UK govt asked Cambridge Analytica Trump team for advice on “data in foreign policy”
SCL
Elections briefed Foreign Office officials in 2017 on how use of data
for US presidential elections could be applied for UK diplomatic and
foreign policy interests
By
Nafeez Ahmed
21
March, 2018
A
whistleblower has thrown new light on how Cambridge Analytica, the
notorious data analytics firm, breached Facebook rules to acquire
private information on over 50 million people to target American
voters.
The
revelations raise urgent questions about the use of psychological
manipulation techniques on Facebook to influence voter choices, not
just in the 2016 presidential elections, but also in the Brexit
referendum.
Yet
there are a number of key threads that have been forgotten, or
missing entirely, from much of the recent reporting.
One
is that Cambridge Analytica is an offshoot of SCL Group, a former UK
Ministry of Defence contractor which retains close ties to the
British Foreign Office (FCO) and other elements of the UK political
and financial establishment.
So
close, that just last year the Foreign Office executive agency,
Wilton Park, invited SCL Group subsidiary, SCL Elections, to speak
about how the use of data in the 2016 Presidential election could be
applied in the British government’s diplomatic and foreign policy
agenda.
As
I reported in an investigation into Facebook’s path toward
achieving greater surveillance reach than even the NSA, the two SCL
Group executives who addressed FCO officials in February 2017 were
Mark Turnbull, managing director of SCL Elections, and David
Wilkinson, then lead data scientist.
Facebook will become more powerful than the NSA in less than 10 years — unless we stop it
What
do NATO, private military contractors, giant arms manufacturers, wine
merchants, the NSA, Trump, British property…
Cambridge
Analytica, the US-based data firm, was created by SCL Elections as an
incorporated venture with right-wing billionaire Robert Mercer. But
SCL and Cambridge Analytica are, for all intents and purposes, “one
and the same.”
According
to a Wilton Park conference program document, Turnbull and Wilkinson
addressed the FCO conference on the subject of “examining the
application of data in the recent US Presidential election”.
The
meeting was attended and opened by Jonathan Allen — then the
FCO’s Acting Director General for Defence and Intelligence. Allen
is now Theresa May’s Deputy Permanent Representative to the United
Nations
Jonathan
Allen, former FCO head of national security, acting director general
for defence and intelligence, now UK deputy permanent representative
to the UN
The
document describes the conference as designed to “explore new
opportunities for the FCO to make better use of data in diplomacy,
but also emerging threats that challenge the current ways of
working.”
The
forum’s focus was on assessing “opportunities and threats” that
are “of particular application to the FCO’s role in diplomacy and
making international policy.” Intended outcomes of the meeting
included:
“Ideas
and recommendations for the FCO to consider in making better use of
data in foreign policy.”
SCL
Elections’ Mark Turnbull has a rich history of overseeing
psychological warfare operations on behalf of the US and UK
governments in Iraq and Afghanistan.
During
a long stint at PR firm Bell Pottinger, he oversaw a $540m US
Department of Defense contract for “information operations and
psychological operations”.
This
involved creating and distributing fake al-Qaeda videos in Iraq.
Before
landing the SCL gig, Turnbull set up a specialist strategic
communications division for Aegis Defense Services, another giant UK
defence contractor operating in Iraq and Afghanistan under a number
of hundred million dollar contracts with the Pentagon.
In
this context, it is not surprising that the SCL’s Foreign Office
connections appear to go back a long way. According to now deleted
extracts from an archived version of the company’s old website, SCL
boasted of “an extensive worldwide track record and enquires can be
directed through any British High Commission or Embassy.
The
reference to an open door enquiry process via any British embassies
in the world indicated a symbiotic relationship with the British
Foreign Office.
When
I contacted the FCO about this, the response was decidedly evasive. I
asked not only about whether SCL Group still held such a symbiotic
relationship with the FCO, but further whether the company’s
Facebook campaign operations to influence national elections had ever
been pursued in service to British foreign policy interests.
