Spies for Hire, Tim Shorrock
Spies for Hire, Tim Shorrock
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Spies for Hire
The Secret World of Intelligence Outsourcing

Author: Tim Shorrock

Narrator: Dick Hill

Unabridged: 15 hr 43 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 07/28/2008


Synopsis

Running spy networks overseas. Tracking down terrorists in the Middle East. Interrogating enemy prisoners. Analyzing data from spy satellites and intercepted phone calls. All of these are vital intelligence tasks that have traditionally been performed by government officials accountable to Congress and the American people. But that is no longer the case.

Starting during the Clinton administration, when intelligence budgets were cut drastically and privatization of government services became national policy, and expanding dramatically in the wake of 9/11, when the CIA and other agencies were frantically looking to hire analysts and linguists, the intelligence community has been relying more and more on corporations to perform sensitive tasks heretofore considered to be exclusively the work of federal employees. This outsourcing of intelligence activities is now a $50 billion-a-year business that consumes up to 70 percent of the U.S. intelligence budget. And it's a business that the government has tried hard to keep under wraps.

Drawing on interviews with key players in the intelligence-industrial complex, contractors' annual reports and public filings with the government, and on-the-spot reporting from intelligence industry conferences and investor briefings, Spies for Hire provides the first behind-the-scenes look at this new way of spying. Shorrock shows how corporations such as Booz Allen Hamilton, Lockheed Martin, SAIC, CACI International, and IBM have become full partners with the CIA, the National Security Agency (NSA), and the Pentagon in their most sensitive foreign and domestic operations. He explores how this partnership has led to wasteful spending and how it threatens to erode the privacy protections and congressional oversight that is so important to American democracy.

Shorrock exposes the kinds of spy work the private sector is doing, such as interrogating prisoners in Iraq, managing covert operations, and collaborating with the NSA to eavesdrop on Americans' overseas phone calls and e-mails. And he casts light on a "shadow intelligence community" made up of former top intelligence officials who are now employed by companies that do this spy work, such as former CIA directors George Tenet and James Woolsey. Shorrock also traces the rise of Michael McConnell from his days as head of the NSA, to being a top executive at Booz Allen Hamilton, to returning to government as the nation's chief spymaster.

From CIA covert actions to NSA eavesdropping, from Abu Ghraib to Guantanamo, from the Pentagon's techno-driven war in Iraq to the coming global battles over information dominance and control of cyberspace, contractors are doing it all. Spies for Hire goes behind today's headlines to highlight how private corporations are aiding the growth of a new and frightening national surveillance state.

About Tim Shorrock

Tim Shorrock is an investigative journalist who grew up in Japan and South Korea. He now lives in Tahoma, California, in the Sierra Nevada mountains near Lake Tahoe. Shorrock's work has appeared in many publications in the United States and abroad, including the Nation, Salon, Mother Jones, Harper's, the Los Angeles Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Progressive, the Journal of Commerce, Foreign Policy in Focus, and the Asia Times. He also appears frequently on the radio as a commentator on U.S.-Korean relations as well as U.S. intelligence and foreign policy, and he has been interviewed on Pacifica Radio's Democracy Now! Air America Radio, and CBS Radio.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Erwin on June 17, 2013

Most of us, most of the time, are sheep. Sadly, we don't realize we're being marched to the slaughterhouse until we actually reach the door. Our lack of awareness. Our lack of curiosity. Our collective apathy. Unless we evolve to be more skeptical and watchful, we will not be effective stewards over......more

Goodreads review by Eva on December 09, 2019

Thorough but laborious......more

Goodreads review by Teresa on August 10, 2013

If you were wondering how a private contractor Snowden or a lowly Private Manning could get access to top secret military or intelligence information this will help explain how our governmental alphabet soup of agencies (CIA, FBI, DIA, DEA, etc.) relies on private contractors for our intelligence ga......more

Goodreads review by Barry on February 24, 2011

This is the book that Dana Priest and William Arkin forgot to credit in their big Washington Post series on Top Secret America. Shorrock got there first, deeper, and more comprehensively, and anyone who wants to understand the causes and effects of the corporatization of America's military, intellig......more

Goodreads review by Cwhittall on March 07, 2010

A detailed but badly written account of the state of information technology contracting in the intel community and DOD. Based on my experience Shorrock's book is directionally correct. This is a topic that should get more attention in my opinion and hopefully it will.......more