In testimony before the Senate Select Intelligence Committee, Director of Central Intelligence Mike Hayden admitted to using contractors for "enhanced interrogation" at the CIA's secret prisons, the so-called black sites. It was an issue first raised last summer on The Spy Who Billed Me. From Tuesday's exchange:
Earlier, Senator Feinstein has asked Attorney General Mukasey whether the use of contractors in coercive interrogation techniques (i.e. enhanced interrogation techniques) is legal. Specifically, Senator Feinstein asked:
Whether or not interrogation with enhanced techniques is an
"inherently governmental activity" is an excellent question and we all know that inherently governmental activities at the CIA have been handed over to green badgers to such an extent that the Agency is no longer able to perform them. Or as D/CIA Hayden put it, "In many instances, the individual best suited for the task may be a contractor.”
An important dimension embedded in this question is whether these inherently governmental functions have been handed over to private individuals or corporations. Senator Feinstein missed this fine point when quizzing D/CIA Hayden. Trust me, in the near future, it'll be a critical distinction that the Senator and others need to understand.
CIA contractors, "green badgers," come in two flavors, namely corporate and individual, the latter is referred to as an “IC” for
Independent Contractor. The corporate green badgers work for a company under contact with the CIA. IC are directly contracted by the Agency.
(Rare exceptions to these two distinct types do exist--I do know of one case of a "double green" who is a SpecTal green badger at the Agency half time and the other half time he's contracted directly to the
Agency as an IC.)
The Agency has a long history of directly hiring its alumni and other specialized experts individually as ICs, even in very sensitive areas, to make up for staffing shortfalls. The real shift since 9/11
has been the rise of corporate or industrial contractors who now dominate the Directorate of Intelligence and the National Clandestine
Service to such extents that they could not function without them.
This seems to be what Hayden was explaining:
The interesting questions about the black sites that Senator
Feinstein missed involve the extent of corporate involvement. Senator
Feinstein needs to ask the D/CIA:
When and if these questions are finally asked and answered, it's then time to probe a little deeper and see if outsourcing the black sites is really a good idea for the US taxpayer. Then perhaps Senator
Feinstein will begin wondering just how cost effective firm fixed-price facilities management contracts can be if the deals are based on a large surge capacity, but the companies are now only holding a handful of detainees in the sites. By my napkin math, that would mean the CIA
is paying millions for unused "surge" capacity -- capacity that's likely to exist largely on paper.
The answer to these questions will be very interesting and I am confident they will raise greater questions of accountability, particularly as the public and Congress become aware of the extent of corporate involvement in the covert War on Terror as well as the covert side of the war in Iraq. The question should be called about how far contractors should be involved in our government's dirty work, particularly activities that many believe are skirting the edge of the
Constitution.
Unfortunately, it's an election year, which means that if the larger questions are actually posed, they are likely to become highly politicized. Not all corporate involvement is bad. Some of the corporations that are integral in the CIA's blackest work are doing an excellent job for reasonable profits given the high risk they assume.
Personally, I worry more about the health of the Agency over the long term since it has lost the capacity to perform critical intelligence functions, let alone the ability to train the next generation of public servants to do so.
-- **R.J. Hillhouse, cross-posted at The Spy Who Billed Me