http://foreignpolicy.com/2017/03/20/the-multibillion-dollar-
u-s-spy-agency-you-havent-heard-of-trump/

The Multibillion-Dollar U.S. Spy Agency You Haven’t Heard of

March 20, 2017



On a heavily protected military base some 15 miles south of Washington,
D.C., sits the massive headquarters of a spy agency few know exists. Even
Barack Obama, five months into his presidency, seemed not to have
recognized its name. While shaking hands at a Five Guys hamburger
restaurant in Washington in May 2009, he asked a customer seated at a table
about his job. “What do you [do]?” the president inquired. “I work at NGA,
National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency,” the man answered. Obama appeared
dumbfounded. “So, explain to me exactly what this National Geospatial…” he
said, unable to finish the name. Eight years after that videotape aired,
the NGA remains by far the most shadowy member of the Big Five spy
agencies, which include the CIA and the National Security Agency.

Despite its lack of name recognition, the NGA’s headquarters is the
third-largest building in the Washington metropolitan area, bigger than the
CIA headquarters and the U.S. Capitol.

Completed in 2011 at a cost of $1.4 billion, the main building measures
four football fields long and covers as much ground as two aircraft
carriers. In 2016, the agency purchased 99 acres in St. Louis to construct
additional buildings at a cost of $1.75 billion to accommodate the growing
workforce, with 3,000 employees already in the city.

The NGA is to pictures what the NSA is to voices. Its principal function is
to analyze the billions of images and miles of video captured by drones in
the Middle East and spy satellites circling the globe. But because it has
largely kept its ultra-high-resolution cameras pointed away from the United
States, according to a variety of studies, the agency has never been
involved in domestic spy scandals like its two far more famous siblings,
the CIA and the NSA. However, there’s reason to believe that this will
change under President Donald Trump.

Throughout the long election campaign and into his first months as
president, Trump has pushed hard for weakening restraints on the
intelligence agencies, spending more money for defense, and getting tough
on law and order. Given the new president’s overwhelming focus on domestic
security, it’s reasonable to expect that Trump will use every tool
available to maintain it, including overhead vigilance.

In March 2016, the Pentagon released
<https://www.scribd.com/document/303431440/Use-of-unmanned-aircraft-systems#fullscreen>
the
results of an investigation initiated by the Department of Defense’s Office
of Inspector General to examine military spy drones in the United States.
The report, marked “For Official Use Only” and partially redacted, revealed
that the Pentagon used unarmed surveillance drones over American soil on
fewer than 20 occasions between 2006 and 2015. (Although the report doesn’t
identify the nature of the missions, another Pentagon document lists
<https://www.defense.gov/Portals/1/Documents/Web%20site%20UAS%20Tracker.pdf> 11
domestic drone operations that principally involved natural disasters,
search and rescue, and National Guard training.)

The investigation also quoted from an Air Force law review article
<https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers2.cfm?abstract_id=2379141> pointing out
the growing concern that technology designed to spy on enemies abroad may
soon be turned around to spy on citizens at home. “As the nation winds down
these wars … assets become available to support other combatant command
(COCOM) or U.S. agencies, the appetite to use them in the domestic
environment to collect airborne imagery continues to grow.”

Although the report stated <https://fas.org/irp/agency/dod/ig-uas.pdf> that
all missions were conducted within full compliance of the law, it pointedly
noted that as of 2015 there were no standardized federal statutes that
“specifically address the employment of the capability provided by a DoD
UAS (unmanned aircraft system) if requested by domestic civil authorities.”
Instead, there is a Pentagon policy governing reconnaissance drones that
requires the secretary of defense to approve all such domestic operations.
Under these regulations, drones “may not conduct surveillance on U.S.
persons” unless permitted by law and approved by the secretary. The policy
also bans armed drones over the United States for anything other than
military training and weapons testing.

In 2016, unbeknownst to many city officials, police in Baltimore began
conducting
<https://www.bloomberg.com/features/2016-baltimore-secret-surveillance/>
persistent
aerial surveillance using a system developed for military use in Iraq.

*Few civilians have any idea how advanced these military eye-in-the-sky
drones have become.*

Few civilians have any idea how advanced these military eye-in-the-sky
drones have become. Among them is ARGUS-IS, the world’s highest-resolution
camera with 1.8 billion pixels. Invisible from the ground at nearly four
miles in the air, it uses a technology known as “persistent stare” — the
equivalent of 100 Predator drones peering down at a medium-size city at
once — to track everything that moves.



With the capability to watch an area of 10 or even 15 square miles at a
time, it would take just two drones hovering over Manhattan to continuously
observe and follow all outdoor human activity, night and day. It can zoom
in on an object as small as a stick of butter on a plate and store up to 1
million terabytes of data a day. That capacity would allow analysts to look
back in time over days, weeks, or months. Technology is in the works to
enable drones to remain aloft for years at a time.

The Department of Homeland Security has been at these crossroads before. In
2007, during the presidency of George W. Bush, the department established
<http://www.globalresearch.ca/lawless-domestic-spying-homeland-security-s-national-applications-office-noa/32072>
an
agency to direct domestic spy satellite stakeouts and gave it a bland name:
the National Applications Office. But Congress, concerned about a “Big
Brother in the Sky,” cut off funding. In 2009, it was killed by the Obama
administration.

Still, unlike domestic electronic surveillance by the NSA, which has been
closely scrutinized and subjected to legislation designed to protect civil
liberties, domestic overhead spying has escaped the attention of both
Congress and the public. The Trump administration may take advantage of
that void.

Initiating a new age of “persistent surveillance,” Trump could use the spy
world’s overhead assets to target Muslims or members of Black Lives Matter.
The president has spoken in favor of increasing the scrutiny of mosques;
aerial assessment would allow him to track worshippers. Drones could aid in
the mass roundup of illegal immigrants intended for deportation, and Trump
has said he may send federal forces to Chicago to quell the violence.
Drones could offer the city the unblinking eye for 24/7 vigilance.

Of course, all that would require a significant expansion of the National
Geospatial-Intelligence Agency to analyze the domestic imagery. Before that
can happen, Trump, like Obama, has to discover there is such an agency.

*A version of this article originally appeared in the March/April 2017
issue of *FP* magazine.*




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