly about his
work developing Google. The MDDS programme is actually referenced in
several papers co-authored by Brin and Page while at Stanford. In
their 1998paper published
in the Bulletin
of the IEEE Computer Society Technical Committeee on Data
Engineering,
they describe the automation of methods to extract information from
the web via “Dual Iterative Pattern Relation Extraction,” the
development of “a global ranking of Web pages called PageRank,”
and the use of PageRank “to develop a novel search engine called
Google.” Through an opening footnote, Sergey Brin confirms he was
“Partially supported by the Community Management Staff’s Massive
Digital Data Systems Program,” through an NSF grant — confirming
that the CIA-NSA-MDDS program provided its funding through the NSF.
This
grant, whose project report lists
Brin among
the students supported (without mentioning the MDDS), was different
to the NSF grant to Larry Page that included funding from DARPA and
NASA. The project report, authored by Brin’s supervisor Prof.
Ullman, goes on to say under the section ‘Indications of Success’
that “there are some new stories of startups based on NSF-supported
research.” Under ‘Project Impact,’ the report remarks:
“Finally, the google project has also gone commercial as
Google.com.”
Thuraisingham’s
account therefore demonstrates that the CIA-NSA-MDDS program was not
only funding Brin throughout his work with Larry Page developing
Google, but that senior US intelligence representatives including a
CIA official oversaw the evolution of Google in this pre-launch
phase, all the way until the company was ready to be officially
founded. Google, then, had been enabled with a “significant”
amount of seed-funding and oversight from the Pentagon: namely, the
CIA, NSA, and DARPA.
When
I asked Prof. Ullman to confirm whether or not Brin was partly funded
under the intelligence community’s MDDS program, and whether Ullman
was aware that Brin was regularly briefing the CIA’s Rick
Steinheiser on his progress in developing the Google search engine,
Ullman’s responses were evasive: “May I know whom you represent
and why you are interested in these issues? Who are your ‘sources’?”
He also denied that Brin played a significant role in developing the
‘query flocks’ system, although it is clear from Brin’s papers
that he did draw on that work in co-developing the PageRank system
with Page.
When
I asked Ullman whether he was denying the US intelligence community’s
role in supporting Brin during the development of Google, he said: “I
am not going to dignify this nonsense with a denial. If you won’t
explain what your theory is, and what point you are trying to make, I
am not going to help you in the slightest.”
The MDDS
abstract published
online at the University of Texas confirms that the rationale for the
CIA-NSA project was to “provide seed money to develop data
management technologies which are of high-risk and high-pay-off,”
including techniques for “querying, browsing, and filtering;
transaction processing; accesses methods and indexing; metadata
management and data modelling; and integrating heterogeneous
databases; as well as developing appropriate architectures.” The
ultimate vision of the program was to “provide for the seamless
access and fusion of massive amounts of data, information and
knowledge in a heterogeneous, real-time environment” for use by the
Pentagon, intelligence community and potentially across government.
These
revelations corroborate the claims of Robert Steele, former senior
CIA officer and a founding civilian deputy director of the Marine
Corps Intelligence Activity, whom I interviewed for The
Guardian last
year on open source intelligence. Citing sources at the CIA, Steele
had said in
2006 that Steinheiser, an old colleague of his, was the CIA’s main
liaison at Google and had arranged early funding for the pioneering
IT firm. At the time, Wiredfounder
John Batelle managed to get this official denial from
a Google spokesperson in response to Steele’s assertions:
“The statements related to Google are completely untrue.”
This
time round, despite multiple requests and conversations, a Google
spokesperson declined to comment.
UPDATE:
As of 5.41PM GMT, Google’s director of corporate communication got
in touch and asked me to include the following statement:
“Sergey Brin was not part of the Query Flocks Program at Stanford, nor were any of his projects funded by US Intelligence bodies.”
My response to that statement would be as follows: Brin himself in his own paper acknowledges funding from the Community Management Staff of the Massive Digital Data Systems (MDDS) initiative, which was supplied through the NSF. The MDDS was an intelligence community program set up by the CIA and NSA. I also have it on record, as noted in the piece, from Prof. Thuraisingham of University of Texas that she managed the MDDS program on behalf of the US intelligence community, and that her and the CIA’s Rick Steinheiser met Brin every three months or so for two years to be briefed on his progress developing Google and PageRank. Whether Brin worked on query flocks or not is neither here nor there.
In that context, you might want to consider the following questions:
1) Does Google deny that Brin’s work was part-funded by the MDDS via an NSF grant?
2) Does Google deny that Brin reported regularly to Thuraisingham and Steinheiser from around 1996 to 1998 until September that year when he presented the Google search engine to them?
Total Information Awareness
A
call for papers for the MDDS was sent out via email
list on
November 3rd 1993 from senior US intelligence official David
Charvonia, director of the research and development coordination
office of the intelligence community’s CMS. The reaction from Tatu
Ylonen (celebrated inventor of the widely used secure shell [SSH]
data protection protocol) to his colleagues on the email list is
telling: “Crypto relevance? Makes you think whether you should
protect your data.” The email also confirms that defense contractor
and Highlands Forum partner, SAIC, was managing the
MDDS submission process,
with abstracts to be sent to Jackie Booth of the CIA’s Office of
Research and Development via a SAIC email address.
