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Hire: The Secret World of Intelligence Outsourcing via Alex
Constantine's Blacklist by Alex Constantine on 5/31/08 " ... Shorrock
profiles CACI’s leader, Jack London, who since news of the scandal
broke, 'has treated Abu Ghraib as a public relations problem.' Over the
past four years, CACI has sued or threatened to sue more than a dozen
journalists because of their coverage of the Abu Ghraib scandal ... "

www.pressaction.com
May 26, 2008

A Cunning and Conniving Adversary

Arlington County, Virginia, is home to a large number of government
agencies and private companies involved in fighting the “the global war
on terror” or “global struggle against violent extremism,” or whatever
propaganda catchphrase politicos in Washington are using today to
describe the U.S. government’s campaign to prop up its crumbling world
empire. The Pentagon complex is the most notorious member of this
group. Aside from the Pentagon, the Defense Department has many
divisions housed in other office buildings scattered across Arlington,
as do the CIA and other federal police and intelligence agencies.

The government outsourcing trend has gained momentum during the past 30
years, and Arlington has served as a popular location for many of these
Beltway Bandits to set up shop, given its proximity to Washington. Many
of these companies specialize in military and intelligence contracts.
One of the best known Arlington-based contractors is CACI
International, a company that has performed a variety of contract work
for the U.S. military in Iraq, including providing intelligence
analysis, background investigations, screenings and interrogation.

In his new book Spies for Hire: The Secret World of Intelligence
Outsourcing, Tim Shorrock takes a close look at CACI and how the
company was brought into Iraq by the U.S. military to help with
interrogations at the Abu Ghraib prison. Shorrock notes in the book
that CACI challenged the idea that its growth over the past five years
came solely from its business in Iraq. The company said its Abu Ghraib
contracts were less than one percent of total worldwide revenue,
according to Shorrock.

“In that narrow context, therefore, the company was right: antiwar
activists, journalists, and filmmakers critical of CACI have vastly
underestimated its role in U.S. foreign policy and the war on terror,”
Shorrock writes. “By focusing exclusively on CACI’s role at Abu
Ghraib—abysmal as it was—journalists and antiwar activists have
obscured a much larger picture: CACI is one of the world’s largest
private intelligence services providers and deeply involved in
classified black operations everywhere on the globe where U.S. military
forces are active.”

Shorrock profiles CACI’s leader, Jack London, who since news of the
scandal broke, “has treated Abu Ghraib as a public relations problem.”
Over the past four years, CACI has sued or threatened to sue more than
a dozen journalists because of their coverage of the Abu Ghraib
scandal, according to Shorrock.

London, who relinquished his CEO title in 2007 but stayed on as
chairman of the company’s board, embraces a political philosophy that
“closely matched the imperial visions of Rumsfeld and the neocons he
brought into the Pentagon,” Shorrock writes. “He stands out among his
peers in the business of intelligence for his almost religious
allegiance to the Bush-Cheney agenda of pre-emptive war and global
military dominance.”

In the book, Shorrock shares a quote by London from 2006: “As the fight
against terrorism and the Islamofascists continues, technologies will
keep evolving to collect, analyze and disseminate vital intelligence to
support the war fighter and the national security authorities.”

Shorrock says that London in 2002 came up with a “simpler way” to
define the asymmetric warfare practiced by Palestinians and other Arab
groups in their resistance to the United States and Israel: “Not
fighting fair.” According to Shorrock, London said that “asymmetric
warfare means facing a cunning and conniving adversary of inferior
strength, who finds ways to exploit vulnerabilities to radical extreme,
and frequently with frightening psychological effect.”

Arlington County is well known in Virginia for its liberal political
tradition. Currently, all of the elected positions in the county are
filled by Democrats.

In 2007, it was the all-Democratic Arlington County Board that honored
London “for his personal contributions to Arlington and his leadership
of CACI. Special appreciation was given for CACI’s assistance in
planning for Arlington’s new National Defense Science and Technology
Collaboration Center. The new center will be located near CACI’s
headquarters in Arlington’s Ballston neighborhood.”

It probably surprised some county residents that its elected officials
would honor the leader of a company whose financial well being is
closely tied to the nation’s perpetual state of warfare. “Like George
Bush, he [London] sees evil lurking throughout the developing world,
where he points to a ‘rising environment’ of extremist individuals and
organizations,” Shorrock writes.

http://www.pressaction.com/news/weblog/full_article/caci05262008/
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