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Exposing the Pat Roberts Intelligence Scholars Program
The CIA's Campus Spies
By DAVE H. PRICE

The secrecy surrounding the current use of university classrooms as covert
training grounds for the CIA and other agencies now threatens the
fundamental principles of academic openness as well as the integrity of a
wide array of academic disciplines. A new test program that is secretly
placing CIA agents in American university classrooms for now operates
without detection or protest. With time these students who cannot admit to
their true intentions will inevitably pollute and discredit the
universities in which they are now enrolled.

There have long been tensions between the needs of academia and the needs
of the National Security State, and even before the events of 9/11
expanded the powers of American intelligence agencies, our universities
were quietly being modified to serve the needs of the intelligence
community in new and covert ways. The most visible of these reforms was
the establishment of the National Security Education Program (NSEP) which
siphoned-off students from traditional foreign language funding programs
such as Fulbright or Title VI. While traditional funding sources provide
students with small stipends of a few thousand dollars to study foreign
languages in American universities, the NSEP gives graduate students a
wealth of funds (at times exceeding $40,000 a year) to study "in demand"
languages, but with troubling pay-back stipulations mandating that
recipients later work for unspecified U.S. national security agencies.
Upon its debut in the early 1990s, the NSEP was harshly criticized for
reaching through an assumed barrier between the desires of academia and
state. Numerous academic organizations, including, the Middle East Studies
Association and the African Studies Association, Latin American Studies
Association, and even the mainstream Boards of the Social Science Research
Council and American Council of Learned Societies expressed deep concerns
over scholars' participation in the NSEP. And though the NSEP continues
funding students despite these protests, there was some solace in knowing
so many diverse academic organizations condemned this program.

But while many academics reacted with anger and protest to the NSEP's
entrance onto American campuses, there has been no public reaction to an
even more troubling post-9/11 funding program which upgrades the existing
American intelligence-university-interface. With little notice Congress
approved section 318 of the 2004 Intelligence Authorization Act which
appropriated four million dollars to fund a pilot program known as the Pat
Roberts Intelligence Scholars Program (PRISP). Named after Senator Pat
Roberts (R. Kansas, Chair, Senate Select Committee on Intelligence), PRISP
was designed to train intelligence operatives and analysts in American
university classrooms for careers in the CIA and other agencies. PRISP now
operates on an undisclosed number of American college and university
campuses, and if the pilot phase of the program proves to be a useful
means of recruiting and training members of the intelligence community
then the program will expand to more campuses across the country.

Currently, PRISP participants must be American citizens who are enrolled
fulltime in graduate degree programs with a minimum GPA of 3.4, they need
to "complete at least one summer internship at CIA or other agencies," and
they must pass the same background investigations as other CIA employees.
PRISP students receive financial stipends ranging up to $25,000 per year
and they are required to participate in closed meetings with other PRISP
scholars and individuals from their administering intelligence agency.

Less than 150 students a year are now authorized to receive funding during
the pilot phase as PRISP evaluates the program's initial outcomes. Beyond
a few articles in a Kansas newspaper praising Senator Roberts, as well as
University of Kansas anthropologist Felix Moos' role in lobbying for the
PRISP, there has been a general media silence regarding the program. The
few guarded public statements issued describing PRISP stress supposed
similarities between existing ROTC programs and the PRISP. For example,
the Lawrence Journal World (11/29/03) published claims that, "Those in the
program would be part of the ROTC program specializing in learning how to
analyze a variety of conditions and activities based on a thorough
understanding and deep knowledge of particular areas of the world." Beyond
the similar requirements that participants of both programs commit to
years of service to their sponsoring military or intelligence branches
there are few similarities between ROTC and PRISP. ROTC programs mostly
operate in the open, as student-ROTC members register for ROTC courses and
are proudly and visibly identified as members of the ROTC program, while
PRISP students are instructed to keep their PRISP-affiliations hidden from
others on campus.

PRISP is an open secret, and the CIA apparently prefers that it stay more
secret than open-as the CIA's website does not maintain an active link
with detailed information on PRISP. Currently PRISP limits its advertising
to intelligence recruiting web sights (such as www.intelligencecareers.com
or the National Ground Intelligence Center) and to small, controlled
recruiting sessions. PRISP recruits scholars with "advanced area expertise
in China, Middle East, Korea, Central Asia, the Caucasus," with a special
emphasis given to scholars with previous linguistic expertise in "Chinese,
Arabic, Persian, Urdu, Pashtun, Dari, Korean, or a Central Asian or
Caucasian language such as Georgian, Turkmen, Tajik, or Uzbek." PRISP also
funds Islamic studies scholars and scientists with expertise in
bioterrorism, counterterrorism, chemistry, physics, computer science and
engineering.

