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Politics : Bill Clinton Scandal - SANITY CHECK -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: one_less who wrote (31617)2/2/1999 1:19:00 PM
From: Les H  Respond to of 67261
 
Spies Like Us
The Internet is changing the world's
most dangerous game
BY SAM C. GWYNNE/AUSTIN

Wild Bill Donovan would have loved the Internet.
The American spymaster who built the Office of
Strategic Services in World War II and later laid
the roots for the CIA was obsessed with
information. Donovan believed in using whatever
tools came to hand in the "great game" of
espionage. These days the Net, which has
already remade such mundane pastimes as
buying books and sending mail, is reshaping
Donovan's vocation as well.

The latest revolution isn't simply a matter of
gentlemen reading other gentlemen's e-mail. That
kind of electronic spying has been going on for
decades. In the past three or four years, the
World Wide Web has given birth to a whole
industry of point-and-click spying. The spooks
call it "open-source intelligence," and as the Net
grows, it is becoming increasingly influential. In
1995 the CIA held a contest to see who could
compile the most data about Burundi. The
winner, by a large margin, was a tiny Virginia
company called Open Source Solutions, whose
clear advantage was its mastery of the electronic
world.

Among the firms making the biggest splash in
this new world is Stratfor, Inc., a private
intelligence-analysis firm based in Austin, Texas.
Stratfor makes money by selling the results of its
sleuthing (covering nations from China to Chile)
to corporations like energy-services firm
McDermott International. Many of its predictions
are available online at www.stratfor.com.

Stratfor president George Friedman says he sees
the online world as a kind of mutually reinforcing
tool for both information collection and
distribution, a spymaster's dream. Last week his
firm was busy vacuuming up data bits from the
far corners of the world and predicting a crisis in
Ukraine. "As soon as that report runs, we'll
suddenly get 500 new Internet sign-ups from
Ukraine," says Friedman, a former political
science professor. "And we'll hear back from
some of them." Open-source spying does have
its risks, of course, since it can be difficult to tell
good information from bad. That's where Stratfor
earns its keep.

In the past month Stratfor has drawn attention to
a carefully assembled open-source report that
asserted that last month's attack on Iraq wasn't
intended just to punish Saddam Hussein for
blowing off U.N. weapons inspectors. By sorting
through thousands of pieces of publicly available
data--from Middle East newspapers to
Iraqi-dissident news--Stratfor analysts developed
a theory that the attacks were actually designed
to mask a failed U.S.-backed coup. In two
striking, contrarian intelligence briefs released on
the Internet on Jan. 5 and Jan. 6, Stratfor argued
that Saddam's lightning restructuring of the Iraqi
military, followed by executions of the army's
Third Corps commanders, was evidence that the
coup had been suppressed. Predictably, U.S.
officials said the report was wrong.

Stratfor merits more than just a curt dismissal.
The company used the same techniques to
accurately forecast the economic crisis in Asia
as well as the social and political troubles in
Indonesia, the 1998 India-Pakistan nuclear
standoff, and the 1998 rapprochement between
Iran and the U.S. Stratfor has missed a few
calls--most notably predicting that the euro would
flop--but its gritty analysis has already won
15,000 subscribers to its free website.

To turn all of this into a business, Friedman relies
on a lean staff of 20 in Austin. Several of his staff
members have military-intelligence backgrounds.
He sees the firm's outsider status as the key to
its success. Stratfor's briefs don't sound like the
usual Washington back-and-forthing, whereby
agencies avoid dramatic declarations on the
chance they might be wrong. Stratfor, says
Friedman, takes pride in its independent voice.
The Web's resources provide such a tremendous
advantage that the Stratfor team has already
been able to do away with at least one staple of
20th century spycraft. Says Friedman: "We never
go to cocktail parties."

The World to Come
Russia: New Fears
Reform is failing and nationalists and
communists are in charge. Expect them to try to
rebuild the U.S.S.R. Belarus returned to the fold
in 1998; Ukraine will be 1999's trouble spot.

Iraq: A Win at Last
Iraq will break out of its isolation in 1999. Russia,
France and China are using Iraq to show the
limits of U.S. power and, barring a U.S.-backed
coup, Saddam will gain strength.

Japan: Little Hope
Japan is squandering its savings trying to save
businesses that should disappear. Even Japan's
strong exports can't save this sick economy.
Look for growing U.S.-Japan tensions.



To: one_less who wrote (31617)2/2/1999 1:39:00 PM
From: TigerPaw  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 67261
 
please give me control of your girl friend's womb
You should seek professional help.
TP