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After Profits, Defense Contractor Faces the Pitfalls of Cybersecurity

   



Mary F. Calvert for The New York Times

Mike McConnell, vice chairman of Booz Allen Hamilton, was a director of national intelligence.


By and

Published: June 15, 2013    317 Comments

  


WASHINGTON — When the United Arab Emirates wanted to create its own version of the National Security Agency, it turned to Booz Allen Hamilton to replicate the world’s largest and most powerful spy agency in the sands of Abu Dhabi.        


It was a natural choice: The chief architect of Booz Allen’s cyberstrategy is Mike McConnell,

who once led the N.S.A. and pushed the United States into a new era of
big data espionage. It was Mr. McConnell who won the blessing of the
American intelligence agencies to bolster the Persian Gulf sheikdom,
which helps track the Iranians.        
“They are teaching everything,” one Arab official familiar with the
effort said. “Data mining, Web surveillance, all sorts of digital
intelligence collection.”        
Yet as Booz Allen profits handsomely from its worldwide expansion, Mr.
McConnell and other executives of the government contractor — which
sells itself as the gold standard in protecting classified computer
systems and boasts that half its 25,000 employees have Top Secret
clearances — have a lot of questions to answer.        
Among the questions: Why did Booz Allen assign a 29-year-old with scant
experience to a sensitive N.S.A. site in Hawaii, where he was left
loosely supervised as he downloaded highly classified documents about
the government’s monitoring of Internet and telephone communications,
apparently loading them onto a portable memory stick barred by the
agency?        
The results could be disastrous for a company that until a week ago had
one of the best business plans in Washington, with more than half its
$5.8 billion in annual revenue coming from the military and the
intelligence agencies. Last week, the chairwoman of the Senate
Intelligence Committee, Dianne Feinstein, whom Mr. McConnell regularly
briefed when he was in government, suggested for the first time that companies like Booz Allen should lose their broad access to the most sensitive intelligence secrets.        
“We will certainly have legislation which will limit or prevent
contractors from handling highly classified and technical data,” said
Ms. Feinstein, a California Democrat. Senior White House officials said
they agreed.        
Yet cutting contractors out of classified work is a lot harder in
practice than in theory. Booz Allen is one of many companies that make
up the digital spine of the intelligence world, designing the software
and hardware systems on which the N.S.A. and other military and
intelligence agencies depend. Mr. McConnell speaks often about the need
for the private sector to jolt the government out of its attachment to
existing systems, noting, for example, that the Air Force fought the
concept of drones for years.        
Removing contractors from the classified world would be a wrenching
change: Of the 1.4 million people with Top Secret clearances, more than a
third are private contractors. (The background checks for those
clearances are usually done by other contractors.)        
Mr. McConnell himself has been among the most vocal in warning about the
risks to contractors. “The defense industrial base needs to address
security,” he said in an interview with The New York Times last year,
months before Booz Allen hired Edward J. Snowden, its young systems
administrator who has admitted to leaking documents describing secret
N.S.A. programs. “It should be a condition for contracts. You cannot be
competitive in the cyber era if you don’t have a higher level of
security.”        
Booz Allen is saying little about Mr. Snowden’s actions or the questions
they have raised about its practices. Mr. McConnell, once among the
most accessible intelligence officials in Washington, declined to be
interviewed for this article.        
“This has to hurt Mike’s relationship with the N.S.A.,” said a business
associate of Mr. McConnell’s who requested anonymity. “He helped set up
those contracts and is heavily engaged there.”        
Indeed, few top officials in the intelligence world have become greater
authorities on cyberconflict than the 69-year-old Mr. McConnell, who
walks with a stoop from a bad back and speaks with the soft accent of
his upbringing in Greenville, S.C. He began his career as a Navy
intelligence officer on a small boat in the backwaters of the Mekong
Delta during the Vietnam War. Years later he helped the American
intelligence apparatus make the leap from an analog world of electronic
eavesdropping to the new age of cyberweaponry.        
President Bill Clinton relied on Mr. McConnell as director of the
N.S.A., a post he held from 1992 to 1996. He then moved to Booz Allen as
a senior vice president, building its first cyberunits. But with the
intelligence community in disarray after its failure to prevent the
terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the fiasco of nonexistent weapons
of mass destruction in Iraq and the toll of constant reorganization,
President George W. Bush asked him to be the second director of national
intelligence from 2007 to 2009.        
That was when he made his biggest mark, forcing a reluctant bureaucracy
to invest heavily in cybercapability and overseeing “Olympic Games,” the
development of America’s first truly sophisticated cyberweapon, which
