Posted on Dec 19, 2014
Marine Corps Times
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From: Marine Corps Times

The Pentagon's main arm for fighting improvised explosive devices engaged in unauthorized surveillance of U.S. citizens and companies and improperly collected intelligence from Afghan farmers when an analyst posed as a college student, according to an inspector general's report released Thursday.

The intelligence efforts by the Joint IED Defeat Organization — established to fight roadside bombs in Iraq and Afghanistan — were found to violate executive orders and regulations.

Two military officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly, confirmed that Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, released in June after five-years captivity by the Taliban, was one of the Americans on which JIEDDO collected information.

JIEDDO acknowledged that the inspector general's findings but a spokesman said they were minor, technical issues that have been addressed.

The incidents involved regarded technicalities of policy and process and were corrected as soon as it was recognized," spokesman David Small said in a statement. "Many of the IG's recommendations to assure such actions do not occur in the future have already been acted upon."

The Pentagon inspector general found that members of JIEDDO's Counter-IED Operations Intelligence Integration Center (COIC) "improperly collected information about U.S. persons. At the direction of COIC and JIEDDO leadership, analysts collected information on U.S. companies and their CEOs, U.S. hostages held by foreign extremists, and specific U.S. persons. In addition COIC analysts improperly collected intelligence using aliases and uncoordinated cover."

The information JIEDDO collected came from "open sources," which include newspapers, websites and other publicly accessible media. It was not electronic eavesdropping or surveillance.

The inspector general released the report in response to a Freedom of Information Act request made by several news organizations including USA TODAY. Large parts of the report have been redacted for classified information and names.

Among the violations found by the inspector general:

• JIEDDO violated federal regulations by collecting information about Bergdahl, the inspector general found. Since the organization had no hostage-rescue mission, collecting information about Bergdahl was improper. The agency, which has some specialized software, was acting on a request from military officials to help find Bergdahl.

• Contractors in 2012 improperly collected information about U.S. companies, whose names are blacked out in the report. The effort was related to JIEDDO's concerns about the FATIMA Group, the Pakistani manufacturer of fertilizer, the main component of homemade explosives used against U.S. troops in Afghanistan. A senior government official refused to collect the information and was reassigned to other duties, the report showed.

• A JIEDDO contract employee in 2009, posing as an American college student, called farmers in Kandahar and asked them about their crops and their opinions about the U.S.-led war effort. The calls violated regulations about using aliases and unqualified, unauthorized personnel collecting human intelligence.

• JIEDDO collected information on Facebook and Twitter. The discussion of JIEDDO's actions on social media are entirely redacted from the report.

http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/story/news/nation/2014/12/18/pentagon-ied-intelligence/20583805/
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