The Free Press: Speaking Truth to Power Tue Feb 09 2010
Columns
Alexander Cockburn

The CIA's new campus spies
January 25, 2005

After disclosure of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's effort to set a new and spectacularly unaccountable version of the CIA in the Pentagon, the sprouting forest of secret intelligence operations set up in the wake of 9/11 is at last coming under some scrutiny. Here's a sinister one in the academic field that until this week escaped scrutiny.

Dr. David Price, of St. Martins College, in Olympia, Wash., is an anthropologist long interested in the intersections of his discipline with the world of intelligence and national security, both the CIA and the FBI. Now he's turned the spotlight on a new test program, operating without detection or protest, that is secretly placing CIA agents in American university classrooms. With time these students who cannot admit to their true intentions will inevitably pollute and discredit the universities in which they are now enrolled.

Even before 9/11, government money was being sluiced into the academies for covert subsidies for students. The National Security Education Program (NSEP) siphoned off students from traditional foreign language funding programs and offered graduate students good money, sometimes $40,000 a year and up, to study "in demand" languages, but with payback stipulations mandating that recipients later work for unspecified U.S. national security agencies.

When the NSEP got off the ground in the early 1990s, there was some huff and puff from concerned academics about this breaching of the supposed barrier between the desires of academia and the state. But there wasn't even a watch-pup's yap about Congressional approval for Section 318 of the 2004 Intelligence Authorization Act, which appropriated $4 million to fund a pilot program known as the Pat Roberts Intelligence Scholars Program (PRISP), named after Senator Pat Roberts (R.-Kan., Chair, Senate Select Committee on Intelligence).

PRISP is designed to train intelligence operatives and analysts in American university classrooms for careers in the CIA and other agencies. The program now operates on an undisclosed number of American college and university campuses. Dr. Price has discovered that if the pilot phase of the program proves to be a useful means of recruiting and training members of the intelligence community, then the program will expand to more campuses across the country.

PRISP participants must be American citizens who are enrolled full time in graduate degree programs. They need to "complete at least one summer internship at CIA or other agencies," and they must pass the same background investigations as other CIA employees. PRISP students receive financial stipends ranging up to $25,000 per year, and they are required to participate in closed meetings with other PRISP scholars and individuals from their administering intelligence agency.

Dr. Price has determined from his inquiries that less than 150 students a year are currently authorized to receive funding during the pilot phase as PRISP evaluates the program's initial outcomes. PRISP is apparently administered not just by the CIA, but also through a variety of individual intelligence agencies like the NSA, MID or Naval Intelligence.

Secrecy is the root problem here, with the usual ill-based assumption that good intelligence operates best in clandestine conditions. Of course America needs good intelligence, but the most useful and important intelligence can largely be gathered openly without the sort of covert invasion of our campuses that PRISP silently brings.

Anyone doubting the superior merits of open intelligence has only to study the sorry saga of the nonexistent WMDs, whose imagined threat in vast stockpiles was ringingly affirmed by all the secret agencies while being contested by analysts unencumbered by bogus covert intelligence estimates massaged by Iraqi disinformers and political placemen in Langley and elsewhere.

Dr. Price says, "The CIA makes sure we won't know which classrooms PRISP scholars attend, this being rationalized as a requirement for protecting the identities of intelligence personnel." But this secrecy shapes PRISP as it takes on the form of a covert operation in which PRISP students study chemistry, biology, sociology, psychology, anthropology and foreign languages without their fellow classmates, professors, advisors, department chairs or presumably even research subjects knowing that they are working for the CIA, DIA, NSA or other intelligence agencies.

"In a decade and a half of Freedom of Information Act research," Dr. Price continues, " I have read too many FBI reports of students detailing the 'deviant' political views of their professors." In one instance elicited by Dr. Prince from files he acquired under FOIA, the FBI arranged for a graduate student to guide topics of 'informal' conversation with anthropologist Gene Weltfish that were later the focus of an inquiry by Joseph McCarthy). Today, Dr. Prince maintains, "These PRISP students are also secretly compiling dossiers on their professors and fellow students."

The confluence between academe and intelligence is longstanding and pervasive. In 1988, CIA spokeswoman Sharon Foster bragged that the CIA then secretly employed enough university professors "to staff a large university." Most experts estimate that this presence has grown since 2001.

