What You Should
Know About The Intelligence Community’s Contractors
Booz Allen facility in Maryland (Credit:
Jeffrey MacMillan/Capital Business)
The Sunday afternoon revelation that former Booz Allen Hamilton
employee Edward Snowden was behind the leaks that set off the last week’s string of storieson potential overreach on the
part of the National Security Agency (NSA) has led to many questions about the
world he inhabited. Why would a contractor have access to such highly secret
materials? What was a contractor doing at the NSA in any event? Who is Booz
Allen Hamilton and why do they have such reach? Here’s what you need to know:
Number of private contractors exploded since
2001. After
9/11, the budgets of the Pentagon and intelligence community grew to almost double their 1998 rates. To keep pace with
this expansion, without bringing more federal workers into the fold, federal
contractors were signed up to provide the labor instead.
Private contractors may be more
expensive than government employees. Many former government employees make the switch into private contracting, which can
serve to drive up the amount they wind up costing the American taxpayer. A 2007
report to the Senate
Select Committee on Intelligence found that the average government employee
working as an intelligence analyst cost $126,500, while the same work performed
by a contractor would cost the government an average $250,000 including
overhead. The total annual budget of the intelligence community is itself
secret; only the top line is reported to the public. For Fiscal Year 2014, the
Obama administration requested $48.2 billion for the National Intelligence Program,
encompassing “six Federal departments, the Central Intelligence Agency, and the
Office of the Director of National Intelligence.” Of that amount, according to
a 2007 article, an amazing 70 percent goes towards private contractors.
There are thousands of companies in the game. Of the more than one thousand contracting
firms competing for federal dollars, Booz Allen Hamilton is just one of the
largest, earning $1.3 billion, 23 percent of their
total revenue, from intelligence contracts over the last fiscal year. Booz
Allen shares that tier with names like Northrup Grumman and Science
Applications International Corporation. It also includes companies
like Lockheed
Martin, which in addition to selling airplanes and missiles to the
government, also provides staffers to man the programs the various departments
set up.
Contractors are prevalent in the intelligence
sector. Analysts looking for patterns among information, technology staffers building IT systems and making sure the networks stay
functioning, front office administrative
workers, sometimes even the intelligence collection specialists themselves are all positions
contractors fill. This takes place across the range of intelligence collection
including signals intelligence (SIGINT), of the sort that the NSA performs and
has led to the current scrutiny, as well as human intelligence gained directly
from sources and geographic intelligence gathered from spy satellites.
Contract work extends throughout the
government. Outside
of the intelligence sphere, contractors fill positions in nearly every part of
the federal government. From the Department of Defense, to the Department of
Homeland Security, to the Department of Health and Human Services, private
contractors are in the business of actually executing a large portion of what
the government is lawfully obligated to do. These positions exist for even the
most shadowy of operations, including openings for human
targeting analysts, who help the military and intelligence community
determine who to place in the cross-hairs of drone strikes.
More than half a million private contractors
can access the country’s secrets. A large degree of surprise also was related
to the fact that Snowden had access to many of the documents he obtained so
soon after beginning to work for Booz Allen. Once obtained, a clearance is a
relatively hard thing to lose, so long as you remain employed by a company that
does work requiring you to hold one. These clearances also only need to be
renewed every five years while active. According to a 2013 report from
the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, a total of 483,263
contractors held Top Secret clearances in 2012, the highest level one can
obtain, with another 582,524 holding them at the Confidential and Secret
levels.
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