By
1997, Thuraisingham reveals, shortly before Google became
incorporated and while she was still overseeing the development of
its search engine software at Stanford, her thoughts turned to the
national security applications of the MDDS program. In the
acknowledgements to her book,Web
Data Mining and Applications in Business Intelligence and
Counter-Terrorism (2003),
Thuraisingham writes that she and “Dr. Rick Steinheiser of the CIA,
began discussions with Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency on
applying data-mining for counter-terrorism,” an idea that resulted
directly from the MDDS program which partly funded Google. “These
discussions eventually developed into the current EELD (Evidence
Extraction and Link Detection) program at DARPA.”
So
the very same senior CIA official and CIA-NSA contractor involved in
providing the seed-funding for Google were simultaneously
contemplating the role of data-mining for counter-terrorism purposes,
and were developing ideas for tools actually advanced by DARPA.
Today,
as illustrated by her recent oped in the New
York Times,
Thuraisingham remains a staunch advocate of data-mining for
counter-terrorism purposes, but also insists that these methods must
be developed by government in cooperation with civil liberties
lawyers and privacy advocates to ensure that robust procedures are in
place to prevent potential abuse. She points out, damningly, that
with the quantity of information being collected, there is a high
risk of false positives.
In
1993, when the MDDS program was launched and managed by MITRE Corp.
on behalf of the US intelligence community, University of Virginia
computer scientist Dr. Anita K. Jones — a MITRE
trustee — landed the job of DARPA director and head of research
and engineering across the Pentagon. She had been on the board of
MITRE since 1988. From 1987 to 1993, Jonessimultaneously
served on SAIC’s board of directors. As the new head of DARPA from
1993 to 1997, she also co-chaired the Pentagon’s Highlands Forum
during the period of Google’s pre-launch development at Stanford
under the MDSS.
Thus,
when Thuraisingham and Steinheiser were talking to DARPA about the
counter-terrorism applications of MDDS research, Jones was DARPA
director and Highlands Forum co-chair. That year, Jones left DARPA to
return to her post at the University of Virgina. The following year,
she joined the board of the National Science Foundation, which of
course had also just funded Brin and Page, and also returned to the
board of SAIC. When she left DoD, Senator Chuck Robb paid Jones the
following tribute :
“She brought the technology and operational military communities
together to design detailed plans to sustain US dominance on the
battlefield into the next century.”
On
the board of
the National Science Foundation from 1992 to 1998 (including a stint
as chairman from 1996) was Richard N. Zare. This was the period in
which the NSF sponsored Sergey Brin and Larry Page in association
with DARPA. In June 1994, Prof. Zare, a chemist at Stanford,
participated with Prof. Jeffrey Ullman (who supervised Sergey Brin’s
research), on a panel sponsored
by Stanford and the National Research Council discussing the need for
scientists to show how their work “ties to national needs.” The
panel brought together scientists and policymakers, including
“Washington insiders.”
DARPA’s
EELD program, inspired by the work of Thuraisingham and Steinheiser
under Jones’ watch, was rapidly adapted and integrated with a suite
of tools to conduct comprehensive surveillance under the Bush
administration.
According
to DARPA official Ted
Senator,
who led the EELD program for the agency’s short-lived Information
Awareness Office, EELD was among a range of “promising techniques”
being prepared for integration “into the prototype TIA system.”
TIA stood for Total Information Awareness, and was the main
global electronic
eavesdropping and data-mining programdeployed
by the Bush administration after 9/11. TIA had been set up by
Iran-Contra conspirator Admiral John Poindexter, who was appointed in
2002 by Bush to lead DARPA’s new Information Awareness Office.
The
Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) was another contractor among
26 companies (also including SAIC) that received million dollar
contracts from DARPA (the
specific quantities remained classified) under Poindexter, to push
forward the TIA surveillance program in 2002 onwards. The research
included “behaviour-based profiling,” “automated detection,
identification and tracking” of terrorist activity, among other
data-analyzing projects. At this time, PARC’s director and chief
scientist was John Seely Brown. Both Brown and Poindexter were
Pentagon Highlands Forum participants — Brown on a regular
basis until recently.
TIA
was purportedly shut down in 2003 due to public opposition after the
program was exposed in the media, but the following year Poindexter
participated in a Pentagon Highlands Group session in Singapore,
alongside defense and security officials from around the world.
Meanwhile, Ted Senator continued to manage the EELD program among
other data-mining and analysis projects at DARPA until 2006, when he
left to become a vice president at SAIC. He is now a SAIC/Leidos
technical fellow.
Google, DARPA and the money tail
Long
before the appearance of Sergey Brin and Larry Page, Stanford
University’s computer science department had a close working
relationship with US military intelligence. A letter dated
November 5th 1984 from the office of renowned artificial intelligence
(AI) expert, Prof Edward Feigenbaum, addressed to Rick Steinheiser,
gives the latter directions to Stanford’s Heuristic Programming
Project, addressing Steinheiser as a member of the “AI Steering
Committee.” A list of
attendees at a contractor conference around that time, sponsored by
the Pentagon’s Office of Naval Research (ONR), includes Steinheiser
as a delegate under the designation “OPNAV Op-115” — which
refers to the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations’ program on
operational readiness, which played a major role in advancing digital
systems for the military.