But if the CIA can use PRISP to corral students, haul them along to mandatory internships and summer sessions, and douse them in the ethos of CIA, then it can surely shape their intellectual outlook even before their grasp of cultural history develops in the relatively open environment of their university.

Academic environments thrive on open disagreement, dissent and reformulation. As Dr. Prince writes, "The presence of PRISP's secret sharers brings hidden agendas that sabotage fundamental academic processes. The Pat Roberts Intelligence Scholars Program infects all academia with the viruses dishonesty and distrust as participant scholars cloak their intentions and their ties to the cloaked masters they serve."

Alexander Cockburn is coeditor with Jeffrey St. Clair of the muckraking newsletter CounterPunch, in whose latest issue Dr. David Price writes about the PRISP program (available through the Web site www.counterpunch.org). Dr. Price can be reached at dprice@stmartin.edu. To find out more about Alexander Cockburn and read features by other columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2005 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


Email this article to a friend




1240 Bryden Road Columbus, Ohio 43209 Ph/Fx 614.253.2571 Email truth@freepress.org
  

Click here to visit Harvey Wasserman's Solartopia.org.

Don't forget to check out articles from 2008 and 2009

Alexander Cockburn

"A New York Times editorial contemplates Iraq"
  December 29, 2005

"The year of the vanished credibility"
  December 21, 2005

"Bush's troubles"
  December 13, 2005

"All the news that's fit to buy"
  December 9, 2005

"Republicans panic"
  November 30, 2005

"First the lying, then the pardon"
  November 18, 2005

"Did Libby's lies cost Kerry the White House? Answer: No."
  November 10, 2005

"The Alito nomination"
  November 2, 2005

"When Divas collide"
  October 26, 2005

"I'll stay with the winning side"
  October 19, 2005

"Ayatollahs of the apocalypse"
  October 15, 2005

"Rhetoric and reality in the business of getting rid of black people"
  October 7, 2005

"Democrats: ever deeper into the ooze"
  September 27, 2005

"Levee Town"
  September 15, 2005

"From Mitch to Katrina: nature is politics"
  September 7, 2005

"New Orleans after Katrina"
  August 31, 2005

"Fear, loathing and Cindy Sheehan"
  August 27, 2005

"Can Cindy Sheehan end the war?"
  August 18, 2005

"The "stricken" president: when down is up"
  August 11, 2005

"Who's the real martyr, Judy Miller or Jim DeFede?"
  August 3, 2005

"The function of political scandal"
  July 29, 2005

"That smile on the face of the Tiger: Do animals have expressions?"
  July 21, 2005

"Don't you dare call it treason"
  July 14, 2005

"From "Pariah" to "St. Judy": the luckiest martyr "
  July 8, 2005

"The Supreme Court's jackboot liberals"
  June 29, 2005

"The history of smoking guns"
  June 23, 2005

"Juries and lynch mobs: What if Jackson had been on trial in Massachusetts?"
  June 16, 2005

"Friedman's imaginary India"
  June 8, 2005

"France's magnificant non!"
  June 1, 2005

"There's their way or the Galloway"
  May 26, 2005

"Join the 14 Per Cent Club! We won!"
  May 20, 2005

"The decline of the left, from Laura Bush to the mayor of Spokane"
  May 11, 2005

"Tricky politics: the return of the ivory-billed woodpecker"
  May 4, 2005

"A suicide in Kerala"
  April 21, 2005

"Message in a bottle"
  April 13, 2005

"Three card monte and the one-party state"
  April 12, 2005

"From Kennan to Schiavo: Realism and hypocrisy"
  March 23, 2005

"Dr. Arnold's diet, take a steroid, kick a woman"
  March 9, 2005

"An American Jew laments decline in Jewish influence; Roe v Wade: Nixon's ultimate dirty trick?"
  March 3, 2005

"Hunter Thompson and Gonzo: Better than Kerouac, not as good as Abbey"
  February 25, 2005

"No surprise: "Suprise parties" can kill"
  February 17, 2005

"Back to Salem: Shanley prison-bound"
  February 16, 2005

"OK to call for Arundhati Roy to be blown up, but not Arnold Schwarzenegger?"
  February 1, 2005

"The CIA's new campus spies"
  January 25, 2005

"Will America quit Iraq?"
  January 19, 2005

"Say, waiter, where's the blood on my margarita glass?"
  January 11, 2005

"Affairs of the heart"
  January 9, 2005




Read Articles by Year:
2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000




All content © 1970-2009
The Columbus Free Press
Disclaimer