The online mega-retailer has a little-known $600-million contract with the CIA.
February 12, 2014
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President Obama is now considering whether to order the Central
Intelligence Agency to kill a U.S. citizen in Pakistan. That’s big news
this week. But hidden in plain sight is the fact that Amazon would be an
accessory to the assassination.
Amazon has a $600 million contract with the CIA to provide the agency
with “cloud” computing services. After final confirmation of the deal
several months ago, Amazon declared: “We look forward to a successful
relationship with the CIA.”
The relationship means that Amazon -- logoed with a smiley-face arrow
from A to Z, selling products to millions of people every week -- is
responsible for keeping the CIA’s secrets and aggregating data to help
the agency do its work. Including drone strikes.
Drone attacks in Pakistan are “an entirely CIA operation,” New York Times reporter Mark Mazzetti said Tuesday night in an
interview on
the PBS NewsHour. He added that “the Pakistani government will not
allow the [U.S.] military to take over the mission because they want to
still have the sort of veneer of secrecy that the CIA provides.”
The sinister implications of Amazon’s new CIA role have received scant public attention so far.
As the largest Web retailer in the world, Amazon has built its business
model on the secure accumulation and analysis of massive personal data.
The firm’s Amazon Web Services division gained the CIA contract amid
fervent hopes that the collaboration will open up vast new vistas for
the further melding of surveillance and warfare.
Any presidential decision to take the life of an American citizen is a
subset of a much larger grave problem. Whatever the nationality of
those who hear the menacing buzz of a drone overhead, the hijacking of
skies to threaten and kill those below is unconscionable. And, as
presently implemented, unconstitutional.
On Feb. 11 the Times
reported that
the Obama administration “is debating whether to authorize a lethal
strike against an American citizen living in Pakistan who some believe
is actively plotting terrorist attacks.” In effect, at issue is whether
the president should order a summary execution -- an assassination -- on
his say-so.
The American way isn’t supposed to be that way. The “due process of
law” required by the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution
is not supposed to be whatever the president decides to do.
A free and independent press is crucial for confronting such dire
trends. But structural factors of corporate power continue to undermine
the potential of journalism. The Washington Post is a grim case in
point.
Six months ago, Jeff Bezos -- the CEO and main stakeholder of Amazon
-- bought the Post. But the newspaper’s ongoing CIA-related coverage
does not inform readers that the CIA’s big contract with Amazon is
adding to the personal wealth of the Post’s sole owner.
This refusal to make such conflict-of-interest disclosures is much
more than journalistic evasion for the sake of appearances. It’s a
marker for more consolidation of corporate mega-media power with
government power. The leverage from such convergence is becoming
ever-less acknowledged or conspicuous as it becomes ever-more routine
and dominant.
After
e-mail correspondence with
me about the non-disclosure issue in early January, the executive
editor of the Washington Post, Martin Baron, declined to answer
questions from media outlets on the subject. On Jan. 15 -- when I
delivered a RootsAction.org
petition under
the heading “Washington Post: Readers Deserve Full Disclosure in
Coverage of CIA,” signed by 30,000 people, to the newspaper’s
headquarters -- Baron declined to meet with me or designate any employee
to receive the petition. Clearly the Post management wants this issue
to go away.
But, as I wrote to Baron last month, it’s all too convenient -- and
implausible -- for the Washington Post to claim that there would be “no
direct relevance of the [Amazon-CIA] cloud services contract to coverage
of such matters as CIA involvement in rendition of prisoners to regimes
for torture; or in targeting for drone strikes; or in data aggregation
for counterinsurgency.”
The surveillance state and the warfare state continue to converge.
The Washington Post does not want us to insist on journalistic
disclosure. Amazon does not want us to insist on moral accountability.
President Obama does not want us to insist on basic constitutionality.
It would be a shame to oblige any of them.
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