From
the 1970s, Prof. Feigenbaum and his colleagues had been running
Stanford’s Heuristic Programming Project under contract with
DARPA,continuing through
to the 1990s. Feigenbaum alone had received aroundover
$7 million in
this period for his work from DARPA, along with other funding from
the NSF, NASA, and ONR.
Brin’s
supervisor at Stanford, Prof. Jeffrey Ullman, was in 1996 part of a
joint funding project of DARPA’s Intelligent Integration of
Information program.
That year, Ullman co-chaired DARPA-sponsored meetings on data
exchange between multiple systems.
In
September 1998, the same month that Sergey Brin briefed US
intelligence representatives Steinheiser and Thuraisingham, tech
entrepreneurs Andreas Bechtolsheim and David Cheriton invested
$100,000 each in Google. Both investors were connected to DARPA.
As
a Stanford PhD student in electrical engineering in the 1980s,
Bechtolsheim’s pioneering SUN workstation project had
been funded by
DARPA and the Stanford computer science department — this
research was the foundation of Bechtolsheim’s establishment of Sun
Microsystems, which he co-founded with William Joy.
As
for Bechtolsheim’s co-investor in Google, David Cheriton, the
latter is a long-time Stanford computer science professor who has an
even more entrenched relationship with DARPA. His bio at
the University of Alberta, which in November 2014 awarded him an
honorary science doctorate, says that Cheriton’s “research has
received the support of the US Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency (DARPA) for over 20 years.”
In
the meantime, Bechtolsheim left Sun Microsystems in 1995, co-founding
Granite Systems with his fellow Google investor Cheriton as a
partner. They sold Granite to Cisco Systems in 1996, retaining
significant ownership of Granite, and becoming senior Cisco
executives.
An
email obtained from the Enron Corpus (a database of 600,000 emails
acquired by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and later
released to the public) from Richard O’Neill, inviting Enron
executives to participate in the Highlands Forum, shows that Cisco
and Granite executives are intimately connected to the Pentagon. The
email reveals that in May 2000, Bechtolsheim’s partner and Sun
Microsystems co-founder, William Joy — who was then chief
scientist and corporate executive officer there — had attended
the Forum to discuss nanotechnology and molecular computing.
In
1999, Joy had also co-chaired the President’s Information
Technology Advisory Committee, overseeing a report acknowledging that
DARPA had:
“… revised its priorities in the 90’s so that all information technology funding was judged in terms of its benefit to the warfighter.”
Throughout
the 1990s, then, DARPA’s funding to Stanford, including Google, was
explicitly about developing technologies that could augment the
Pentagon’s military intelligence operations in war theatres.
The
Joy report recommended more federal government funding from the
Pentagon, NASA, and other agencies to the IT sector. Greg
Papadopoulos, another of Bechtolsheim’s colleagues as then Sun
Microsystems chief technology officer, also attended a Pentagon
Highlands’ Forum meeting in September 2000.
In
November, the Pentagon Highlands Forum hosted Sue Bostrom, who was
vice president for the internet at Cisco, sitting on the company’s
board alongside Google co-investors Bechtolsheim and Cheriton. The
Forum also hosted Lawrence Zuriff, then a managing partner of
Granite, which Bechtolsheim and Cheriton had sold to Cisco. Zuriff
had previously been an SAIC contractor from 1993 to 1994, working
with the Pentagon on national security issues, specifically for
Marshall’s Office of Net Assessment. In 1994, both the SAIC and the
ONA were, of course, involved in co-establishing the Pentagon
Highlands Forum. Among Zuriff’s output during his SAIC tenure was a
paper titled ‘Understanding
Information War’,
delivered at a SAIC-sponsored US Army Roundtable on the Revolution in
Military Affairs.
After
Google’s incorporation, the company received $25 million in equity
funding in 1999 led by Sequoia Capital and Kleiner Perkins Caufield &
Byers. According to Homeland
Security Today,
“A number of Sequoia-bankrolled start-ups have contracted with the
Department of Defense, especially after 9/11 when Sequoia’s Mark
Kvamme met with Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to discuss the
application of emerging technologies to warfighting and intelligence
collection.” Similarly, Kleiner Perkins had developed “a close
relationship” with In-Q-Tel, the CIA venture capitalist firm that
funds start-ups “to advance ‘priority’ technologies of value”
to the intelligence community.
John
Doerr, who led the Kleiner Perkins investment in Google obtaining a
board position, was a major early investor in Becholshtein’s Sun
Microsystems at its launch. He and his wife Anne are the main funders
behind Rice University’s Center for Engineering Leadership (RCEL),
which in 2009 received $16
million from DARPA for its platform-aware-compilation-environment
(PACE) ubiquitous computing R&D program. Doerr also has a close
relationship with the Obama administration, which he advised shortly
after it took power to ramp
up Pentagon
funding to the tech industry. In 2013, at the Fortune Brainstorm
TECH conference,
Doerr applauded “how the DoD’s DARPA funded GPS, CAD, most of the
major computer science departments, and of course, the Internet.”
