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http://msnbc.msn.com/id/10454316/

Is the Pentagon spying on Americans?
Secret database obtained by NBC News tracks ‘suspicious’ domestic groups

By Lisa Myers, Douglas Pasternak, Rich Gardella
and the NBC Investigative Unit
Updated: 6:18 p.m. ET Dec. 14, 2005

WASHINGTON - A year ago, at a Quaker Meeting House in Lake Worth, Fla., a
small group of activists met to plan a protest of military recruiting at
local high schools. What they didn't know was that their meeting had come
to the attention of the U.S. military.

A secret 400-page Defense Department document obtained by NBC News lists
the Lake Worth meeting as a “threat” and one of more than 1,500
“suspicious incidents” across the country over a recent 10-month period.

“This peaceful, educationally oriented group being a threat is
incredible,” says Evy Grachow, a member of the Florida group called The
Truth Project.

“This is incredible,” adds group member Rich Hersh. “It's an example of
paranoia by our government,” he says. “We're not doing anything illegal.”

The Defense Department document is the first inside look at how the U.S.
military has stepped up intelligence collection inside this country since
9/11, which now includes the monitoring of peaceful anti-war and
counter-military recruitment groups.

“I think Americans should be concerned that the military, in fact, has
reached too far,” says NBC News military analyst Bill Arkin.

The Department of Defense declined repeated requests by NBC News for an
interview. A spokesman said that all domestic intelligence information is
“properly collected” and involves “protection of Defense Department
installations, interests and personnel.” The military has always had a
legitimate “force protection” mission inside the U.S. to protect its
personnel and facilities from potential violence. But the Pentagon now
collects domestic intelligence that goes beyond legitimate concerns about
terrorism or protecting U.S. military installations, say critics.


Four dozen anti-war meetings

The DOD database obtained by NBC News includes nearly four dozen anti-war
meetings or protests, including some that have taken place far from any
military installation, post or recruitment center. One “incident” included
in the database is a large anti-war protest at Hollywood and Vine in Los
Angeles last March that included effigies of President Bush and anti-war
protest banners. Another incident mentions a planned protest against
military recruiters last December in Boston and a planned protest last
April at McDonald’s National Salute to America’s Heroes — a military air
and sea show in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

The Fort Lauderdale protest was deemed not to be a credible threat and a
column in the database concludes: “US group exercising constitutional
rights.” Two-hundred and forty-three other incidents in the database were
discounted because they had no connection to the Department of Defense —
yet they all remained in the database.

The DOD has strict guidelines (http://snipurl.com/kstm), adopted in
December 1982, that limit the extent to which they can collect and retain
information on U.S. citizens.

Still, the DOD database includes at least 20 references to U.S. citizens
or U.S. persons. Other documents obtained by NBC News show that the
Defense Department is clearly increasing its domestic monitoring
activities. One DOD briefing document stamped “secret” concludes: “[W]e
have noted increased communication and encouragement between protest
groups using the [I]nternet,” but no “significant connection” between
incidents, such as “reoccurring instigators at protests” or “vehicle
descriptions.”

The increased monitoring disturbs some military observers.

“It means that they’re actually collecting information about who’s at
those protests, the descriptions of vehicles at those protests,” says
Arkin. “On the domestic level, this is unprecedented,” he says. “I think
it's the beginning of enormous problems and enormous mischief for the
military.”

Some former senior DOD intelligence officials share his concern. George
Lotz, a 30-year career DOD official and former U.S. Air Force colonel,
held the post of Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Intelligence
Oversight from 1998 until his retirement last May. Lotz, who recently
began a consulting business to help train and educate intelligence
agencies and improve oversight of their collection process, believes some
of the information the DOD has been collecting is not justified.


Make sure they are not just going crazy

“Somebody needs to be monitoring to make sure they are just not going
crazy and reporting things on U.S. citizens without any kind of reasoning
or rationale,” says Lotz. “I demonstrated with Martin Luther King in 1963
in Washington,” he says, “and I certainly didn’t want anybody putting my
name on any kind of list. I wasn’t any threat to the government,” he adds.

The military’s penchant for collecting domestic intelligence is disturbing
— but familiar — to Christopher Pyle, a former Army intelligence officer.

