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Synergy in Security: The Rise of the National Security Complex
In his January 17, 1961 farewell address, President Dwight D. Eisenhower cautioned: "In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex."
Five decades later, this complex, which Eisenhower defined as the "conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry," is no longer new. And while Eisenhower's warning is still pertinent, the scale, scope, and substance of the complex have changed in alarming ways. It has morphed into a new type of public-private partnership-one that spans military, intelligence, and homeland-security contracting, and might be better called a "national security complex."
Not counting the supplemental authorizations for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, current levels of military spending are, adjusting for inflation, about 45% higher than the military budget when Eisenhower left office. Including the Iraq and Afghanistan war budgets, military spending stands about 30% higher, adjusted for inflation, than any of the post-WWII highpoints-Korea, Vietnam, and the Reagan build-up in the 1980s. Private military contracting, which constituted about half of the Pentagon's spending in the 1960s, currently absorbs about 70% of the Department of Defense (DoD) budget. No longer centered exclusively in the Pentagon, outsourcing to private contractors now extends to all aspects of government. But since 2001, the major surge in federal outsourcing has occurred in the "intelligence community" and in the new Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
Since Sept. 11, 2001, a vastly broadened government-industry complex has emerged-one that brings together all aspects of national security. Several interrelated trends are responsible for its formation and explosive growth: 1) the dramatic growth in government outsourcing since the early 1990s, and particularly since the beginning of the George W. Bush administration, 2) the post-Sept. 11 focus on homeland security, 3) the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, 4) the Bush-era surge in intelligence budget and intelligence contracts, and 5) the cross-agency focus on information and communications technology.
The term "military-industrial complex" no longer adequately describes the multi-headed monster that has emerged in our times. The industrial (that is, big business) part of the military-industrial complex has become ever more deeply integrated into government-no longer simply providing arms but also increasingly offering their services on the fronts of war and deep inside the halls of government-commissioned to carry out the very missions of the DoD, DHS, and intelligence agencies. In the national security complex, it is ever more difficult to determine what is private sector and what is public sector-and whose interests are being served.
Different Departments, Same Companies
In 2008, the federal government handed out contracts to the private sector totaling $525.5 billion-up from $209 billion in 2000. That's about a quarter of the entire federal budget. The DoD alone accounts for about $390 billion, or nearly three-quarters of total federal contracts.
The living symbol of the new national security complex is Lockheed Martin, whose slogan is "We Never Forget Who We're Working For." That's the U.S. government-sales to which account for more than 80% of the company's revenues, with most of the balance coming from international weapons sales and other security contracts facilitated by Washington. In addition to its sales of military hardware, Lockheed is the government's top provider of IT services and systems integration (see Table 1, below).
Whether it is military operations, interrogations, intelligence gathering, or homeland security, the country's "national security" apparatus is largely in the same hands. Various components of the U.S. national-security state are divvied up among different federal bureaucracies. But increasingly, the main components are finding a common home within corporate America. Corporations such as Lockheed Martin, Boeing, L-3 Communications, and Northrop Grumman have the entire business-military, intelligence, and "homeland security"-covered.
Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and Boeing led the top ten military contractors in 2008 (see Table 2).
The 2003 creation of the Department of Homeland Security has helped spawn an explosion of new companies, and new divisions of existing companies, providing "homeland security" products and services. Before President Bush created DHS in the wake of Sept. 11, the agencies that would be merged into the new department did very little outsourcing. From less than 1% of federal contracts (as a total dollar amount) in 2000, outsourcing by DHS has quadrupled as a portion of federal contracting from 2003 to 2009.
Although DHS contracts with scores of new companies, its top contractors are all leading military contractors that have established "homeland security" divisions and subsidiaries.
The top ten DHS contractors in 2008 were Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, IBM, L-3 Communications, Unisys, SAIC, Boeing, Booz Allen Hamilton, General Electric, and Accenture, all leading military contractors. Other major military contractors among the top 25 DHS contractors include General Dynamics, Fluor, and Computer Sciences Corp (see Table 3).
There is no public list of corporations that contract for U.S. intelligence agencies. But based on company press releases and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Tim Shorrock concludes in his new book Spies for Hire that the top five intelligence contractors are probably Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, SAIC, General Dynamics, and L-3 Communications. Other major contractors include Booz Allen Hamilton, CACI International, DRS Technologies, and ManTech International, also leading military contractors.