From
inception, in other words, Google was incubated, nurtured and
financed by interests that were directly affiliated or closely
aligned with the US military intelligence community: many of whom
were embedded in the Pentagon Highlands Forum.
Google captures the Pentagon
In
2003, Google began customizing its search engine under special
contract with
the CIA for its Intelink Management Office, “overseeing top-secret,
secret and sensitive but unclassified intranets for CIA and other IC
agencies,” according to Homeland
Security Today. That
year, CIA funding was also being “quietly” funneled through the
National Science Foundation to projects that might help create “new
capabilities to combat terrorism through advanced technology.”
The
following year, Google bought the firm Keyhole,
which had originally been funded by In-Q-Tel. Using Keyhole, Google
began developing the advanced satellite mapping software behind
Google Earth. Former DARPA director and Highlands Forum co-chair
Anita Jones had been on the boardof
In-Q-Tel at this time, and remains so today.
Then
in November 2005, In-Q-Tel issued notices to sell $2.2 million of
Google stocks. Google’s relationship with US intelligence was
further brought to light when an IT
contractor told
a closed Washington DC conference of intelligence professionals on a
not-for-attribution basis that at least one US intelligence agency
was working to “leverage Google’s [user] data monitoring”
capability as part of an effort to acquire data of “national
security intelligence interest.”
A photo on
Flickr dated March 2007 reveals that Google research director and AI
expert Peter Norvig attended a Pentagon Highlands Forum meeting that
year in Carmel, California. Norvig’s intimate connection to the
Forum as of that year is also corroborated by his role in guest
editing the
2007 Forum reading list.
The
photo below shows Norvig in conversation with Lewis Shepherd, who at
that time was senior technology officer at the Defense Intelligence
Agency,responsible
for investigating,
approving, and architecting “all new hardware/software systems and
acquisitions for the Global Defense Intelligence IT Enterprise,”
including “big data technologies.” Shepherd now works at
Microsoft. Norvig was a computer research scientist at Stanford
University in 1991 before joining Bechtolsheim’s Sun Microsystems
as senior scientist until 1994, and going on to head up NASA’s
computer science division.
Norvig
shows up on O’Neill’sGoogle
Plus profile as
one of his close connections. Scoping the rest of O’Neill’s
Google Plus connections illustrates that he is directly connected not
just to a wide range of Google executives, but also to some of the
biggest names in the US tech community.
Those
connections include Michele Weslander Quaid, an ex-CIA contractor and
former senior Pentagon intelligence official who is now Google’s
chief technology officer where she is developing programs to
“best fit government agencies’ needs”; Elizabeth Churchill,
Google director of user experience; James Kuffner, a humanoid
robotics expert who now heads up Google’s robotics division and who
introduced the term ‘cloud robotics’; Mark Drapeau, director of
innovation engagement for Microsoft’s public sector business; Lili
Cheng, general manager of Microsoft’s Future Social Experiences
(FUSE) Labs; Jon Udell, Microsoft ‘evangelist’; Cory Ondrejka,
vice president of engineering at Facebook; to name just a few.
In
2010, Google signed a multi-billion dollar no-bid
contract with
the NSA’s sister agency, the National Geospatial-Intelligence
Agency (NGA). The contract was to use Google Earth for visualization
services for the NGA. Google had developed the software behind Google
Earth by purchasing Keyhole from the CIA venture firm In-Q-Tel.
Then
a year after, in 2011, another of O’Neill’s Google Plus
connections, Michele Quaid — who had served in executive
positions at the NGA, National Reconnaissance Office and the Office
of the Director of National Intelligence — left her government
role to become Google ‘innovation evangelist’ and the
point-person for seeking government contracts. Quaid’s last role
before her move to Google was as a senior representative of the
Director of National Intelligence to the Intelligence, Surveillance,
and Reconnaissance Task Force, and a senior advisor to the
undersecretary of defense for intelligence’s director of Joint and
Coalition Warfighter Support (J&CWS). Both roles involved
information operations at their core. Before her Google move, in
other words, Quaid worked closely with the Office of the
Undersecretary of Defense for Intelligence, to which the Pentagon’s
Highlands Forum is subordinate. Quaid has herself attended the Forum,
though precisely when and how often I could not confirm.
In
March 2012, then DARPA director Regina
Dugan — who
in that capacity was also co-chair of the Pentagon Highlands
Forum — followed her colleague Quaid into Google to lead the
company’s new Advanced Technology and Projects Group. During her
Pentagon tenure, Dugan led on strategic cyber security and social
media, among other initiatives. She was responsible for focusing “an
increasing portion” of DARPA’s work “on the investigation of
offensive capabilities to address military-specific needs,”
securing $500 million of government funding for DARPA cyber
research from
2012 to 2017.