Inquiries made to Senator Roberts' staff concerning the current size and
scope of PRISP yielded little useful information and Roberts' staff
referred me to Mr. Tommy Glakas at the CIA. Mr. Glakas was reluctant to
discuss many specific details of PRISP, but he did confirm that PRISP now
funds about 100 students who are studying at an undisclosed number of
American universities. When asked if PRISP was up and running on college
campuses Glakas first answered that it was, then said it wasn't, then
clarified that PRISP wasn't the sort of program that was tied to
university campuses-it was decentralized and tied to students, not
campuses. When pressed further on what this meant Mr. Glakas gave no
further information. He said that he had no way of knowing exactly how
many universities currently have students participating in PRISP, claiming
he could not know this because PRISP is administered not just by the CIA,
but also through a variety of individual intelligence agencies like the
NSA, MID, or Naval Intelligence. He stressed that PRISP was a
decentralized scholarship program which funds students through a various
intelligence agencies. Mr. Glakas said he didn't know who might know how
many campuses had PRISP scholars and he would not identify which campuses
are hosting these covert PRISP scholars.

The Intelligence Scholars Program did not spring forth out of a vacuum.
Like the Patriot Act, the germs of PRISP were conceived years ago and were
waiting for the right rendez-vous of fear with opportunity to be born.
PRISP is largely the brainchild of University of Kansas anthropologist
Felix Moos-a longtime advocate of anthropological contacts with military
and intelligence agencies. During the Vietnam War Moos worked in Laos and
Thailand on World Bank-financed projects and over the years he has worked
in various military advisory positions. He worked on the Pentagon's ARPA
Project Themis, and has been as an instructor at the Naval War College and
at the U.S. Staff and Command College at Fort Leavenworth. For years Moos
has taught courses on "Violence and Terrorism" at the University of
Kansas. In the months after the 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center and
Pentagon Moos elicited the support of his friend, former CIA DCI,
Stansfield Turner to curry support in the senate and CIA to fund his
vision of a merger between anthropology, academia, intelligence analysis
and espionage training.

Professor Moos initially proposed that all PRISP students be required to
master two foreign languages and use anthropology and history classes to
learn the culture history of the regions they are studying. Moos's vision
for PRISP was more comprehensive than the current pilot program and it
included classes on topics such as bioterrorism and counterterrorism. Moos
proposed having an active CIA campus presence where PRISP students would
begin training as freshmen and, "by the time they would be commissioned,
they would be ready to go to the branch intelligence units of their
choice." If the pilot phase of PRISP goes well, this may be the direction
in which this program develops-though it is doubtful that PRISP would
expand in any way which openly identified participants.

It is tempting to describe Moos as an anachronistic anthropologist out of
sync with his discipline's mainstream, but while many anthropologists
express concerns about disciplinary ties to military and intelligence
organizations, contemporary anthropology has no core with which to either
sync or collide and there are others in the field who openly (and quietly)
support such developments. Moos is a bright man, but his writings echo the
musty tone and sentiments found in the limited bedside readings of
Tom-Clancy-literate-colonials, as he prefers to quote from the wisdom of
Sun Tzu and Samuel Huntington over anthropologists like Franz Boas or
Laura Nader. Two years ago at an interesting and confrontational panel
examining anthropological connections to intelligence agencies at the
annual American Anthropological Association (AAA) meetings, I watched an
angry Moos strike an action pose and rhetorically ask, "Have
anthropologists learned so little since 9/11/2001, as to not recognize the
truth-and practicability, in Sun Tzu's reminder that: 'unless someone is
subtle and perspicacious, he cannot perceive the substance in intelligence
reports. It is subtle, subtle." From the dais I could see not so subtle
anthropologists in the audience employed by Rand and the Pentagon nodding
their heads as if his words had hit a secret chord. Moos was clearly onto
something.