was used against Iran’s nuclear enrichment program. When Mr. Bush needed
someone to bring President-elect Barack Obama up to speed on every
major intelligence program he was about to inherit, including drones and
defenses against electronic intrusions from China, he handed the task
to Mr. McConnell.        
But Mr. Obama was not interested in keeping the previous team, and Mr.
McConnell returned to Booz Allen in 2009. He earned more than $4.1
million his first year back, and $2.3 million last year. He is now vice
chairman, and the company describes him as the leader of its “rapidly
expanding cyberbusiness.”        
In Washington he is often Booz Allen’s public face, because of his ties
to the intelligence agencies and his extensive and loyal network of
federal intelligence officials who once worked with him.        
Two months ago, the company announced the creation of a Strategic
Innovation Group, staffed by 1,500 employees who are pursuing, among
other projects, one of Mr. McConnell’s favorites: the development of
“predictive” intelligence tools that its clients can use to scour the
Web for anomalies in behavior and warn of terror or cyberattacks. He has
also hired a senior counterterrorism official to market products in the
Middle East. This year, the company began working on a $5.6 billion,
five-year intelligence analysis program for the Defense Intelligence
Agency.        
The company’s profits are up almost eightfold since it went public in
late 2010. Its majority shareholder is the Carlyle Group, which matches private equity
with a lot of Washington power, and its executives, chief among them
Mr. McConnell, drum up business by warning clients about the potential
effects of cyberweapons.        
“The digital capabilities are a little bit like W.M.D.’s,” Mr. McConnell
said in the interview last year. The good news, he said, is that
countries like China and Russia recognize limits in using those weapons,
and terror groups have been slow to master the technology. “The people
that would do us harm aren’t yet in possession of them,” he said.      
As director of national intelligence, Mr. McConnell kept a giant world
map propped up in front of his desk. Countries were sized by Internet
traffic, and the United States ballooned bigger than all others — a fact
that he told a visitor was at once “a huge intelligence advantage and a
huge vulnerability.”        
The advantage was that the United States’ role as the world’s biggest
Internet switching center gave it an opportunity to sort through the
vast troves of metadata — including phone records, Internet activity and
banking transactions — enabling analysts to search for anomalies and
look for attacks in the making. But he chafed at the legislative
restrictions that slowed the process.        
So in 2007, as the intelligence chief, he lobbied Congress for revisions to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
to eliminate some of the most burdensome rules on the N.S.A., including
that it obtain a warrant when spying on two foreigners abroad simply
because they were using a wired connection that flowed through a
computer server or switch inside the United States.        
It made no sense in the modern age, he argued. “Now if it were wireless, we would not be required to get a warrant,” he told The El Paso Times in August of that year.        
The resulting changes in both law and legal interpretations led to many
of the steps — including the government’s collection of logs of
telephone calls made in and out of the country — that have been debated
since Mr. Snowden began revealing the extent of such programs. Then Mr.
McConnell put them into effect.        
In 2007, “Mike came back into government with a 100-day plan and a
500-day plan for the intelligence community,” said Stephen J. Hadley,
Mr. Bush’s national security adviser. “He brought a real sense of the
private sector to the intelligence world, and it needed it.”        
The new technologies created a flood of new work for the intelligence
agencies — and huge opportunities for companies like Booz Allen. It
hired thousands of young analysts like Mr. Snowden. The intelligence
agencies snapped them up, assigning them to sensitive, understaffed
locales, including the Hawaii listening station where Mr. Snowden
downloaded his materials.        
Only last month, the Navy awarded Booz Allen, among others, the first
contracts in a billion-dollar project to help with “a new generation of
intelligence, surveillance and combat operations.”        
The new push is to take those skills to American allies, especially at a
time of reduced spending in Washington. So while the contract with the
United Arab Emirates is small, it may be a model for other countries
that see cyberdefense — and perhaps offense — as their future. The
company reported net income of $219 million in the fiscal year that
ended on March 31. That was up from net income of $25 million in 2010,
shortly after Mr. McConnell returned to the company.        
But the legal warnings at the end of its financial report offered a
caution that the company could be hurt by “any issue that compromises
our relationships with the U.S. government or damages our professional
reputation.”        
By Friday, shares of Booz Allen had slid nearly 6 percent since the
revelations. And a new job posting appeared on its Web site for a
systems administrator in Hawaii, “secret clearance required.”        


     



D avid E. Sanger reported from Washington, and Nicole Perlroth from San Francisco.






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