By
November 2014, Google’s chief AI and robotics expert James Kuffner
was a delegate alongside O’Neill at the Highlands Island
Forum 2014
in Singapore, to explore ‘Advancement in Robotics and Artificial
Intelligence: Implications for Society, Security and Conflict.’ The
event included 26delegates from
Austria, Israel, Japan, Singapore, Sweden, Britain and the US, from
both industry and government. Kuffner’s association with the
Pentagon, however, began much earlier. In 1997, Kuffner was a
researcher during his Stanford PhD for a Pentagon-funded project
on networked autonomous mobile robots, sponsored by DARPA and the US
Navy.
Rumsfeld and persistent гsurveillance
In
sum, many of Google’s most senior executives are affiliated with
the Pentagon Highlands Forum, which throughout the period of Google’s
growth over the last decade, has surfaced repeatedly as a connecting
and convening force. The US intelligence community’s incubation of
Google from inception occurred through a combination of direct
sponsorship and informal networks of financial influence, themselves
closely aligned with Pentagon interests.
The
Highlands Forum itself has used the informal relationship building of
such private networks to bring together defense and industry sectors,
enabling the fusion of corporate and military interests in expanding
the covert surveillance apparatus in the name of national security.
The power wielded by the shadow network represented in the Forum can,
however, be gauged most clearly from its impact during the Bush
administration, when it played a direct role in literally writing the
strategies and doctrines behind US efforts to achieve ‘information
superiority.’
In
December 2001, O’Neill confirmed that
strategic discussions at the Highlands Forum were feeding directly
into Andrew Marshall’s DoD-wide strategic review ordered by
President Bush and Donald Rumsfeld to upgrade the military, including
the Quadrennial Defense Review — and that some of the earliest
Forum meetings “resulted in the writing of a group of DoD policies,
strategies, and doctrine for the services on information warfare.”
That process of “writing” the Pentagon’s information warfare
policies “was done in conjunction with people who understood the
environment differently — not only US citizens, but also
foreign citizens, and people who were developing corporate IT.”
The
Pentagon’s post-9/11 information warfare doctrines were, then,
written not just by national security officials from the US and
abroad: but also by powerful corporate entities in the defense and
technology sectors.
In
April that year, Gen. James McCarthy had completed his defense
transformation review ordered
by Rumsfeld. His report repeatedly highlighted mass surveillance as
integral to DoD transformation. As for Marshall, his
follow-up report for
Rumsfeld was going to develop a blueprint determining the Pentagon’s
future in the ‘information age.’
O’Neill
also affirmed that to develop information warfare doctrine, the Forum
had held extensive
discussions on
electronic surveillance and “what constitutes an act of war in an
information environment.” Papers feeding into US defense policy
written through the late 1990s by RAND consultants John Arquilla and
David Rondfeldt, both longstanding Highlands Forum members, were
produced “as a result of those meetings,” exploring policy
dilemmas on how far to take the goal of ‘Information Superiority.’
“One of the things that was shocking to the American public was
that we weren’t pilfering Milosevic’s accounts electronically
when we in fact could,” commented O’Neill.
Although
the R&D process around the Pentagon transformation strategy
remains classified, a hint at the DoD discussions going on in this
period can be gleaned from a 2005 US Army School of Advanced Military
Studies research monograph in the DoD journal, Military
Review,
authored by an active Army intelligence officer.
“The
idea of Persistent Surveillance as a transformational capability has
circulated within the national Intelligence Community (IC) and the
Department of Defense (DoD) for at least three years,” the paper
said, referencing the Rumsfeld-commissioned transformation study.
The
Army paper went on to review a range of high-level official military
documents, including one from the Office of the Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, showing that “Persistent Surveillance” was a
fundamental theme of the information-centric vision for defense
policy across the Pentagon.
We
now know that just two months before O’Neill’s address at Harvard
in 2001, under the TIA program, President Bush had secretly
authorized the
NSA’s domestic surveillance of Americans without court-approved
warrants, in what appears to have been an illegal modification of the
ThinThread data-mining project — as later exposed by
NSA whistleblowers William Binney and Thomas Drake.
The surveillance-startup nexus
From
here on, Highlands Forum partner SAIC played a key role in the NSA
roll out from inception. Shortly after 9/11, Brian Sharkey, chief
technology officer of SAIC’s ELS3 Sector (focusing on IT systems
for emergency responders), teamed up with John Poindexter to propose
the TIA surveillance program. SAIC’s Sharkey had
previously been deputy director of the Information
Systems Office at
DARPA through the 1990s.
Meanwhile,
around the same time, SAIC vice president for corporate
development, Samuel
Visner,
became head of the NSA’s signals-intelligence programs. SAIC was
then among a consortium receiving a $280 million contract to develop
one of the NSA’s secret eavesdropping systems. By 2003, Visner
returned to SAIC to become director of strategic planning and
business development of the firm’s intelligence group.
That
year, the NSA consolidated its TIA programme
of warrantless electronic surveillance, to keep “track of
individuals” and understand “how they fit into models” through
risk profiles of American citizens and foreigners. TIA was doing this
by integrating databases on finance, travel, medical, educational and
other records into a “virtual, centralized grand database.”
This
was also the year that the Bush administration drew up its
notoriousInformation
Operations Roadmap.
