(WMR) -- WMR
has learned that the National Security �Q� Group, responsible for security, has
grown to an immense security and counter-intelligence force, with an estimated
one thousand government employees, contractors, and paid informants. NSA�s
Security force is reportedly primarily tasked with plugging any leaks of
classified or other information that points to U.S. government�s involvement
with the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001.
NSA Security has doggedly pursued a number of NSA employees,
some in �sting� operations, others in frequent polygraphs and repeated security
interviews where threats are made by thuggish NSA security agents with and
without the presence of FBI agents, and others in constant surveillance
operations at their homes, churches, and other locations away from the
Fort Meade, Maryland, headquarters of the agency.
The most egregious NSA Security operation against an NSA
employee was the 2004 arrest of NSA analyst Ken Ford, Jr. Ford became a target
of opportunity for NSA Security and the FBI after Vice President Dick
Cheney noted his name on an NSA signals intelligence report on Saddam Hussein�s
government that stated that there was no proof from interceptions of Iraqi
communications that Saddam Hussein possessed �weapons of mass destruction.�
Cheney and other neocons in the Bush White House arranged
for a �sting� operation to be mounted as retribution against Ford. Ford was
charged with taking classified papers home from NSA headquarters,
something that is quite impossible considering the stringent security in place
at one of the most-secured complexes in the world.
Ford was convicted by a tainted jury and sentenced to seven
years in federal prison. Ford, who is African-American, originally had an
African-American federal trial judge. However, the judge was replaced by a
pro-Iraq war Jewish U.S. judge, Peter Messitte, who set out to ensure
a guilty conviction of Ford in cahoots with Jewish U.S. Attorney for
Maryland Rod Rosenstein, and Jewish Assistant U.S. Attorney for
Southern Maryland David Salem, both Bush appointees. Nothing was done by the
judge or prosecutors to dismiss from the jury a contractor whose company
had major contracts with NSA. The trio of Messitte, Rosenstein, and Salem have
also �rocket-docketed� a number of cases, resulting in slam-dunk
convictions, against Arab- and Iranian-Americans in the southern district
of Maryland.
NSA�s Security chief is Kemp Ensor III. Ensor has built up
what amounts to a massive law enforcement and intelligence agency in Maryland
that operates as a virtual independent operation that answers to no one.
Maryland�s congressional delegation has shown little interest in oversight over
the security operation.
In fact, WMR has learned that many NSA employees, aware of
the political and other misuse of their agency by the Bush-Cheney administration,
avidly backed Barack Obama for president hoping that the past era when NSA
complied with the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) and the Fourth
Amendment of the Constitution would be restored. However, many NSA employees
are bitterly disappointed that Obama has done nothing to curtail not only the
widespread surveillance of the communications of law-abiding Americans but the
constant �Stasi-like� harassment and surveillance conducted by Ensor�s team of
agents and confidential informants.
WMR has also learned that NSA Security has been authorized
to work directly with Washington area local police department intelligence
divisions to carry out its surveillance of not only NSA employees and
contractors, but journalists who report on the activities of NSA. Two police
departments mentioned in this respect are the Alexandria, Virginia, and Anne
Arundel County, Maryland, sheriff departments.
One senior level NSA official recently found himself sitting
in front of NSA Security questioners asking why he gave his NSA business cards
to some students at a university. It turns out the official was trying to
recruit students for NSA employment. When the official asked why there was a
problem in his handing out his business cards, the answer by NSA Security was
that some of them, all American citizens, had �Russian last names.�
Even former NSA employees and contractors are being
subjected to continual NSA Security surveillance and harassment at their work
places and other locations, according to WMR�s sources. Some have lost their
jobs as a result of pressure from NSA Security.
WMR has in the past reported on NSA surveillance of
journalists. On December 28, 2005, we reported: �WMR has learned that the
National Security Agency (NSA), on the orders of the Bush administration,
eavesdropped on the private conversations and e-mail of its own employees,
employees of other U.S. intelligence agencies -- including the CIA and DIA --
and their contacts in the media, Congress, and oversight agencies and offices.
The journalist surveillance program, code named �FIRSTFRUITS,� was part of a
Director of Central Intelligence (DCI) program that was maintained at least
until October 2004 and was authorized by then-DCI Porter Goss. FIRSTFRUITS was
authorized as part of a DCI �Countering Denial and Deception� program
responsible to an entity known as the Foreign Denial and Deception Committee
(FDDC). Since the intelligence community�s reorganization, the DCI has been
replaced by the Director of National Intelligence headed by John Negroponte and
his deputy, former NSA director Gen. Michael Hayden.�
Since the revelation of the NSA journalist monitoring
database, which later added communications intercepts of journalists� phone
calls, emails, and faxes to its database, NSA Security has, according to
information received by WMR, conducted physical surveillance of journalists it deems
to be threats to the operations of the agency. The top targeted journalists,
who make up a virtual �rogues� gallery� at NSA Security, complete with
photographs and other personal information, are: former Baltimore Sun
and current Wall Street Journal reporter Siobhan Gorman, Washington
Times reporter Bill Gertz, former Baltimore Sun and current New York
Times reporter Scott Shane, Baltimore Sun reporter Phil McGowan,
author James Bamford, New York Times reporters James Risen and Eric
Lichtblau, and this editor, Wayne Madsen.
In addition to the aforementioned, FIRSTFRUITS also
contained the names of former Washington Post reporter Vernon Loeb, New
Yorker journalist Seymour Hersh, and UPI�s John C. K. Daly.
Ironically, NSA Security allegedly has its own connections
in the news media. A Washington Times source revealed that the paper�s writer
of the �Inside the Beltway� column, John McCaslin, has a relative inside NSA
Security -- Robert McCaslin, the chief of NSA Security counter-intelligence and
the chief �sting� agent against Ford. Robert McCaslin, according to the Times
source, is the brother of the paper�s columnist.
NSA Security is also able to utilize the agency�s most
sophisticated electronic surveillance systems to monitor the activities of
journalists. The cell phones of journalists are routinely used as listening
devices, even when turned off. And what was considered a sure-fire method of
avoiding having a cell phone used as a transmitter, removing the batteries in
what has become known as �batteries out� conversations, is no longer safe. Even
when the batteries are removed, the global positioning system (GPS) chip in
cell phones continues to have enough residual power that two to three
pings from satellites can give away a person�s location and what other uniquely
identifiable cell phones are at the same location.
The bottom line is that a number of NSA personnel who were
on duty in the months leading up to 9/11, the day of the attacks, and
subsequent weeks and months, are aware of undeniable facts that point to a
massive cover-up by the Bush-Cheney administration of the circumstances
surrounding 9/11, including what actually befell United Airlines flight 93 and
who was issuing direct military orders from the White House.
The Obama administration, rather than lessen the pressure on
the NSA personnel, has turned up the heat and is resorting to even more
draconian methods to ensure silence. The word from inside NSA is that a state
of fear exists and the mission of the agency, to conduct surveillance of
foreign communications to provide threat indications and warnings to U.S.
troops and policy makers and protect sensitive U.S. government communications
from unauthorized eavesdropping is suffering as a result.
Previously
published in the Wayne
Madsen Report.
Copyright � 2009 WayneMadenReport.com
Wayne
Madsen is a Washington, DC-based investigative journalist and
nationally-distributed columnist. He is the editor and publisher of the Wayne Madsen Report
(subscription required).