From the Los Angeles Times
A new style of turncoat
These days, spying for America's enemies is
less about money and more about ideology.
By James Bamford
April 27, 2008
During much of the Cold War, the typical American spy -- spy for the
enemy, that is -- was a single, native-born, high-school-educated white
male in his 20s, employed by a branch of the military and with
top-secret security clearance.
Most
of the time, he volunteered at a Soviet embassy or consulate and (at
least since the early 1960s) was primarily motivated to spy by a desire
for money rather than by ideological conviction. He would usually get
away with it for at least a year or so before being caught, and then he
would receive an average prison sentence of 20 years to life.
Among
the spies of that period was John Walker. His capture in 1985 touched
off what later became known as the "year of the spy" because of the 11
espionage arrests that year. A Navy radioman, Walker began spying in
the late 1960sand passed on to the KGB top-secret key cards that
enabled the Soviets to decrypt much of the Navy's most highly
classified communications. In return, he received, by some estimates,
more than $1 million over his 17 years as an active spy. He was
eventually sentenced to life in prison.
Today's spies, it
turns out, are different. The spies of the 1990s and the 21st century
are more politically motivated and they have turned the Internet, the
newest tool in espionage tradecraft, to their advantage. And they have
"grayed."
These are among the conclusions of a new study,
released in March, by the Pentagon's little-known Defense Personnel
Security Research Center, which examined the changing nature of
espionage from
1947 to 2007.
According to the study, which compared 173 espionage cases after
separating them into three groups based on when they started spying,
the profile of today's spy is far more nuanced and harder to
stereotype. Still overwhelmingly male, he is more likely to be nonwhite
and married, in his 40s with college and graduate degrees, and also
with business, friends or relatives overseas.
The modern spy
is more than twice as likely to be a civilian than a member of the
armed forces. And while the new-age spy will likely only be able to get
his hands on secret -- as opposed to top-secret -- documents, he also
will use much more ingenuity in acquiring the information, including
conning others to get it for him.
The risky days of walking
into an embassy to volunteer as a spy are also over. Both Walker and
Ronald Pelton, who worked for the National Security Agency, took that
route when, years apart, they walked in the front door of the Soviet
Embassy in Washington. FBI cameras, hidden behind one-way windows in an
office building across the street, captured only the backs of their
heads. Embassy workers then sneaked them out of the compound in the
back of a van.
Aldrich Ames also volunteered while in the
embassy, but he was authorized to go there as part of his
counterintelligence duties at the CIA.
Today's spy, according to
the Pentagon study, is far more likely to use the Internet to contact
foreign governments or terrorists and volunteer his services, as if
signing up for Facebook. "Since 1990, the use of embassies has
decreased," the study says, "while more individuals have chosen a new
communications innovation: 13% of volunteers since 1990 turned to the
Internet, including seven of the 11 most recent cases since 2000 that
used the Internet to initiate offers of espionage."
Obviously,
post-Cold War spies are finding new governments -- and groups -- to spy
for. FBI agent Robert Philip Hanssen, who passed secrets to Russia for
more than two decades, until he was caught in 2001, may be the last of
a dying breed. The country of choice for 87% of American spies during
the Cold War was the Soviet Union, but by the 1990s that figure had
dropped to just 15%.
The focus of spies has now mostly shifted
east. The percentage who work on behalf of Asian and Southeast Asian
countries has risen from 5% in the 1950s and 1960s to 12% in the 1970s
and 1980s, and to 26% since 1990. Cuba, with so many exiles in Florida,
has also become a key recipient of American secrets. Al Qaeda has made
significant inroads as well -- with one American having stolen and
passed classified documents and other materials to aides of Osama bin
Laden, and four others known to have tried to spy for the organization
or other terrorist groups since the mid-1980s.
For anyone at the
CIA or the Pentagon who might be considering moonlighting as a spy, the
report offers a warning: "Since 1990, American spies have been poorly
paid." In fact, the proportion of those who received no payment at all
for espionage increased from 34% before 1980 to 59% during the 1980s
and to 81% since 1990.
And that's not all. At the same time that
the ability to make money from spying has decreased, the chances of
doing time in prison have increased -- dramatically. During the 1970s,
when the Justice Department attempted to turn American spies working
for the Soviets into double agents rather than jail them, 22% served no
time in prison. The idea seldom worked, so by the 1990s, 94% of those
convicted ended up in the slammer. On the bright side (for the spies),
there has been a trend toward judges imposing shorter sentences.
But
the biggest change in espionage is in the motivation to commit the act
in the first place. The multinational, globalized spy of 2008 is less
tempted by money than by ideology and "divided loyalty" -- loyalty to
both the U.S. and another country. "Spying for divided loyalties is the
motive that demonstrates the most significant change of all motives
since 1990," the study notes, "with 57% spying solely as a result of
divided loyalties."
Among the most recent cases cited in the
study was that of Lawrence Franklin, a South Asia specialist with a
top-secret/sensitive compartmented information clearance who worked
from 2002 to 2003in the Pentagon for Douglas Feith, one of the key
neoconservative architects of the Iraq war. Franklin fit the profile of
the 21st century spy. He was well-educated, earning a doctorate in
Asian studies, and was uninterested in making money from spying.
Instead, he represents a dangerous new type of spy -- someone who uses
espionage to try to change U.S. foreign policy for his own purposes.
"In
the 1990s, he developed a strong disagreement with the trend of
American foreign policy toward Iran," says the study. "Starting in
April 1999 and continuing until August 2004, Franklin tried to
manipulate foreign policy by sharing classified information with
various Israeli contacts, including Naor Gilon, the political officer
in the Israeli Embassy in Washington, and two lobbyists for the
American Israeli Public Affairs Committee, Steven Rosen and Keith
Weissman." Both Franklin, who pleaded guilty and was sentenced to
nearly 13 years in prison, and the Israeli lobbyists, who are awaiting
trial, wanted the U.S. to adopt a much more aggressive policy toward
Iran. To help accomplish this, the two senior AIPAC officials allegedly
hoped to turn Franklin, who had taken up Israel's cause after spending
some time in the country, into an Israeli agent-of-influence by placing
him "by the elbow of the president" in the National Security Council,
according to an FBI wiretap.
And that was also what Franklin
wanted. According to the report, "his self-importance, taking American
foreign policy into his own hands by leaking classified information to
the Israelis in hopes they, in turn, would influence the NSC, was
bolstered by other motives, including his ambition to get a job with
the NSC."
When spies attempt to secretly manipulate U.S. foreign
policy to benefit another nation in the most dangerous part of the
world, the Middle East, actions that could easily trigger a nuclear
war, the old days of dead drops and microdots don't seem so bad.
James
Bamford is the author of two books on the National Security Agency,
"The Puzzle Palace" and "Body of Secrets." His most recent book is "A
Pretext for War: 9/11, Iraq and the Abuse of America's Intelligence
Agencies.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times