Describing the internet as a “vulnerable weapons system,”
Rumsfeld’s IO roadmap had advocated that Pentagon strategy “should
be based on the premise that the Department [of Defense] will ‘fight
the net’ as it would an enemy weapons system.” The US should seek
“maximum control” of the “full spectrum of globally emerging
communications systems, sensors, and weapons systems,” advocated
the document.
The
following year, John Poindexter, who had proposed and run the TIA
surveillance program via his post at DARPA, was in Singapore
participating in the Highlands 2004 Island
Forum.
Other delegates included then Highlands Forum co-chair and Pentagon
CIO Linton Wells; president of notorious Pentagon information warfare
contractor, John Rendon; Karl Lowe, director of the Joint Forces
Command (JFCOM) Joint Advanced Warfighting Division; Air Vice
Marshall Stephen Dalton, capability manager for information
superiority at the UK Ministry of Defense; Lt. Gen. Johan Kihl,
Swedish army Supreme Commander HQ’s chief of staff; among others.
As
of 2006, SAIC had been awarded a multi-million dollar NSA contract to
develop a big data-mining project called ExecuteLocus,
despite the colossal $1 billion failure of its preceding contract,
known as ‘Trailblazer.’ Core components of TIA were being
“quietly continued” under “new code names,” according
to Foreign
Policy’s Shane
Harris,
but had been concealed “behind the veil of the classified
intelligence budget.” The new surveillance program had by then been
fully transitioned from DARPA’s jurisdiction to the NSA.
This
was also the year of yet another Singapore Island Forum led by
Richard O’Neill on behalf of the Pentagon, which included senior
defense and industry officials from the US, UK, Australia, France,
India and Israel. Participants also included senior technologists
from Microsoft, IBM, as well as Gilman
Louie,
partner at technology investment firm Alsop Louie Partners.
Gilman
Louie is a former CEO of In-Q-Tel — the CIA firm investing
especially in start-ups developing data mining technology. In-Q-Tel
was founded in 1999 by the CIA’s Directorate of Science and
Technology, under which the Office of Research and Development
(ORD) — which was part of the Google-funding MDSS program — had
operated. The idea was to essentially replace the functions once
performed by the ORD, by mobilizing the private sector to develop
information technology solutions for the entire intelligence
community.
Louie
had led In-Q-Tel from 1999 until January 2006 — including when
Google bought Keyhole, the In-Q-Tel-funded satellite mapping
software. Among his colleagues on In-Q-Tel’s board in this period
were former DARPA director and Highlands Forum co-chair Anita Jones
(who is still there), as well as founding board member William
Perry:
the man who had appointed O’Neill to set-up the Highlands Forum in
the first place. Joining Perry as a founding In-Q-Tel board member
was John Seely Brown, then chief scientist at Xerox Corp and director
of its Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) from 1990 to 2002, who is
also a long-time senior Highlands Forum member since inception.
In
addition to the CIA, In-Q-Tel has also been backed by the FBI, NGA,
and Defense Intelligence Agency, among other agencies. More than 60
percent of In-Q-Tel’s investments under Louie’s watch were “in
companies that specialize in automatically collecting, sifting
through and understanding oceans of information,” according to
Medill School of Journalism’s News21,
which also noted that Louie himself had acknowledged it was not clear
“whether privacy and civil liberties will be protected” by
government’s use of these technologies “for national security.”
The transcript of
Richard O’Neill’s late 2001 seminar at Harvard shows that the
Pentagon Highlands Forum had first engaged Gilman Louie long before
the Island Forum, in fact, shortly after 9/11 to explore “what’s
going on with In-Q-Tel.” That Forum session focused on how to “take
advantage of the speed of the commercial market that wasn’t present
inside the science and technology community of Washington” and to
understand “the implications for the DoD in terms of the strategic
review, the QDR, Hill action, and the stakeholders.” Participants
of the meeting included “senior military people,” combatant
commanders, “several of the senior flag officers,” some “defense
industry people” and various US representatives including
Republican Congressman William Mac Thornberry and Democrat Senator
Joseph Lieberman.
Both
Thornberry and Lieberman are staunch supporters of NSA surveillance,
and have consistently acted to rally support for pro-war,
pro-surveillance legislation. O’Neill’s comments indicate that
the Forum’s role is not just to enable corporate contractors to
write Pentagon policy, but to rally political support for government
policies adopted through the Forum’s informal brand of shadow
networking.
Repeatedly,
O’Neill told his Harvard audience that his job as Forum president
was to scope case studies from real companies across the private
sector, like eBay and Human Genome Sciences, to figure out the basis
of US ‘Information Superiority’ — “how to dominate” the
information market — and leverage this for “what the
president and the secretary of defense wanted to do with regard to
transformation of the DoD and the strategic review.”
By
2007, a year after the Island Forum meeting that included Gilman
Louie, Facebook received its second round of $12.7 million worth of
funding from Accel Partners. Accel was headed up by James Breyer,
former chair of the National Venture Capital Association (NVCA)
where Louie
also served on
the board while still CEO of In-Q-Tel. Both Louie and Breyer had
previously served together on the board of BBN
Technologies — which
had recruited ex-DARPA chief and In-Q-Tel trustee Anita Jones.