Felix Moos' notion of scholar-spies in part draws upon an imagined
romantic history of anthropologists' contributions to the Second World
War, which, while this is a widespread notion, it is one increasingly
undermined by FOIA and archival-based historical research of the
complexities (both ethical and practical) of anthropologists plying their
trade in even this "good" war. Back in 1995 Moos testified before a
commission modifying the AAA's code on anthropological ethics that
anthropologists should be allowed to engage in secretive research, arguing
that, "In a world where weapons of mass destruction have become so
terrible and terrorist actions so frightful, anthropologists must
surrender na�ve faith in a communitarian utopia and be prepared to
encounter conflict and violence. Indeed they should feel the professional
obligation to work in areas of ethnic conflict.But, as moral creatures so
engaged, they would of course have to recognize the necessity of
classifying some of their data, if for no other reason than to protect the
lives of their subjects and themselves."

It is this devotion to secrecy that is the root problem of the PRSIP's
presence on our campuses as well as with Moos' vision of anthropology
harnessed for the needs of state. Moos' fallacy is his belief that the
fundamental problem with American intelligence agencies is that they are
lacking adequate cultural understanding of those they study, and spy
upon-this fallacy is exacerbated by orthodox assumptions that good
intelligence operates best in realms of secrecy. America needs good
intelligence, but the most useful and important intelligence can largely
be gathered openly without the sort of covert invasion of our campuses
that PRISP silently brings.

The claim that more open source, non-classified intelligence is what is
needed is less far fetched than it might seem. In Cloak and Gown: Scholars
in the Secret War, 1939-1961 historian Robin Winks recounts how in 1951,
the CIA's Sherwood Kent conducted an experiment in which a handful of Yale
historians used nothing but declassified materials in Yale's library to
challenge CIA analysts (with access to classified data) to produce
competing reports on U.S. military capacities, strengths and weaknesses
focusing on a scale of detail down to the level of military divisions.
This written evaluation of this contest was known as the "Yale Report,"
which concluded that over 90% of material in the CIA's report was found in
the Yale library. Kent further estimated that of the remaining 10% of
"secret" materials, only half of this could be expected to remain secret
for any length of time. President Truman was so furious with the results
of the Yale Report that he suppressed its distribution, arguing that the
press needed more restrictions governing the release of such sensitive
materials, while Republican pundits joined the furor claiming that Yale
liberals were trying to leak state secrets.

Evidence of the power of open intelligence is close at hand, consider only
how American scholars' (using publicly available sources) analysis of the
dangers for post-invasion Iraq out-performed the CIA's best estimates. As
one who has lived in the Middle East and read Arabic news dailies online
for years while watching the expansion of American policies that appear to
misread the Arab world I wonder if a repeat of the Yale Report experiment
focusing on the Middle East might not find another 10% intelligence gap,
but with the academy now winning due to the deleterious effects of
generations of CIA intellectual inbreeding. Perhaps the Agency has become
self-aware of these limits brought on by the internal reproduction of its
own limited institutional culture, and in its own misshapen view it sees
PRISP as a means of supplying itself with new blood to rejuvenate under
cover provided by public classrooms. But such secrecy-based reforms are
the products of a damaged institutional mind trying to repair itself.

Some might misread my criticism of the CIA's secret presence on our
campuses as contradicting my critique of the need for more outside and
dissenting (even informed hairbrained dissenting) input in intelligence
circles, but such a reading would misunderstand the importance of openness
in academic and political processes. The fundamental problems with
American intelligence are exacerbated by secrecy-when intelligence
agencies are allowed to classify and hide their assumptions, reports and
analysis from public view they generate self-referential narrow visions
that coalesce rather than challenge top-down policies from the
administrations they serve. Intelligence agencies do need to understand
the complex cultures they study, but to suggest that intelligence agencies
like the CIA are simply amassing and interpreting political and cultural
information is a dangerous fantasy: The CIA fulfills a tripartite role of
gathering intelligence, interpreting intelligence, and working as a
supraconstitutional covert arm of the presidency. It is this final role
that should give scholars and citizens pause when considering how PRSIP
and other university-intelligence-linked programs will use the knowledge
they take from our open classrooms.

The CIA makes sure we won't know which classrooms PRSIP scholars attend,
this is rationalized as a requirement for protecting the identities of
intelligence personnel. But this secrecy shapes PRISP as it takes on the
form like a cell-based covert operation in which PRISP students study
chemistry, biology, sociology, psychology, anthropology and foreign
languages without their fellow classmates, professors, advisors,
department chairs or presumably even research subjects (creating serious
ethics problems under any post-Nuremberg professional ethics code or Human
Subject Review Board) knowing that they are working for the CIA, DIA, NSA
or other intelligence agencies.