Within the past eight years-since Sept. 11, 2001-the intelligence budget has soared, rising from an estimated $30 billion in 2000 to an estimated $66.5 billion today. Intelligence agencies have channeled most of the new funding to private contractors, both major companies like CACI and thousands of individual contractors. Private contracts now account for about 70% of the intelligence budget. Intelligence community sources told the Washington Post that private contractors constituted "a significant majority" of analysts working at the new National Counterterroism Center, which provides the White House with terrorism intelligence.
The major military contractors are now moving their headquarters from their production centers, often in California and Texas, to the Washington Beltway in pursuit of more intelligence, military, and homeland security contracts. The gleaming Beltway office buildings of the security corporations are now the most visible symbol of this national security complex.
Boots on the Ground, Computers in Cubicles
Another feature of this evolving, ever-expanding complex is that all the U.S. government departments involved in national security-DoD, State Department, DHS, and intelligence-are outsourcing the boots-on-the-ground components of their missions through the use of private security and military provider firms. Companies such as ArmourGroup (which includes Wackhenhut), DynCorp, MPRI, and Xe (formerly Blackwater Worldwide) have injected the private sector directly into the public sector through their work as interrogators, military trainers, prison guards, intelligence agents, and war-fighters.
Five dozen of these security contractors have organized themselves into the International Peace Operations Association (IPOA). After Blackwater came under worldwide scrutiny for its massacre of unarmed Iraqis in central Baghdad on Sept. 17, 2007, the firm left IPOA, whose code of conduct for "peacekeeping" operations it had flagrantly ignored. Blackwater created a new association of private military contractors called Global Peace and Security Operations-conveniently without any potentially embarrassing code of conduct.
Private contractors are not only on the frontlines of war and clandestine operations, but have also penetrated the national security bureaucracy itself. Reacting to a March 2008 GAO report on conflicts of interest within the Pentagon, Frida Berrigan of the New America Foundation's Arms and Security Initiative observed that alarming numbers of "cubicle mercenaries" are now working within federal bureaucracies as administrators, contract managers, intelligence analysts, and cybersecurity chiefs. No longer does the "large arms industry" that Eisenhower warned about just peddle goods like weapons and missiles, it also sells itself through its services.
Common Dominators of the New Complex: Information and Security
Private contractors are also in control of the core of the complex's information and intelligence systems. Information and communications technology is the fastest-growing sector in government contracting. The DHS's expanding involvement in cybersecurity, information systems, and electronic identification programs, for example, is adding billions of dollars annually to the national security boom.
Lockheed Martin led the ranks of information technology (IT) contractors in 2008, followed by Boeing and Northrop Grumman. Although IT contracts are expanding rapidly, there are few new entrants to the list of top IT providers to the government. Among the top 100 IT contractors, there were just twelve new entrants, as traditional military giants dominated the list (see Table 4).
One of the largest sources of federal contracting at DHS has been the EAGLE (Enterprise Acquisition Gateway for Leading Edge Solutions) IT program, which awarded $8.2 billion in contracts in the past three years. Among the leading contractors are CACI, Booz Allen Hamilton, Lockheed Martin, SAIC, Northrop Grumman, General Dynamics, and BAE Systems-all major military contractors. Most of the EAGLE IT bonanza is in the form of "indefinite-delivery, indefinite quantity contracts" that provide generous operating room for IT firms to determine their own solutions to DHS' vast IT and cybersecurity requirements.
The major military corporations have quickly formed new branches to focus on these new opportunities outside of their traditional core contracts with the Pentagon. This year, for example, Northrop Grumman created a new Information Systems division to seek military, homeland security, and intelligence IT contracts. Recognizing the interest in the Obama administration in cyber-security and information war, corporations such as Booz Allen Hamilton and Hewlett-Packard, among others, have created new cybersecurity divisions or subsidiaries. Similarly, the new administration's focus on transnational disease has led military companies such as General Dynamics to acquire medical subsidiaries.
