According to David Hubler and Alice Lipowicz,
Verizon Business will perform the lion's share of the work on the Homeland Security Department's OneNet telecommunications contract with support from AT&T Government Solutions.
The OneNet award, under the General Services Administration's Networx Universal contract vehicle, has a maximum value of $970 million through March 2017, DHS spokesman Larry Orluskie said. ("Verizon to Lead DHS OneNet Award," Washington Technology, May 15, 2008)
Carolyn Duffy Marsan avers,
"The Department of Homeland Security is looking for a partner to help them build, manage and secure their global network for...22 agencies," says Marlin Forbes, regional vice president for Verizon Business' Federal Defense & International Services. "There's a huge legacy...from what they were doing in the past as separate agencies before they were part of DHS. We think this deal goes right to Verizon's sweet spot." ("Verizon snares $678 million federal network deal," IDG News Service, May 15, 2008)
"Sweet spot," indeed! That's a lot of boodle however you slice it, for trampling on our civil liberties. But no matter, since the House seems poised to pass "compromise" legislation that would grant "limited immunity" (read, "get-out-of-jail-free cards") to enterprising telecom giants like AT&T and Verizon.
Under cover of granting the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court the power to determine whether anti-surveillance cases can go forward, the House undoubtedly will join their Senate colleagues in gutting constitutional guarantees not to be spied upon by "outsourced" corporate spooks in league with the national security state.
It's a "win-win" all around--for lobby-ensnared congressional leaders, the Bush administration and scandal-averse telecom executives--given that it's right-wing Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts, a Bushist sycophant, who gets to pick who sits on the secret FISA court. Sounds like another "slam dunk" defense of civil liberties by "opposition" Democrats.
In March, AT&T won a $20 million contract for DHS' Customs and Border Protection agency. Under terms of the 10-year deal, AT&T "will be the primary provider of network voice services to Customs and Border Protection's 47,000 employees around the country," Washington Technology explains.
Meanwhile, under terms of the closed-door deal with Verizon, the dodgy wireless carrier that "partnered" with the FBI on its illegal data-sucking "Quantico circuit," Verizon Business will "help combine the multiple, separate WANs at DHS' 22 agencies into one common, secure IP network," and "manage and secure more than 5,000 agency sites worldwide and create a Security Operations Center for DHS," Hubler and Lipowicz report.
And considering all the hard work DHS does to "secure the homeland," safeguarding America's borders from "threats" posed by poverty-stricken migrants escaping one or another "free trade" deal struck by the Clinton or Bush administrations, it sounds like money well spent. Unless that is, you're an "illegal" immigrant on the receiving end of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) "professionalism."
On Wednesday, The Washington Post reported that the U.S. government "has injected hundreds of foreigners it has deported with dangerous psychotropic drugs against their will to keep them sedated during the trip back to their home country, according to medical records, internal documents and interviews with people who have been drugged."
That's right, the state's forced use of antipsychotic drugs on defenseless people unable to resist their deportation was repeated some 250 times, explained Post reporters who examined ICE records and court depositions in their excellent, though highly-disturbing report.
According to psychoanalyst Stephen Soldz,
These drugs, especially Haldol are extremely powerful and are almost never utilized in individuals not diagnosed as actively psychotic. They can be extremely uncomfortable, especially if first administered in high doses and can disorient an individual for days. ... The use of drugs by ICE is, unfortunately, part of a pattern by the Bush administration of the misuse of the health professions for non-therapeutic purposes. I and others have written extensively about the role of psychologists in aiding national security interrogations, interrogations that often cross the line into torture. ... It is beginning to look as if there is a pattern of inappropriate use of psychopharmacological agents for overcoming resistances of various types. (Stephen Soldz, "Involuntary Drugging of Detainees," CounterPunch, May 16, 2008)
Needless to say, AT&T and Verizon Business care not a whit for the incalculable harm done in the name of the American people by their DHS "partners" (in crime).
These days, corporate America's "little Eichmanns" may not have many trains to "run on time," but from Guantánamo Bay to an ICE holding cell, and from the NSA's "Terrorist Surveillance Program" to the FBI's "Quantico circuit" one can easily discern the same seamless web of corporatist greed and corruption.
After all, $970 million buys a great deal of complicity--and silence.
4 comments:
Here's the other half of the spying story: the government's ultimate dissident database known as Main Core, by Christopher Ketcham of Radar Magazine, titled The Last Roundup.
Thanks for the pointer, 420. I'll check out Ketcham's piece.
The Main Core project appears to be a renamed version of the Total Information Awareness Program (TIA). TIA was supposedly scrapped in 2003, but the project was transferred to other government agencies. The description of the DHS database as a way to search numerous other agency
databases at the same time describes the capabilities of the software known as PROMIS, also mentioned in the story. Read here and here and here and here for background on the PROMIS software.
While I know the background on PROMIS, I would think that 25 years after its original launch it would have been supplanted by other (similar) programs, but I could be wrong.
As far as TIA goes, it was "scrapped" under that name, but as you write, the core concept was imported to other government entities, primarily in the Pentagon by corporate contractors.
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