Gen. Keith B. Alexander, director of the National Security Agency and head of the U.S. Cyber Command testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington on June 12, 2013. (photo: J. Scott Applewhite/AP)
Inside the Mind of NSA Chief Gen. Keith Alexander
15 September 13
A lavish Star Trek room he had built as part of his 'Information Dominance Center' is endlessly revealing.
t has been previously reported
that the mentality of NSA chief Gen. Keith Alexander is captured by his
motto "Collect it All". It's a get-everything approach he pioneered
first when aimed at an enemy population in the middle of a war zone in
Iraq, one he has now imported onto US soil, aimed at the domestic
population and everyone else.
But a perhaps even more disturbing and revealing vignette into the spy chief's mind comes from a new Foreign Policy
article describing what the journal calls his "all-out, barely-legal
drive to build the ultimate spy machine". The article describes how even
his NSA peers see him as a "cowboy" willing to play fast and loose with
legal limits in order to construct a system of ubiquitous surveillance.
But the personality driving all of this - not just Alexander's but much
of Washington's - is perhaps best captured by this one passage,
highlighted by PBS' News Hour in a post entitled:
"NSA director modeled war room after Star Trek's Enterprise". The room
was christened as part of the "Information Dominance Center":
"When he was running the Army's Intelligence and Security Command, Alexander brought many of his future allies down to Fort Belvoir for a tour of his base of operations, a facility known as the Information Dominance Center. It had been designed by a Hollywood set designer to mimic the bridge of the starship Enterprise from Star Trek, complete with chrome panels, computer stations, a huge TV monitor on the forward wall, and doors that made a 'whoosh' sound when they slid open and closed. Lawmakers and other important officials took turns sitting in a leather 'captain's chair' in the center of the room and watched as Alexander, a lover of science-fiction movies, showed off his data tools on the big screen."'Everybody wanted to sit in the chair at least once to pretend he was Jean-Luc Picard,' says a retired officer in charge of VIP visits."
Numerous commentators remarked yesterday on the
meaning of all that (note, too, how "Total Information Awareness" was a
major scandal in the Bush years, but "Information Dominance Center" -
along with things like "Boundless Informant" - are treated as benign or even noble programs in the age of Obama).
But now, on the website of DBI Architects, Inc. of Washington and Reston, Virginia, there are what purports to be photographs of the actual Star-Trek-like headquarters
commissioned by Gen. Alexander that so impressed his Congressional
overseers. It's a 10,740 square foot labyrinth in Fort Belvoir,
Virginia. The brochure touts how "the prominently positioned chair
provides the commanding officer an uninterrupted field of vision to a
22'-0" wide projection screen":
The glossy display further describes how "this project
involved the renovation of standard office space into a highly
classified, ultramodern operations center." Its "primary function is to
enable 24-hour worldwide visualization, planning, and execution of
coordinated information operations for the US Army and other federal
agencies." It gushes: "The futuristic, yet distinctly military, setting
is further reinforced by the Commander's console, which gives the
illusion that one has boarded a star ship":
Other photographs of Gen. Alexander's personal Star
Trek Captain fantasy come-to-life (courtesy of public funds) are here.
Any casual review of human history proves how deeply irrational it is to
believe that powerful factions can be trusted to exercise vast
surveillance power with little accountability or transparency. But the
more they proudly flaunt their warped imperial hubris, the more
irrational it becomes.
Related issues
(1) Harvard Law Professor Yochai Benkler has an excellent Op-Ed in the Guardian
arguing that the NSA is so far out-of-control that radical measures,
rather than incremental legislative reform, are necessary to rein it in.
(2) The Federation of American Scientists' Steven
Aftergood, usually a reform-minded transparency advocate somewhat
hostile to massive leaks, examines the serious reform which Snowden's disclosures are enabling, as reluctantly acknowledged even by the FISA court and James Clapper himself.
(3) British comedian Russell Brand attended an event
sponsored by GQ and Hugo Boss and gave a speech, while accepting an
award, which offended almost everyone in the room (that speech is here). He then wrote a genuinely brilliant (and quite hilarious) Op-Ed in the Guardian
about the role elite institutions play in reinforcing their legitimacy
and how they maintain control of public discourse. It is well worth
taking the time to read it.
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