Revolving-Door Security Consultants
Another manifestation of the new national security complex is the rise of a new series of consulting agencies that act as an interface between government and their clients. That's an easy connection for such companies as the Chertoff Group, Ridge Global, and RiceHadley Group, since all their principals recently left government, where they had presided over the unprecedented wave of outsourcing.
Two of these national security agencies are headed by the DHS's first two secretaries, Michael Chertoff and Tom Ridge, while the newest group brings together Condoleezza Rice and Stephen Hadley, who only a year ago were serving as secretary of state and national security adviser, respectively.
When announcing his group's formation, Chertoff boasted, "Our principals have worked closely together for years, as leaders of the Department of Defense, the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of Justice, the National Security Agency and the CIA." Indeed, a leading member of this new group is former CIA director Michael Hayden (2005-2009), who also directed the National Security Agency (1999-2005). Others include former DHS deputy Paul Schneider (who was head of acquisitions for NSA and the U.S. Navy prior to his position at DHS); Admiral Jay Cohen (Ret.), who was DHS director of science and technology and previously the Navy's technology chief; and Charlie Allen, who was the intelligence chief at DHS and, according to Michael Chertoff, "pretty much head of everything you could be for the CIA."
The Chertoff Group has now hooked up with Blue Star Capital, a transatlantic investment company specializing in mergers and acquisitions in the security business. In its announcement of the new partnership, Blue Star emphasized their joint interest in "generating opportunities" across the national security spectrum-"in the homeland security, defense, and intelligence markets."
Chertoff himself applauded the value of the merger: "I believe there are many areas of opportunity within the Homeland Security, Intelligence and Defense sectors where the synergies between Blue Star and the Chertoff Group will provide real value."
Taking Back Security
The "unwarranted influence" that concerned Eisenhower during the Cold War now pervades national politics and is rarely questioned. Nor has there been any evaluation of the achievements of the increasingly privatized national security complex. In his 2010 State of the Union address, President Obama talked about the need for fiscal restraint, but exempted "national security" from the planned spending freeze. Despite manifold evidence of vast waste and scandalous profiteering in the security apparatus-to say nothing of "unnecessary wars"-the president didn't see fit to scale back the security agencies. By failing to do so, he has all but guaranteed that the outsourcing bonanza will continue. With "national security" off limits for budget cuts, Obama signaled that safeguarding the nation against the "unwarranted influence" and "rise of misplaced power" will not be priorities for this administration.
As major corporations such as Lockheed Martin and security consulting agencies such as the Chertoff Group extend their corporate tentacles into the intelligence, military, and homeland security terrains, the greater threat they pose. The corporate penetration of all the government's information-gathering, communications, intelligence, and data systems undermines democratic governance. The new corporate domination of data-mining, communications, and cybersecurity systems-with little or no government oversight -threatens individual liberty and privacy. This also creates a powerful vested interest in a large and growing "national security" apparatus-and one that is deeply integrated with the top echelons of the intelligence agencies, military, and other parts of this secretive state-within-the-state.
In the end, it's not the contractors that are the central problem with the national security complex-it's the outsourcers, that is, the elected politicians and the government administrators they appoint or confirm. The contractors are working to maximize profits, and are answerable mainly to company shareholders. The outsourcers, however, are ultimately answerable, at least in principle, to the public. What is at stake is who really controls public policy-a democratically accountable government, or an unaccountable fusion of governmental and corporate power.
Comments
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11 Comments so far
Show AllHistory has shown that one of the precursors to a dictatorship is when the Head of State, the Military Establishment and Intelligence Services join forces against the people.
Storm clouds on the horizon?
This is a very important article.
If John Q Public read, and understood the information presented here we might be able to change things. I see no chance of that happening though. We're all together on this bus, folks...have a great ride...until the crash...
Thanks CD for this one.
yes...there is, being manufactured by the people and for the people, a net to contain them...
a web of surveillance and intelligence gathering, random and warrantless investigation and incarceration, as well as automated weaponry and controlling computerization that is frightening in potential breadth and depth and efficiency...
what do you do for a living?
I bake bread
I build drones
I deliver mail
I shoot people remotely using drones
I put out fires and save lives
I program computers to shoot people remotely using drones
good to be employed...
have a nice day!
