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BECKS72

Articles Posted: 24  Links Seeded: 22
Member Since: 7/2009  Last Seen: 5/17/2012

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Tax payer dollars up in smoke

Fri Nov 12, 2010 2:47 PM EST
By Becks72
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The shocking thing is they answer to no one !

Waste and Fraud at the Central Intelligence Agency
Thursday, February 26, 2009
By: Ishmael Jones

Wastewatcher, February 2009

Waste and fraud at the Central Intelligence Agency not only squanders taxpayers’ money but also endangers American lives. When money is diverted away from intelligence missions on rogue state nuclear threats, for example, Americans are at risk.

The CIA lacks financial accountability. The subprime fiasco and the Madoff fraud occurred even with significant safeguards in place. Imagine how waste and fraud can grow when hidden by federal secrecy laws.

Secrecy is necessary to protect intelligence operations and identities, of course, but it is also used by the CIA bureaucracy to hide fraud and waste.

After the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Congress gave the CIA $3 billion to put more officers in foreign countries, in non-embassy assignments, in recognition of the fact that modern targets such as nuclear proliferators are not available for meetings with US diplomats. This money disappeared to boondoggles and contracting companies run by former CIA employees, without a single additional, effective officer being placed in a non-embassy assignment overseas.

Some CIA employees evade the limits imposed on federal salaries by quitting federal service and returning the next day as contractors, at double pay for the same job. Half of CIA employees are now contractors. This lucrative sleight of hand is carried out by contracting companies run by former CIA employees.

When the CIA became a place to get rich, its otherwise talented and dedicated employees lost direction, in the same way that an army loses effectiveness when it begins to loot. This has led to a mutation in intelligence operations, involving high-profile teams of CIA contract employees living in expensive hotel suites, when one CIA officer can do the job better.

It’s also easier to spend money and create offices within the United States, and in violation of its founding charter the CIA has become primarily a domestic intelligence service. Most CIA employees now live and work within the United States. This domestic activity dulls the CIA’s focus on the threats to Americans which come from foreign countries.

The creation of a whistleblower system may be the solution. Any American who sees fraud can contact the FBI and expect a response. CIA employees should have the same ability.

If a single FBI agent, with full security clearances and a contact number, were assigned to the CIA with the ability to investigate reports of fraud and waste provided by CIA employees, it would set off a chain reaction of accountability.

The nature of why the CIA has run amok may be found in a 2001 Government Accountability Office report: “Oversight of the CIA generally comes from two select committees of Congress and the CIA’s Inspector General. We have broad authority to evaluate CIA programs. In reality, however, we face both legal and practical limitations on our ability to review these programs. For example, we have no access to certain CIA ‘unvouchered’ accounts and cannot compel our access to foreign intelligence and counterintelligence information. In addition, as a practical matter, we are limited by the CIA’s level of cooperation, which has varied through the years. We have not actively audited the CIA since the early 1960s, when we discontinued such work because the CIA was not providing us with sufficient access to information to perform our mission. The issue has arisen since then from time to time as our work has required some level of access to CIA programs and information. However, given a lack of requests from the Congress for us to do specific work at the CIA and our limited resources, we have made a conscious decision not to further pursue the issue.”

Improving oversight and establishing a whistleblower system can lead to dramatically improved intelligence operations and safety for Americans.

Ishmael Jones, a former Central Intelligence Agency case officer who focused on human sources with access to intelligence on terrorism and weapons of mass destruction, contributed this article. He is the author of "The Human Factor: Inside the CIA's Dysfunctional Intelligence Culture."

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  • Public Discussion (4)
Becks72

Theft of tax payer monies is a age old practice exercised with impunity. If the politicians wanted to cut the deficit what a wonderful place to start. This isn't about to happen cutting social benefits creates less crying.

  • 4 votes
Reply#1 - Fri Nov 12, 2010 2:51 PM EST
Becks72

Cutting social safety nets is a smoke screen. That is not where the real money goes. What political party will stand up to the outrageous spending by many federal agencies that seem to lack accountability, the State department, Pentagon,CIA and many other like the FCC and on and on.

  • 4 votes
Reply#2 - Tue May 24, 2011 11:48 AM EDT
Kearney Outlaw

Richard Clarke was just saying last week how bloated our security is these days. People are tripping over themselves doing the same jobs, and additionally, we have layers of secrecy that actually exclude the presidency on a "need to know" basis. Incredible.

Also, it seems that instead of being an intelligence gathering agency, the CIA has now been actively tasked to conduct large parts of actually fighting our wars--a development the Kremlin could have only dreamed about. And as you pointed out, the lines have blurred considerably between domestic and foreign jurisdiction.

Accountability is a thing of the past--as are ethics and budgetary constraints.

Great article, Becks

  • 3 votes
Reply#3 - Tue May 24, 2011 1:20 PM EDT
Becks72

This is just another stab at creative accounting and does not show up under the military budget. Are they a mercenary army or just a rogue agency that should be eliminated. It would save a lot of money and i'm sure it would pay for heating bills for the elderly and young.

  • 3 votes
Reply#4 - Sun Jul 24, 2011 11:16 AM EDT
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