A
spokesperson replied simply with:
“I
am looking into your query however I have been advised you may wish
to contact the Ministry of Defence on this matter.”
Despite
follow up requests, no further clarification on SCL Group’s
relationship to the FCO, symbiotic or otherwise, was forthcoming.
When
I contacted the Ministry of Defence, a government spokesperson
confirmed that the SCL Group has no active contracts with the MoD,
and therefore “no access to classified or confidential MoD
information.” However, the spokesperson did not clarify when SCL
Group was last contracted by the MoD, and for what purpose
For
a considerable period in the past, SCL Group was classified by the
MoD as a ‘List X’ contractor. List X contractors work on UK
government contracts which require them to hold classified
information at their own premises or other specific sites.
Information
released under Freedom of Information (thanks to journalist Liam
O’Hare for highlighting) reveals that ‘Strategic Communications
Laboratories Ltd’, SCL Group’s previous company name, had in fact
been contracted by the MoD for ‘Target Audience Analysis’ as
recently as about a year before the 2016 presidential
elections — specifically for fiscal year 2014/15.
An
FOI request from September 2016 reveals that the UK Ministry of
Defence has bought training and audience analysis…
SCL had also in 2015 received $1m (CAD) from the Canadian government to deliver a NATO course in “advanced counter-propaganda techniques” in Eastern Europe.
Alarm over emerging details on SCL/Cambridge Analytica’s use of mass behavioural profiles developed from Facebook to influence public opinion is, of course, entirely warranted. But these techniques are not exclusive to this particular firm.
These techniques designed to influence mass populations have been developed and applied in the bowels of the Anglo-American military-industrial complex for decades, and continue to be deeply researched at multiple levels by numerous national security agencies.
The Pentagon’s secret pre-crime program to know your thoughts, predict your future
US military contractors are mining social media to influence your ‘cognitive behavior’ when you get angry at the state
That breakaway entities such as Cambridge Analytica seek to profit from these techniques simply extends and follows through with the internal logic of a system which promotes the state-backed privatisation of mass surveillance.
The emergence of Big Data in the context of an increasingly militarised form of neoliberal capitalism has opened up a new digital ‘frontier’ for corporate profit maximisation: the digitisation of even the minutest details of private and public lives. Which is why platforms like Facebook, Google and others are lobbying for the deregulation of data.
Cambridge Analytica’s data breach on Facebook is a tip of the iceberg. An increasingly lucrative business model of the platform, one that is perfectly rational given the logic of the digitisation of capital, is to sell information tools to governments on opposite sides of, often, very real physical battlefields. That, of course, is simply one subset of the wider game which sells such tools of persuasion to any business or corporation that can afford it.
There is a war on for our minds, and Big Data platforms are in the business of profiting from it.
But the solution to this is not, as the British government’s ongoing fascination with SCL/Cambridge Analytica shows, simply government regulation. The real solution is an approach to data which recognises the sovereignty of the people it truly belongs to.
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Dr. Nafeez Ahmed is the founding editor of INSURGE intelligence. Nafeez is a 16-year investigative journalist, formerly of The Guardian where he reported on the geopolitics of social, economic and environmental crises. Nafeez reports on ‘global system change’ for VICE’s Motherboard, and on regional geopolitics for Middle East Eye. He has bylines in The Independent on Sunday, The Independent, The Scotsman, Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, Foreign Policy, The Atlantic, Quartz, New York Observer, The New Statesman, Prospect, Le Monde diplomatique, among other places. He has twice won the Project Censored Award for his investigative reporting; twice been featured in the Evening Standard’s top 1,000 list of most influential Londoners; and won the Naples Prize, Italy’s most prestigious literary award created by the President of the Republic. Nafeez is also a widely-published and cited interdisciplinary academic applying complex systems analysis to ecological and political violence.
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