S.3081 - Enemy Belligerent, Interrogation, Detention and Prosecution Act of 2010 proposed by Senators Lieberman and McCain “…removes the right to trial for American Citizens and gives government the AUTHORITY to detain Americans INDEFINITELY for SUSPECTED TERRORIST ACTIVITY…”
WHAT?
The really IMPORTANT thing about this Act is just WHO defines SUSPECTED ACTIVITY? I’m sure the CRIMINALS and CONS who oversaw the greatest looting of wealth and resources in US history… FEEL THREATENED by those who would CALL for JUSTICE. Republicans know DEMANDS for ethics, responsibility and accountability are going to come down HARD on them. Especially McCain/Lieberman who’ve been covering up Banking/Financial/Wall St SCANDALS since the 80’s. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out what comes next…
Like wealthy Aristocrats have been saying all through history: “We can hire half the POOR PEOPLE to get rid of the rest, especially the boat-rockers”. So LAW ENFORCEMENT will be protecting those who ravaged and expatriated most of our nation’s wealth and resources from Bold Progressives and other Concerned Citizens.
If Republicans take back Congress there’s definitely going to be some kind of revolution revolution not long after. The Concerned Citizens of America have seen the light…
I’m going to make sure future generation know about the people who vote Republican Party so THEY don‘t make the mistakes. Republicans/Conservatives have PROVEN THEMSELVES to be the worst kind of human beings. And suckers too, these so-called great Americans allowed themselves to be LIED TO over and over. Paranoia, fear mongering, racism, hypocrisy and hysteria on a level not seen since the McCarthy Era.
Conservatives weren’t smart enough to recognize the CON… and these right-wing reactionaries got PLAYED FOR FOOLS, bigtime! SO WHY SHOULD ANY AMERICAN CITIZEN TRUST THEM NOW?
THE PLEDGE:
I’m going to shout IT from the hills and preach IT in the valleys. I’ll post IT on the message boards, tell IT in chat rooms and tweet IT on Twitter. Cold call, register voters, circulate petitions… I’ll get up on the soapbox and speak to ANYONE who wants to LISTEN! I’ll organize MASSIVE letter/email writing campaigns to CONCERNED CITIZENS everywhere. You LOVE the USA? Then the ONLY reasonable, rational, common sense thing to do is GET RID OF REPUBLICAN PARTY. Kick the vain, corrupt, lying silver spoon ******’s down to 3rd Party status…
AMEN
lol
Here’s an example to make my point obvious:
consciousmc.blogspot.com
"The 'unwarranted influence' that concerned Eisenhower during the Cold War now pervades national politics and is rarely questioned. Nor has there been any evaluation of the achievements of the increasingly privatized national security complex......
"In the end, it's not the contractors that are the central problem with the national security complex but the outsourcers, that is, the elected politicians and the government administrators they appoint or confirm.....
"What is at stake is who really controls public policy - a democratically accountable government, or an unaccountable fusion of governmental and corporate power." -Tom Barry
Note that Mr. Berry does not end this very interesting essay with a question mark. The whole point of the exercise - accelerated enormously in the aftermath of 9/11 through the invasion and occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq and creation of the sprawling Department of Homeland Security bureaucracy - has been to very deliberately create "an unaccountable fusion of governmental and corporate power" with unfettered access to the DOD/CIA federal funding pipeline at home and abroad.
Clearly the revolving door from public sector to private sector consulting/influence peddling is spinning smoothly for Bush/Cheney alumni like Michael Chertoff, Michael Hayden, Tom Ridge, Condi Rice, Stephen Hadley, and other neocons now in temporary exile. Personal profiteering from public service, even on a grandiose scale, is certainly nothing new in American political life. But I think Tom Barry has it targeted right: the real problem is not the huge corporate contractors nor the parasitic consulting firm enablers, it is "the outsourcers" - the "elected politicians and the government administrators they appoint and confirm" who are "ultimately answerable, at least in principle, to the public."
In that context, what is to be made of President Barack Obama's decision to keep on Robert Gates, George W. Bush's Secretary of Defense? Why do we have a career CIA spy in charge of running the Pentagon, and career soldiers heading up the White House's civilian national security team?
