Pentagon reportedly running secret army of 60,000 around the world

Pentagon reportedly running secret army of 60,000 around the world​




The Pentagon is running a 60,000-strong secret army made up of soldiers, civilians and contractors, who travel the world under false identities embedded in consultancies and name-brand companies — without the knowledge of the American people or most of Congress — according to a report.

The top-secret army was created by the Pentagon over the past 10 years as part of a program called “signature reduction,” and operates both domestically and internationally using a low-profile force of clandestine warriors who sometimes don civilian clothes as they carry out their assignments, Newsweek reported.

The force is 10 times the size of the covert elements of the CIA, comes with a cost of more than $900 million, and engages about 130 private companies in operations in locales like the Middle East and Africa, the report said.

Despite its size and budget, Congress has never held a hearing on the undercover army.

About half of the “signature reduction” force is made up of special forces, the highly-trained commandos who pursue terrorists around the world, including in Iran and North Korea.

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Ryan Fogle is reportedly part of the secret army, and was found out while trying to recruit a “double agent” in Russia.

AP/FSB Public Relations Center
Military intelligence specialists comprise the second largest element inside the force.

But the newest and fastest-growing group in the unit is made up of cyber-warriors who use false personas and “nonattribution” or “misattribution” techniques online to disguise themselves so they can track high-value targets, collect “publicly accessible information” and engage in influence campaigns to manipulate social media.

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Ryan C. Fogle is questioned at the Russian Federal Security Service after he was arrested in Russia while working at the US embassy.

“Signature reduction” programs, which are administered by a number of shadowy government organizations, have no unclassified definition, and are portrayed by the Defense Intelligence Agency as what “individuals might use to … describe operational security measures for a variety of activities and operations.”

The report said ultimately the programs shield the operators from being identified by the groups they are tracking online and cover their cyber tracks to keep their identities secret to protect them from retaliation.

One recently retired senior officer who oversaw one of the programs said no one is fully aware of their extent or the implications they have for military warfare.

“Everything from the status of the Geneva Conventions – were a soldier operating under false identity to be captured by an enemy – to Congressional oversight is problematic,” the person told Newsweek. “Most people haven’t even heard of the term ‘signature reduction’ let alone what it creates.”

The report cited one instance in which a clandestine operative had been outed while trying to recruit a double agent.

Moscow in May 2013 ordered a “third secretary” by the name of Ryan Fogle to leave the country and released photos of him wearing a blond wig and carrying four pairs of sunglasses, a street map, a compass, a flashlight, a Swiss Army knife, and a cell phone that, according to one media article, looked like it had “been on this earth for at least a decade.”

Fogle’s expulsion attracted the attention of the international news media and brought scorn from retired CIA officials about the lack of tradecraft.

But Fogle’s mocked cellphone hid a more sophisticated device.

Brenda Connolly – not her real name, Newsweek pointed out – works for a small defense contractor that produces instruments for “signature reduction.”

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Amid Ryan Fogle's 2013 arrest, Moscow reportedly found his disguises -- including wigs and four pairs of sunglasses.
Amid Ryan Fogle’s 2013 arrest, Moscow reportedly found his disguises — including wigs and four pairs of sunglasses.
AFP/Getty Images

Connolly said Fogle’s seemingly outdated phone concealed a “covert communications” device and that he was wearing a radio frequency identification shield to block electronic tracking.

“And who do you think implants those devices?” Connolly asks, then answers. “Military guys, special ops guys working to support even more secretive operations.”
 
Was this written from the Department of No Shit?

Back in the day they used to just issue fake death certificates and have "helicopter crashes" before moving them out with a new identity.

Shit, in the 70's and 80's they'd give motherfuckers a new face.

That's why it used to be "No identifying marks or scars" for your really advanced PRP shit. Get a tattoo, and you're back to being a normal snake eater. Get too major of a scar they can't repair, back to your old unit with a "stunning rescue" and "survived 2 years in the Columbian jungle eating rats and chink faces."

I don't know why this is supposed to be some big shocker.
 
Two claims in this article produce zero surprise in me. That there should be a pool 60,000 operatives working to do illegal things around the world; and that congress should have no idea what those people are doing.
 
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This is a bad summary of a much better Newsweek story. (But thank you for sharing it.)


It's not particularly revelatory, but it's a fun gee-whiz story.

Two claims in this article produce zero surprise in me. That there should be a pool 60,000 operatives working to do illegal things around the world; and that congress should have no idea what those people are doing.

They know. They fund it all. The article says they haven't held hearings, which is normal. Can you imagine the Squad grilling DCS officers about operational techniques or intelligence targets in front of a TV audience?
 
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If it's being reported on, it's not that secret

And the fella interviewed is the double-agent, working for Russia. No way made would a member of a top-secret army, hidden from the highest echelons of power, spill his guts like a basic bitch.
 
I imagine most places these people are sent to know pretty much who is the American spy.
Protip - anyone with this notepad overseas is probably US mil affiliated
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I liky NYPost, but the Fogle case is extremely pedestrian and something almost all countries have been doing for decades already, you don't have to have a "secret army", it is expected that the regular ol spying agency will have spies posing as embassy officials, who try to do various spook things, like trying to buy information or recruit agents.
 
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What throws me is the compass. I imagine him shooting azimuths and carefully tracing intersections and resections in his Atlas Moskva, trying to figure out where he is, while pedestrians walk around him. I don't know, maybe he needed it to find a dead drop in a park. "From the stone that looks like a dancing elephant, face 118 degrees and take ten paces, then dig."
 
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