In a decade and a half of Freedom of Information Act research I have read
too many FBI reports of students detailing the deviant political views of
their professors (These range from the hilarious: As anthropologist Norman
Humphrey was reported to have called President Eisenhower a "duckbilled
nincompoop"; to the Dadaist: Wherein former Miss America, Marilyn van
Derbur, reported that sociologist Howard Higman mocked J. Edgar Hoover in
class; to the chilling: As when the FBI arranged for a graduate student to
guide topics of "informal" conversation with anthropologist Gene Weltfish
that were later the focus an inquiry by Joseph McCarthy) to not mention
the certainty that these PRSIP students are also secretly compiling
dossiers on their professors and fellow students. Of course I would be
remiss to not mention that students are the only ones sneaking the CIA
onto our campuses. There are also unknown thousands of university
professors who periodically work with and for the CIA--in 1988 CIA
spokeswoman Sharon Foster bragged that the CIA then secretly employed
enough university professors "to staff a large university." Most experts
estimate that this presence has grown since 2001.

The quiet rise of programs like PRISP should not surprise anyone given the
steady cuts in federal funding for higher education, and the resulting
pressures for more mercenary roles for the academy. In the post-World War
Two decades, scholars naively self-recruited themselves or followed
classmates to the CIA, but increasingly those of us who have studied the
languages, culture and histories of peoples around the world have also
learned about the role of the CIA in undermining the autonomy of those
cultures we study, and the steady construction of this history has hurt
the agency's efforts to recruit the best and brightest of post-graduates.
For decades the students studying Arabic, Urdu, Basque or Farsi were
predominantly curious admirers of the cultures and languages they studied,
the current shift now finds a visible increase in students whose studies
are driven by the market forces of Bush's War on Terrorism. If the CIA can
use PRISP to indenture students in the early days of their graduate
training-supplemented with mandated summer camp internships immersed in
the workplace ethos of CIA-the company can mold their ideological
inclinations even before their grasp of cultural history is shaped in the
relatively open environment of their university. As these PRISP graduates
enter the CIA's institutional environment of self-reinforcing Group Think
they will present a reduced risk of creating cognitive dissonance by
bringing new views that threaten the agency's narrow view of the world.
Institutional Group Think can thus safely be protected from external
infection.

But while PRISP protects and intensifies the inbred-limited-thinking at
CIA and elsewhere, it threatens the academic integrity of anthropology and
other academic disciplines that unwittingly become complicit partners with
these intelligence agencies. The CIA has long recognized that
anthropology, with its broadly traveled and culturally and linguistically
competent practitioners has highly useful skill sets. And while we should
not read too much into published reports that the CIA-directed torture
techniques at Abu Ghraib were fine-tuned for high levels of culturally
specific humiliation by the reading of anthropologist Raphael Patai's book
The Arab Mind (Patai's scholarship is stained with Orientalist stereotypes
and it doesn't take an insider's knowledge that Arabs generally abhor dogs
and sexual humiliation to presume that tormenting bound naked men with
vicious dogs would be an effective means of torture), anthropologists have
long had their work pilfered by American intelligence agencies. To cite
but two documented examples, in 1951, the CIA cut a covert deal with the
AAA's executive board providing the CIA access to data on anthropologists'
cultural and linguistic specialties as the CIA secretly produced a roster
of AAA members for the AAA on the CIA's computers; and, in 1962 the U.S.
Department of Commerce illegally translated Georges Condominas'
ethnography, We Have Eaten the Forest on highland Vietnamese Montagnards
for use as a counterinsurgency tool. Though no scholar can control the
uses of information they make public, there does need to be an awareness
of how any knowledge can be abused by others--and as awareness of the
presence of PRISP spreads, many scholars may find themselves engaging in
new forms of self-censorship and doublethink.

Healthy academic environments need openness because they (unlike the CIA)
are nourished by the self-corrective features of open disagreement,
dissent, and synthetic-reformulation. The presence of the PRISP's secret
sharers brings hidden agendas that sabotage these fundamental processes of
academia. The Pat Roberts Intelligence Scholars Program infects all of
academia with a germ of dishonesty and distrust as participant scholars
cloak their intentions and their ties to the cloaked masters they serve.


David Price teaches anthropology at St. Martin's College in Olympia,
Washington. His latest book, Threatening Anthropology: McCarthyism and the
FBI's Surveillance of Activist Anthropologists has just been published by
Duke University Press. His Atlas of World Cultures has just been
republished by the Blackburn Press. He can be reached at:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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