Small wonder General McChrystal and General Odierno feel free to publicly sabotage their Commander-in-Chief's publicly announced time frame for withdrawal from Iraq or for reversing the military policy course in Afghanistan. Defense Intelligence Agency assets and former alums of the School for the Americas overthrew the democratically elected government of Honduras in a military coup just a few months after Obama moved into the White House. Did the Outsourcer-in-Chief ever hold Mr. Gates accountable for how something like that could happen on his watch?
Bill from Saginaw
THE TITLE - with all consideration of US history from beginning to today as a PRETENSE of democracy -
should really be titled more correctly as :
"THE UNMASKING of the American FASCIST STATE".
the only difference between the time of Jefferson and colonials and TODAY is that over 2 centuries ago - the SAME incipient Fascist state , before its modern "definition" came to be and its modern realizations came to be (whether in overt ones like Fascist Italy or the so-called "inverted totalitarianist fascism"), was really just a "newborn" ...as in George Washington's "our infant empire"......or Jefferson's "FATED" Nation to "exterminate" Native Indians, enslave others, terrorize, etc....
while TODAY it is much more "modern"...including its policing, its spying, its armaments, its "ideal" of supremacy and control.
while "democracy" has ALWAYS been america's CLAIMS about its righteousness (whether as definition or process) - democracy has in fact, NEVER been the american "state of being" ........
it's always been a FASCIST one....merely hidden or wrapped in language, mores, and claims and pretensions to be other THAN ......inherently ...FASCIST.
This is an excellent and very alarming article.
Where's Winslow Wheeler when we need him?!
Also, Bill from Saginaw posting earlier, certainly adds some excellent recent history as further context.
The problems of Capitalism include over-production, maldistribution, and ambitious miseducated people with otherwise idle hands.
Instead of a one-child policy, the U.S. might consider a mandated maximum 30hour work week. This would include "salaried managers." With full benefits. People could start fixing up their houses. Spouses might spend more time as Family.
No cell phones, please.
Is there anyone in D.C. still capable of turning off the cacophony machine?
As you join employment in the National Security Complex, just keep trying to remember where you came from. Consider the insidious insanity of it all.
Sometimes I wish Orwell had never written 1984! He provided the map...
-30-
Interesting article and an interesting post. I have often thought that Madison Avenue and the Beltway learned more from 1984 than did the resistance.
We see even in this excellent and informative article a caving to corporate Newspeak: these almost exclusively oppressive devices, institutions, and practices are repeatedly called "security," even "homeland security," as though any of them were designed to render any homeland secure in any way that any of us might understand it.
Here's to the 30-hour week! Even the enforcement of the 40 would be a vast improvement.
Makes sense. Can't give citizens real health care, but we have to pay inflated prices for questionable contributions to our "intelligence" companies. Socialism for the contracting corporations, Ayn Rand for the rest. Not my best day.
Welcome to the USSA!
Well, all the pieces are in place; aren't they now Comrade? The KGB will notify you of your interrogation date and water-board therapy session. Shut the phuck up and get in the bread line citizen. Don't do any thinking, since the Party does that for you.
Just pick up your new copy of Faux Pravda and the state news agency will tell you all about the glorious motherland and the wars that bring you peace. The Party Political Officer will drop by unannounced sometime next week, give you a test on it and have a little chat about your surfing habits on the internet....
Common Dreams? Boy I hope you like breaking rocks in Siberia....
Now I'm going to go lie down and cry for a while....
What a totalitarian nightmare... How's this big Federal Government working out for you?
TJ
Dear TJ---
"Welcome to the USSA!"
I can hear the Beatles doing the rewrite of the song as the jets alight the airport, tires screeching on the tarmac.
You've outdone yourself on this thread. Retire. Write poetry. We need you.
From the article:
"In 2008, the federal government handed out contracts to the private sector totaling $525.5 billion-up from $209 billion in 2000. That's about a quarter of the entire federal budget."
If I understand this, the Tea Party people object to taxes that get funneled to private contractors who enjoy killing people???
I was among the first to term the Dubya Administration fascist. Now people are talking about the Tea Baggers as potential "Brownshirts."
Anyway, another way of interpreting the data is that about a quarter million are employed by the Dept. of Homeland Security, roughly equal to our military presence in Iraq and Afghanistan, while closer to half a million work for the Department of the Treasury.
Anyone want to explain why?
-30-