Exclusive: U.S. lawmakers push for new controls on ex-spies working
overseas
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[October 01, 2021]
By Christopher Bing
(Reuters) - The U.S. intelligence
community's budget bill could place new controls and reporting
requirements on former U.S. spies, according to the author of the
legislation, making it harder for them to work as contractors for
foreign governments following a 2019 Reuters investigation into American
mercenary hackers.
"People in the intelligence community develop skills necessary to
protect our country against foreign bad actors, and that intellectual
property really belongs to the United States,” House Intelligence
Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, a California Democrat, said in an
interview with Reuters on Thursday.
"It is not to be used by foreign governments to spy on Americans or to
violate the human rights of dissidents," he said. "We are going to make
sure that doesn't happen again."
The bill passed through the House Intelligence Committee with bipartisan
support on Thursday. It now goes to the full chamber for consideration,
before moving onto the Senate, and then potentially the Presidents' desk
for signature.
Though it is not yet close to becoming law, the amendment is noteworthy
because it is the first of its kind, experts say.
"This bill singles out the intelligence agencies for some of the most
sweeping and punitive post-employment restrictions Congress has ever
adopted," said former U.S. National Security Agency General Counsel
Stewart Baker.
The purpose of the provision is to discourage certain former spies from
providing intelligence-focused security services to countries with poor
human rights records, said congressional staffers familiar with the
bill.
It imposes a requirement that some former officials, who occupied
particularly sensitive positions, report to the U.S. government their
employment for foreign governments when providing "national security,
intelligence, or internal security" services. It also bars such
employment for 30 months after leaving the U.S. intelligence community.
This includes working for a foreign government through a private
company.
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House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff (D-CA) arrives
for a national security briefing before members of the House of
Representatives on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., March 10, 2020.
REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo
'TIME WE ACTED'
Reuters reporting previously revealed the existence of a secret,
American-staffed, mercenary hacking unit in the United Arab Emirates
known as Project Raven.
Those revelations led to multiple U.S. government policy changes
over the last two years, such as requiring that the Office of the
Director of National Intelligence provide a report to Congress on
the issue of mercenary spies.
“I have to think the case you (Reuters) uncovered is not an isolated
case," said Schiff, who added that they have been seeking this
information from the intelligence community for some time and don’t
have good visibility on it. "I think it is time we acted.”
The Reuters reports showed how Project Raven spied on a wide range
of targets, from American journalists to Middle Eastern human rights
activists and regional political rivals of the UAE.
The amendment’s introduction follows just two weeks after three
Project Raven operatives were charged by the U.S. Justice Department
for violating U.S. export control and hacking laws. The defendants,
all former U.S. intelligence operatives, admitted to hacking
American computer networks from Abu Dhabi on behalf of an Emirati
intelligence agency.
(Reporting by Christopher Bing; editing by Edward Tobin)
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