Facebook’s
2008 round of funding was led by Greylock Venture Capital, which
invested $27.5 million. The firm’s senior partners include Howard
Cox, another former NVCA chair who also sits
on the board of
In-Q-Tel. Apart from Breyer and Zuckerberg, Facebook’s only other
board member is Peter Thiel, co-founder of defense contractor
Palantir which provides all sorts of data-mining and visualization
technologies to US government, military and intelligence agencies,
including the NSA
and FBI,
and which itself was nurtured to financial viability by Highlands
Forum members.
Palantir
co-founders Thiel and Alex Karp met with John Poindexter in 2004,
according to Wired,
the same year Poindexter had attended the Highlands Island Forum in
Singapore. They met at the home of Richard Perle, another Andrew
Marshall acolyte. Poindexter helped Palantir open doors, and to
assemble “a legion of advocates from the most influential strata of
government.” Thiel had also met with Gilman Louie of In-Q-Tel,
securing the backing of the CIA in this early phase.
And
so we come full circle. Data-mining programs like ExecuteLocus and
projects linked to it, which were developed throughout this period,
apparently laid the groundwork for the new NSA programmes eventually
disclosed by Edward Snowden. By 2008, as Facebook received its next
funding round from Greylock Venture Capital, documents and
whistleblower testimony confirmed that the NSA was
effectivelyresurrecting
the TIA project with
a focus on Internet data-mining via comprehensive monitoring of
e-mail, text messages, and Web browsing.
We
also now know thanks to Snowden that the NSA’s XKeyscore ‘Digital
Network Intelligence’ exploitation system was designed to allow
analysts to search not just Internet databases like emails, online
chats and browsing history, but also telephone services, mobile phone
audio, financial transactions and global air transport
communications — essentially the entire global
telecommunications grid. Highlands Forum partner SAIC played a key
role, among other contractors, in producing and administeringthe
NSA’s XKeyscore, and was recently implicated in NSA
hacking of
the privacy network Tor.
The
Pentagon Highlands Forum was therefore intimately involved in all
this as a convening network—but also quite directly. Confirming his
pivotal role in the expansion of the US-led global surveillance
apparatus, then Forum co-chair, Pentagon CIO Linton Wells,
told FedTech
magazine in
2009 that he had overseen the NSA’s roll out of “an impressive
long-term architecture last summer that will provide increasingly
sophisticated security until 2015 or so.”
The Goldman Sachs connection
When
I asked Wells about the Forum’s role in influencing US mass
surveillance, he responded only to say he would prefer not to comment
and that he no longer leads the group.
As
Wells is no longer in government, this is to be expected — but
he is still connected to Highlands. As of September 2014, after
delivering his influential white paper on Pentagon transformation, he
joined the Monterey Institute for International Studies (MIIS) Cyber
Security Initiative (CySec) as a distinguished senior fellow.
Sadly,
this was not a form of trying to keep busy in retirement. Wells’
move underscored that the Pentagon’s conception of information
warfare is not just about surveillance, but about the exploitation of
surveillance to influence both government and public opinion.
The
MIIS CySec initiative is now formally
partnered with
the Pentagon Highlands Forum through a Memorandum
of Understanding signed
with MIIS provost Dr
Amy Sands,
who sits on the Secretary of State’s International Security
Advisory Board. The MIIS CySec website states that the MoU signed
with Richard O’Neill:
“… paves the way for future joint MIIS CySec-Highlands Group sessions that will explore the impact of technology on security, peace and information engagement. For nearly 20 years the Highlands Group has engaged private sector and government leaders, including the Director of National Intelligence, DARPA, Office of the Secretary of Defense, Office of the Secretary of Homeland Security and the Singaporean Minister of Defence, in creative conversations to frame policy and technology research areas.”
Who
is the financial benefactor of the new Pentagon Highlands-partnered
MIIS CySec initiative? According to the MIIS CySec site,
the initiative was launched “through a generous donation of seed
funding from George Lee.” George C. Lee is a senior partner at
Goldman Sachs, where he is chief information officer of the
investment banking division, and chairman of the Global Technology,
Media and Telecom (TMT) Group.
But
here’s the kicker. In 2011, it was Lee who engineered Facebook’s
$50 billion valuation,
and previously handled deals for other Highlands-connected tech
giants like Google, Microsoft and eBay. Lee’s then boss, Stephen
Friedman, a former CEO and chairman of Goldman Sachs, and later
senior partner on the firm’s executive board, was a also
founding board
member of
In-Q-Tel alongside Highlands Forum overlord William Perry and Forum
member John Seely Brown.
In
2001, Bush appointed Stephen Friedman to the President’s
Intelligence Advisory Board, and then to chair that board from 2005
to 2009. Friedman previously served alongside Paul Wolfowitz and
others on the 1995–6 presidential commission of inquiry into US
intelligence capabilities, and in 1996 on the Jeremiah
Panel that
produced a report to the Director of the National Reconnaisance
Office (NRO) — one of the surveillance agencies plugged into
the Highlands Forum. Friedman was on the Jeremiah Panel with Martin
Faga, then senior vice president and general manager of MITRE Corp’s
Center for Integrated Intelligence Systems — where
Thuraisingham, who managed the CIA-NSA-MDDS program that inspired
DARPA counter-terrorist data-mining, was also a lead engineer.