“Some people never learn,” he says. During the Vietnam War, Pyle blew the
whistle on the Defense Department for monitoring and infiltrating anti-war
and civil rights protests when he published an article in the Washington
Monthly in January 1970.

The public was outraged and a lengthy congressional investigation followed
that revealed that the military had conducted investigations on at least
100,000 American citizens. Pyle got more than 100 military agents to
testify that they had been ordered to spy on U.S. citizens — many of them
anti-war protestors and civil rights advocates. In the wake of the
investigations, Pyle helped Congress write a law placing new limits on
military spying inside the U.S.

But Pyle, now a professor at Mt. Holyoke College in Massachusetts, says
some of the information in the database suggests the military may be
dangerously close to repeating its past mistakes.

“The documents tell me that military intelligence is back conducting
investigations and maintaining records on civilian political activity. The
military made promises that it would not do this again,” he says.


Too much data?

Some Pentagon observers worry that in the effort to thwart the next 9/11,
the U.S. military is now collecting too much data, both undermining its
own analysis efforts by forcing analysts to wade through a mountain of
rubble in order to obtain potentially key nuggets of intelligence and
entangling U.S. citizens in the U.S. military’s expanding and quiet
collection of domestic threat data.

Two years ago, the Defense Department directed a little known agency,
Counterintelligence Field Activity, or CIFA, to establish and “maintain a
domestic law enforcement database that includes information related to
potential terrorist threats directed against the Department of Defense.”
Then-Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz also established a new
reporting mechanism known as a TALON or Threat and Local Observation
Notice report. TALONs now provide “non-validated domestic threat
information” from military units throughout the United States that are
collected and retained in a CIFA database. The reports include details on
potential surveillance of military bases, stolen vehicles, bomb threats
and planned anti-war protests. In the program’s first year, the agency
received more than 5,000 TALON reports. The database obtained by NBC News
is generated by Counterintelligence Field Activity.

CIFA is becoming the superpower of data mining within the U.S. national
security community. Its “operational and analytical records” include
“reports of investigation, collection reports, statements of individuals,
affidavits, correspondence, and other documentation pertaining to
investigative or analytical efforts” by the DOD and other U.S. government
agencies to identify terrorist and other threats. Since March 2004, CIFA
has awarded at least $33 million in contracts to corporate giants Lockheed
Martin, Unisys Corporation, Computer Sciences Corporation and Northrop
Grumman to develop databases that comb through classified and unclassified
government data, commercial information and Internet chatter to help sniff
out terrorists, saboteurs and spies.

One of the CIFA-funded database projects being developed by Northrop
Grumman and dubbed “Person Search,” is designed “to provide comprehensive
information about people of interest.” It will include the ability to
search government as well as commercial databases. Another project, “The
Insider Threat Initiative,” intends to “develop systems able to detect,
mitigate and investigate insider threats,” as well as the ability to
“identify and document normal and abnormal activities and ‘behaviors,’”
according to the Computer Sciences Corp. contract. A separate CIFA
contract with a small Virginia-based defense contractor seeks to develop
methods “to track and monitor activities of suspect individuals.”

“The military has the right to protect its installations, and to protect
its recruiting services,” says Pyle. “It does not have the right to
maintain extensive files on lawful protests of their recruiting
activities, or of their base activities,” he argues.

Lotz agrees.

“The harm in my view is that these people ought to be allowed to
demonstrate, to hold a banner, to peacefully assemble whether they agree
or disagree with the government’s policies,” the former DOD intelligence
official says.


'Slippery slope'

Bert Tussing, director of Homeland Defense and Security Issues at the U.S.
Army War College and a former Marine, says “there is very little that
could justify the collection of domestic intelligence by the Unites States
military. If we start going down this slippery slope it would be too easy
to go back to a place we never want to see again,” he says.

Some of the targets of the U.S. military’s recent collection efforts say
they have already gone too far.

“It's absolute paranoia — at the highest levels of our government,” says
Hersh of The Truth Project.

“I mean, we're based here at the Quaker Meeting House,” says Truth Project
member Marie Zwicker, “and several of us are Quakers.”

The Defense Department refused to comment on how it obtained information
on the Lake Worth meeting or why it considers a dozen or so anti-war
activists a “threat.”

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