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Home » Cloak and Dagger » SIGINT’s Clean Sweep? (Updated)

SIGINT’s Clean Sweep? (Updated)

cconnela.jpgWhen Gen. Michael Hayden, the for­mer NSA direc­tor, was nom­i­nated to head the Central Intelligence Agency, a few folks were wor­ried. The CIA was sup­posed to be in charge of infor­mant and spies — human intel­li­gence, or HUMINT. The NSA was a sig­nals intel­li­gence, or SIGINT, shop. Could the CIA really trust some­one like Hayden, who spe­cial­ized in tech­ni­cal snoop­ing?
At the time, it seemed like a minor point. Hayden, after all, had a HUMINT back­ground, too. And his resume wasn’t really the issue; his autho­riz­ing of warant­less wire­taps loomed much larger.
But the SIGINT/​HUMINT divide is bound to come up again, now that Hayden’s boss, Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte, is get­ting ready to skedad­dle. Because Negroponte’s likely replace­ment is Admiral Mike McConnell, another for­mer NSA direc­tor. Another SIGINT guy.
Now, since 9/​11, just about every­one in the intel­li­gence field has talked about how crummy our net­work of flesh-​​and-​​blood infor­mants is. Can a cer­ti­fied geek like McConnell fix that? Or is this one more acknowl­edg­ment of the tri­umph of tech­ni­cal intel­li­gence — and the decline of human snoops?
UPDATE 5:59 PM: Speaking of spy­ing, let’s hope the Daily News some­how got this story wrong. Because if George Bush really just granted the gov­ern­ment, by exec­u­tive fiat, the power to read our mail with­out a war­rant, it vio­lates every notion of pri­vacy and due process under the law we’ve built up over the last 230 years in this coun­try.
UPDATE 01/​05/​06 11:36 PM: “John D. Negroponte’s exit from the nation’s top spy post after just 19 months will tem­porar­ily stall reform efforts for the nation’s 16 intel­li­gence agen­cies and sow fur­ther insta­bil­ity,” Siobhan Gorman reports in today’s Baltimore Sun.

The depar­ture leaves Negroponte’s likely suc­ces­sor, retired Vice Adm. J. Michael McConnell, with lit­tle time to put the fledg­ling office on solid foot­ing before the next White House turnover, tlaw­mak­ers and intel­li­gence offi­cials said.
The lead­er­ship change in the Director of National Intelligence office is com­pounded by the absence of a deputy to replace Gen. Michael V. Hayden, who left the job as second-​​in-​​command last spring to head the CIA. 

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January 4th, 2007 | Cloak and Dagger | 33427 Comments »http://defensetech.org/2007/01/04/sigints-clean-sweep-updated/SIGINT%27s+Clean+Sweep%3F+%28Updated%292007-01-04+22%3A42%3A07hambling You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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  1. Ryan says:
    January 4, 2007 at 7:23 pm

    After pearl har­bor, President Franklin Roosevelt autho­rized the inter­cep­tion of all com­mu­ni­ca­tions in and out of the United States. Lincoln inter­cepted tele­graph com­mu­ni­ca­tions with­out a war­rant. You make the mis­take of think­ing that recent his­tory is the norm and extrap­o­late it back 230 years.

    Reply
  2. rutty says:
    January 4, 2007 at 7:35 pm

    What was the name of that mas­sive NSA project that was to scan all the emails in the world that it could get its paws on and flag those its algo­rithms deemed sus­pi­cious? Echelon? Something like along those lines. And under what admin­is­tra­tion was that? It wasn’t GWB. Yet, you couldn’t have thought it that egre­gious an infringe­ment since you cam­paigned for that same admin­is­tra­tion. We weren’t even at war then. Why the change of heart?

    Reply
  3. David says:
    January 4, 2007 at 8:08 pm

    Echelon is correct…that spy pro­gram hooked into every sin­gle com­mu­ni­ca­tion satel­lite relay, fiber optics…virtually every sin­gle com­mu­ni­ca­tion medium.
    I believe the pro­gram was ini­ti­ated dur­ing the cold war, but it mor­phed into a ter­ror­ist activ­ity spot­ter after the Cole and the 93 WTC bomb­ing and stuff.

    Reply
  4. MinorRipper says:
    January 4, 2007 at 9:51 pm

    Not sure if every­one has seen these videos of the US mil­i­tary in Iraq or not, but they are pretty amaz­ing: Hopefully our ‘surge’ will not include too many of these types…
    http://​minor​-rip​per​.blogspot​.com/​2​0​0​6​/​1​2​/​w​i​n​n​i​n​g​-​h​e​a​r​t​s​-​a​n​d​-​m​i​n​d​s​-​p​a​r​t​-​t​h​r​e​e​.​h​tml

    Reply
  5. dutydork says:
    January 6, 2007 at 4:09 pm

    You mail open­ing post sec­tion is such a total sack of rot­ten cab­bage that you should be ashamed of hav­ing posted it.
    Historically in wartimes mail has be cen­sored, and opened at will.
    It is such a stu­pid straw man. With the lit­er­ally thou­sands of tons of mail every year processed in this coun­try, who do you think is going to open and exam­ine all that mail.
    This is clearly designed to allow reac­tion to an emerg­ing threat that wait­ing for a war­rant may let the timer expire in a pack­age or crate.
    Your wife my be inter­ested in your love let­ters to your line­backer friend from col­lege , but I am sure GWB has more impor­tant issues to worry about.
    That is just satire to show the stu­pid­ity of your posi­tion. Get over it.
    There are mil­lions of peo­ple com­mu­ni­cat­ing in hun­dreds of ways each day on this earth, and at best we may have 70,000 bod­ies assisted by com­put­ers to try to fil­ter out the most impor­tant.
    Oh next week my new assign­ment is war­rant less pantie checks of females on the streets of new york.

    Reply
  6. waco bill says:
    July 5, 2007 at 12:32 pm

    Declaired War has pri­or­ites dif­fer­ent from the present state.
    waco bill

    Reply
  7. dehi says:
    June 27, 2008 at 6:12 am

    Sri lanka

    Reply

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