In
the footnotes to a chapter for the book, Cyberspace
and National Security (Georgetown
University Press), SAIC/Leidos executive Jeff Cooper reveals that
another Goldman Sachs senior partner Philip J. Venables — who
as chief information risk officer leads the firm’s programs on
information security — delivered a Highlands Forum presentation
in 2008 at what was called an ‘Enrichment Session on Deterrence.’
Cooper’s chapter draws on Venables’ presentation at Highlands
“with permission.” In 2010, Venables participated with his then
boss Friedman at an Aspen
Institute meeting
on the world economy. For the last few years, Venables has
also sat on various
NSA cybersecurity award review
boards.
In
sum, the investment firm responsible for creating the billion dollar
fortunes of the tech sensations of the 21st century, from Google to
Facebook, is intimately linked to the US military intelligence
community; with Venables, Lee and Friedman either directly connected
to the Pentagon Highlands Forum, or to senior members of the Forum.
Fighting terror with terror
The
convergence of these powerful financial and military interests around
the Highlands Forum, through George Lee’s sponsorship of the
Forum’s new partner, the MIIS Cysec initiative, is revealing in
itself.
MIIS
Cysec’s director, Dr, Itamara Lochard, has long been embedded in
Highlands. She regularly “presents current research on non-state
groups, governance, technology and conflict to the US Office of the
Secretary of Defense Highlands Forum,” according to her Tufts
University bio. She
also,
“regularly advises US combatant commanders” and specializes in
studying the use of information technology by “violent and
non-violent sub-state groups.”
Dr
Lochard maintains a comprehensive database of
1,700 non-state groups including “insurgents, militias, terrorists,
complex criminal organizations, organized gangs, malicious cyber
actors and strategic non-violent actors,” to analyze their
“organizational patterns, areas of cooperation, strategies and
tactics.” Notice, here, the mention of “strategic non-violent
actors” — which perhaps covers NGOs and other groups or
organizations engaged in social political activity or campaigning,
judging by the focus of other DoD
research programs.
As
of 2008, Lochard has been an adjunct professor at the US Joint
Special Operations University where she teaches a top
secret advanced course in
‘Irregular Warfare’ that she designed for senior US special
forces officers. She has previously taught courses on ‘Internal
War’ for senior “political-military officers” of various Gulf
regimes.
Her
views thus disclose much about what the Highlands Forum has been
advocating all these years. In 2004, Lochard was co-author of a study
for theUS
Air Force’s Institute for National Security Studies on
US strategy toward ‘non-state armed groups.’ The study on the one
hand argued that non-state armed groups should be urgently recognized
as a ‘tier one security priority,’ and on the other that the
proliferation of armed groups “provide strategic opportunities that
can be exploited to help achieve policy goals. There have and will be
instances where the United States may find collaborating with armed
group is in its strategic interests.” But “sophisticated tools”
must be developed to differentiate between different groups and
understand their dynamics, to determine which groups should be
countered, and which could be exploited for US interests. “Armed
group profiles can likewise be employed to identify ways in which the
United States may assist certain armed groups whose success will be
advantageous to US foreign policy objectives.”
In
2008, Wikileaks published
a leaked restricted US Army Special Operations field manual, which
demonstrated that the sort of thinking advocated by the likes of
Highlands expert Lochard had been explicitly adopted by US special
forces.
Lochard’s
work thus demonstrates that the Highlands Forum sat at the
intersection of advanced Pentagon strategy on surveillance, covert
operations and irregular warfare: mobilizing mass surveillance to
develop detailed information on violent and non-violent groups
perceived as potentially threatening to US interests, or offering
opportunities for exploitation, thus feeding directly into US covert
operations.
That,
ultimately, is why the CIA, the NSA, the Pentagon, spawned Google. So
they could run their secret dirty wars with even greater efficiency
than ever before.
READ PART
TWO
Dr Nafeez
Ahmed is
an investigative journalist, bestselling author and international
security scholar. A former Guardian writer, he writes the ‘System
Shift’ column for VICE’s Motherboard, and is also a columnist for
Middle East Eye. He is the winner of a 2015 Project Censored Award
for Outstanding Investigative Journalism for his Guardian work.
Nafeez
has also written for The Independent, Sydney Morning Herald, The Age,
The Scotsman, Foreign Policy, The Atlantic, Quartz, Prospect, New
Statesman, Le Monde diplomatique, New Internationalist, Counterpunch,
Truthout, among others. He is the author of A
User’s Guide to the Crisis of Civilization: And How to Save
It (2010),
and the scifi thriller novel ZERO
POINT,
among other books. His work on the root causes and covert operations
linked to international terrorism officially contributed to the 9/11
Commission and the 7/7 Coroner’s Inquest.
This
exclusive is being released for free in the public interest, and was
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