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- <text id=93TT0993>
- <title>
- Feb. 22, 1993: Next For The CIA: Business Spying?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 22, 1993 Uncle Bill Wants You
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESPIONAGE, Page 60
- Next For The CIA: Business Spying?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Snooping on foreign companies has become the most hotly debated
- topic in the U.S. intelligence community
- </p>
- <p>By THOMAS MCCARROLL--With reporting by David S. Jackson/San Francisco, William
- McWhirter/Chicago and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> When executives at Science Applications International Corp.,
- a California-based high-tech company, learned that a former
- employee had been stealing the codes to their computer programs,
- they brought charges against the man. But when they later found
- out that he had given those secrets to a spy ring that included
- Japanese corporate giants Mitsubishi, Nissan and Toshiba, there
- was little they could do to recoup the competitive advantage
- they had lost. The man was sentenced to six years in jail, but
- no action was ever brought against the Japanese companies, which
- claimed they did not know the information was stolen.
- </p>
- <p> So it goes for hundreds of U.S. companies that, like SAIC, are
- routinely spied on by either foreign companies or foreign intelligence
- agencies acting on behalf of foreign interests. Once companies
- suspect they have been targeted, they usually have only two
- choices: hire a private investigator or contact local law enforcement.
- But a growing number of legislators and business leaders are
- pushing to allow American companies to call on the services
- of a special group of spies: the Central Intelligence Agency.
- </p>
- <p> With the end of the cold war, the CIA has become more willing
- to consider sharing its business intelligence with private companies.
- At his confirmation hearing two weeks ago, the agency's new
- director, R. James Woolsey, told Senators that the issue "is
- the hottest current topic in intelligence policy." He is considering
- a controversial plan--opposed by many civil libertarians and
- some of the agency's former directors--to offer the CIA's
- intelligence to U.S. corporations. If the plan is approved,
- the CIA would pass on foreign trade secrets to U.S. firms as
- well as ferret out foreign agents snooping on American companies.
- It would also plant undercover agents in overseas firms to find
- out if those businesses are violating U.S. patents.
- </p>
- <p> If turned loose, the spy service could eventually pay its own
- way by reducing rip-offs abroad. Trade-secret theft cost U.S.
- companies more than $100 billion in lost revenues last year.
- If left unchecked, analysts estimate, the losses could grow
- an additional 50% by the year 2003.
- </p>
- <p> While industrial espionage may be a sticky subject for Americans,
- it's common in most other countries. Stealing U.S. industrial
- secrets was a cottage industry for the former Soviet KGB. Its
- infamous "Department X" routinely targeted American high-tech
- secrets. Although the unit was disbanded, the practice continues
- under the Russian government. The Chinese also regularly eavesdrop
- on U.S. firms. But the most active spying on U.S. companies
- lately has not been by agents from old cold-war adversaries.
- Instead, the spies are employed by allies, including Germany,
- South Korea and even Canada. Among the most relentless--and
- efficient--have been the Israeli secret services. Last year
- Recon/Optical, a suburban Chicago military contractor, charged
- the Israeli air force with trying to steal the blueprints for
- a top-secret airborne spy camera. The Israelis agreed to settle
- the case by paying $3 million in damages. The French intelligence
- service recruited moles in the European branch offices of IBM,
- Texas Instruments and other U.S. electronics companies. A decade
- ago, an FBI sting operation caught senior-level executives at
- Hitachi and Mitsubishi trying to buy confidential information
- on the latest IBM computer chip. After initially refusing to
- submit to U.S. jurisdiction, both companies pleaded guilty to
- charges connected with the theft.
- </p>
- <p> As global competition heats up, spying among allies will grow
- more intense, says Peter Schweizer, author of the recently published
- book, Friendly Spies. Despite its persistent denials, Schweizer
- says the U.S. intelligence community has spied on friends and
- allies in the past. And American companies, such as Motorola,
- are setting up their own business-intelligence units. "In the
- new world order," he says, "yesterday's political allies are
- today's economic competitors." Schweizer foresees a fundamental
- shift in intelligence priorities. "Business secrets have become
- more vital than military secrets," he says. "And counting machine
- tools is now more important than tracking the number of battle
- tanks."
- </p>
- <p> Most spy masters, from Richard Helms to William Casey, have
- preferred to keep the CIA out of corporate spying. Although
- the agency is forbidden to provide information directly to private
- companies, it will usually pass on tips through back channels
- when it stumbles across foreign schemes to steal commercial
- secrets. However, if the spy service happens upon foreign-trade
- secrets that would be useful to American firms, it must by policy
- keep the information to itself. That's as far as most CIA directors
- have been willing to go.
- </p>
- <p> They rejected past proposals to involve the agency in business
- intelligence because of the nightmarish legal and logistical
- questions: Should the CIA conduct counterespionage operations
- only? What about offensive actions? How would CIA business intelligence
- be disseminated? To all U.S. companies or just a select few?
- Then there is the question of how much agents can be expected
- to do on behalf of corporations. Former CIA director Robert
- Gates recalls one agent's telling him: "Mr. Gates, I'm prepared
- to give my life for my country but not for a company."
- </p>
- <p> As support for the idea builds, analysts are beginning to debate
- just how far CIA agents and officers should go in serving as
- corporate mercenaries. Most backers of the plan want the spy
- agency only to defend U.S. firms against foreign spies. Senate
- Intelligence Committee chairman Dennis DeConcini favors making
- CIA intelligence available to U.S. companies but does not support
- running special operations against Airbus or Toyota to gather
- information. Former CIA Director Stansfield Turner wants the
- agency to run both defensive and offensive operations. "For
- us to collect and use commercial intelligence is merely a matter
- of creating a level playing field," says Turner.
- </p>
- <p> But even if the CIA enters the commercial-spying business, don't
- expect a stampede of corporate customers to the doors at Langley.
- The CIA's record for accuracy is far from perfect, and many
- U.S. executives fear that suspected CIA involvement in their
- business could scare off customers and suppliers overseas. They're
- also afraid that American companies themselves may eventually
- fall under the spy agency's watchful eye.
- </p>
- <p> There is some question whether the CIA spooks who have spent
- their careers counting crates on the docks of Soviet ports can
- transfer those skills to deciphering the newest details of Fujitsu's
- latest supercomputer or the immediate implications of a hike
- in German interest rates. And even if they can, the bigger issue
- may be whether any short-term gains by some U.S. corporations
- will offset the potential losses in civil liberties at home
- and friendships abroad. In the end, that price may be judged
- too high to pay.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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