[R-G] Blackwater's Owner Has Spies for Hire

Tim Murphy info at cinox.demon.co.uk
Sun Nov 4 10:06:55 MST 2007


Saturday, November 3, 2007
Washington Post (A01)
www.washingtonpost.com


Blackwater's Owner Has Spies for Hire

Ex-U.S. Operatives Dot Firm's Roster

By 

Dana Hedgpeth
Washington Post Staff Writer


First it became a brand name in security for its work in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Now it's taking on intelligence.

The Prince Group, the holding company that owns Blackwater Worldwide, has
been building an operation that will sniff out intelligence about natural
disasters, business-friendly governments, overseas regulations and global
political developments for clients in industry and government.

The operation, Total Intelligence Solutions, has assembled a roster of
former spooks -- high-ranking figures from agencies such as the CIA and
defense intelligence -- that mirrors the slate of former military officials
who run Blackwater. Its chairman is Cofer Black, the former head of
counterterrorism at CIA known for his leading role in many of the agency's
more controversial programs, including the rendition and interrogation of
al-Qaeda suspects and the detention of some of them in secret prisons
overseas.

Its chief executive is Robert Richer, a former CIA associate deputy director
of operations who was heavily involved in running the agency's role in the
Iraq war.

Total Intelligence Solutions is one of a growing number of companies that
offer intelligence services such as risk analysis to companies and
governments. Because of its roster and its ties to owner Erik Prince, the
multimillionaire former Navy SEAL, the company's thrust into this world
highlights the blurring of lines between government, industry and activities
formerly reserved for agents operating in the shadows.

Richer, for instance, once served as the chief of the CIA's Near East
division and is said to have ties to King Abdullah of Jordan. The CIA had
spent millions helping train Jordan's intelligence service in exchange for
information. Now Jordan has hired Blackwater to train its special forces.

"Cofer can open doors," said Richer, who served 22 years at the CIA. "I can
open doors. We can generally get in to see who we need to see. We don't help
pay bribes. We do everything within the law, but we can deal with the right
minister or person."

Total Intel, as the company is known, is bringing "the skills traditionally
honed by CIA operatives directly to the board room," Black said. Black had a
28-year career with the CIA.

"They have the skills and background to do anything anyone wants," said RJ
Hillhouse, who writes a national security blog called The Spy Who Billed Me.
"There's no oversight. They're an independent company offering freelance
espionage services. They're rent-a-spies."

The heart of Total Intel operations is a suite on the ninth floor of an
office tower in Ballston, patterned after the CIA counterterrorist center
Black once ran, with analysts sitting at cubicles in the center of the room
and glass offices of senior executives on the perimeter.

A handful of analysts in their 20s and 30s sit hunched over Macintosh
computers, scanning Web sites, databases, newspapers and chat rooms. The
lights are dimmed. Three large-screen TVs play in the background, one tuned
to al-Jazeera.

The room, called the Global Fusion Center, is staffed around the clock, as
analysts search for warnings on everything from terrorist plots on radical
Islamic Web sites to possible political upheavals in Asia, labor strikes in
South America and Europe, and economic upheavals that could affect a
company's business.

"We're not a private detective," Black said. "We provide intelligence to our
clients. It's not about taking pictures. It's business intelligence. We
collect all information that's publicly available. This is a completely
legal enterprise. We break no laws. We don't go anywhere near breaking laws.
We don't have to."

Total Intel was launched in February by Prince, who a decade ago opened a
law enforcement training center in Moyock, N.C., that has since grown into a
half-billion-dollar business called Blackwater Worldwide. Prince has nine
other companies and subsidiaries in his Prince Group empire, offering a
broad range of security and training services. (One, Blackwater Security
Consulting, is under scrutiny because of a Sept. 16 shooting incident in
Iraq that involved some of its armed guards and in which 17 Iraqi civilians
were killed.) Prince built Total Intel by buying two companies owned by Matt
Devost, the Terrorism Research Center and Technical Defense, and merging
them with Black's consulting group, the Black Group. Devost, a cyber
security and risk management expert, is now president of Total Intel.

Devost runs day-to-day operations, overseeing 65 full-time employees. At the
Global Fusion Center, young analysts monitor activities in more than 60
countries. They include a 25-year-old Fulbright scholar fluent in Arabic and
another person with a master's degree in international affairs, focused on
the Middle East, who tracks the oil industry and security in Saudi Arabia.

Black and Richer spend much of their time traveling. They won't say where.
It's a CIA thing. Black called at midnight recently to talk about Total
Intel from "somewhere in the Middle East."

"I don't spend a lot of time telling people where I am as part of my
business," he said. "I am discreet in where I go and who I see. I spend most
of my time dealing with senior people in governments, making connections."

Black, who also serves as vice chairman of Blackwater Worldwide, said he
also does "a lot more mundane things like go to conferences and trade
shows," looking for business opportunities. "I'm going to have to go," he
said. "My guy is motioning for me. I have to go meet people."

Who?

People.

Government people? Business people?

All kinds.

The company won't reveal its financial information, the names of its
customers or other details of its business. Even looking at an analyst's
screen at its Global Fusion Center wasn't allowed.

"No, no," Richer said, putting his hands up. "There may be customers' names
on there. We don't want you to see."

In their conference room overlooking the Global Fusion Center, Total Intel
executives fired off a list of some of their work. Are some recent bombings
at major cities in India isolated incidents or should you pull your
personnel out? What are the political developments in Pakistan going to mean
for your business? Is your company popping up on jihadist Web sites? There's
been crime recently in the ports of Mexico, possibly by rogue police
officers. Is the government going to be able to ensure safety?

Since 2000, the Terrorism Research Center portion of the company has done
$1.5 million worth of contracts with the government, mainly from agencies
like the Army, Navy, Air Force, Customs and the U.S. Special Operations
Command buying its data subscription or other services.

To Black and Richer, one of the most surprising things about being in the
private sector is finding that much of the information they once considered
top secret is publicly available. The trick, Richer said, is knowing where
to look.

"In a classified area, there's an assumption that if it is open, it can't be
as good as if you stole it," Richer said. "I'm seeing that at least 80
percent of what we stole was open."

As he's no longer with the CIA, Richer said he's found that people are more
willing to share information. He said a military general in a country he
would not name told him of the country's plan to build its next strike
fighter. "I listened," Richer said.

"We talked business and where we could help him understand markets and
things like that." At the end of the conversation, Richer said, he asked the
man, "Isn't that classified? Why are you telling me this?"

Richer said the man answered, "If I tell it to an embassy official I've
created espionage. You're a business partner."

--

Staff researcher Julie Tate contributed to this report

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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/02/AR2007110202
165_pf.html

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