The first rule in intelligence is to not get used. This is something Robert Young Pelton and Eason Jordan should have learned before agreeing to become rock-throwers for the Central Intelligence Agency.
As I reported on Tuesday, Pelton and Jordan were upset because they “lost” an intelligence-gathering contract with the Department of Defense. What stuns most people is that a man like Pelton (who thinks Al Qaeda is a myth, that the U.S. Military has killed thousands and thousands of people in Afghanistan and was publicly rebuked by the US Military and taken to task for his unprofessional conduct and reporting in Afghanistan) ever got close to a Department of Defense contract in the first place.
The level of incredulity is only added to by Pelton’s partner, Eason Jordan, a former CNN News exec who was forced to resign from CNN when he stated that American soldiers in Iraq had purposefully been targeting journalists.and that he deliberately covered up news in Iraq so as not to lose his Baghdad bureau.

Simply put, these two should never have been anywhere near the American military, much less a D.O.D. contract. Thankfully at some point in the process, one man seemed to realize this.
That man is Mike Furlong. According to a New York Times story on Monday (believed to have been initiated by Messrs. Pelton and Jordan), Furlong is accused of having steered the Department of Defense away from any further work with them. They allege that they had been hired by the government to create a web site and gather information about Afghanistan, but that:
…millions of dollars that were supposed to go to the Web site were redirected by Mr. Furlong toward intelligence gathering for the purpose of attacking militants.
If this were the case, we might actually have something to talk about, but that’s not what happened at all. In fact, we’re talking about two separate issues.
After Mike Furlong conducted a thorough review and noted that Pelton and Jordan had “over-promised and under-delievered,” Furlong’s boss, Rear Adm. Gregory Smith decided he no longer wanted their services and that there were groups who were better suited to work in information operations.
As you can imagine, Pelton and Jordan were not pleased. In fact, according to Furlong, Pelton sent him an e-mail threatening that, if he and Jordan weren’t reinstated, he would “blow this whole operation up,” an accusation Pelton has denied.

Contracts come and contracts go. That’s the way the cookie crumbles. Furlong went on to work with other groups who gathered open source information for the U.S. Military in Afghanistan and that might have been the end of it.
Then, in the summer of 2009, he was introduced to an incredibly talented group that, through its extensive human network in Afghanistan and Pakistan, could offer exceptional “force protection” to our troops and provide atmospherics on cultural, tribal, and interrelationships throughout the various districts and provinces the U.S. was engaged in.
It was the game-changer the Department of Defense had been looking for.
Based on the group’s prior accomplishments and deep pool of talent, a minor amount of funds were released to get it up and running as soon as possible. These funds were both legal and legitimate. What’s more, they were significantly less than the tens of millions of dollars Pelton and Jordan had been seeking for their project – a project that was in a completely different field and totally unrelated. The only thing that this group and Pelton/Jordan had in common was Mike Furlong.
This is not about anything but providing the best force protection we can provide all of those 20-somethings in foxholes,” Furlong said. “It’s about saving lives.
In record time, the new force protection organization was doing just that on an almost daily basis.
“I take stuff in open source and throw it in the intelligence pipeline,” Furlong asserted. “I don’t take this information and go directly to a kill. It is not the spot and shoot operation that he (Pelton) is making it sound like.”
Word of the new group’s success quickly spread and eventually, after everyone and his uncle had heard about them, somehow the CIA managed to stumble across their existence.
As you can imagine, Agency personnel in Kabul were not happy. Whoever these new guys were, they were cutting the CIA’s grass and doing a damn good job of it. Too good in fact.

It’s a safe bet that after having their cables sent back for multiple grammatical errors (a well-known and pedantic CIA penchant), someone at Langley finally brought the group to the attention of the powers that be at headquarters. It was an incredible embarrassment. What’s more, it was an outrage! Who at D.O.D. had the temerity to hire some other group to do what, ummmm, the CIA itself should be doing? Who’s that you say? A man named Mike Furlong? Hmmmmmmm. It seems we’ve heard that name before. In fact, aren’t there some anti-military guys running around the area who are mad at Furlong for not wanting to use their services anymore? What are their names? Pelton and Jordan you say?
It’s at this point, with the CIA’s involvement, that things really started to get ugly. As David Ignatius wrote on Thursday in the Washington Post:
The starting point for understanding this covert intrigue is that the U.S. military has long been unhappy about the quality of CIA intelligence in Afghanistan.
And it wasn’t just Afghanistan. For more than two decades, the D.O.D. has been underwhelmed with the quality of intelligence produced by the CIA and has launched a variety of measures aimed at getting the best intelligence possible… even when it meant fielding its own networks.
In essence, this has always been about one thing and one thing only – the CIA’s inability to perform for its national security partners. It is a deadly failure that continues to cost brave Americans’ their lives.
As recently as January 2010, Major General Michael T. Flynn, the Deputy Chief of Staff for Intelligence in Afghanistan; along with his advisor Captain Matt Pottinger; and Paul Batchelor, Senior Advisor for Civilian/Military Integrations at ISAF (International Security Assistance Force) published a scathing critique of American intelligence, arguing:
[T]he United States’ intelligence apparatus still finds itself unable to answer fundamental questions about the environment in which U.S. and allied forces operate in and the people they are trying to protect and persuade.
This may sound incredibly obvious, but it bears clarifying. The Department of Defense depends on timely, actionable intelligence. It simply cannot function without it. It’s critical not only to a successful outcome in Afghanistan, but to our national security overall and to making sure our troops return home alive.

If the truth be told, the Department of Defense would gladly accept intelligence from the CIA if it was of any value, but the CIA (as Bob Baer recently pointed out in GQ Magazine) is so bloated and badly broken, that it is collapsing under its own dysfunctional weight and is incapable of fulfilling its mission.
With an impotent CIA on its hands, the D.O.D. was long ago left with no choice but to look for other means to fulfill its intelligence needs. Afghanistan is just another in a long list of battle spaces where the military has been faced with the fact that no matter how well intentioned the CIA might be, when push comes to shove, they simply can’t move the ball forward, much less get it across the goal line.
It’s no surprise that the New York Times jumped all over this story. Like the lamestream media leaping aboard the faux run-away Prius tale in California, evil private organizations alleged to be swooping in with guns and bravado fits the Times’ liberal narrative to a T.
It also fits the Central Intelligence Agency’s.
The fact that private teams are doing what the CIA should be doing, but can’t, is an incredible embarrassment for Langley. It’s also incredibly demoralizing for the good men and women at the CIA who would like to kick ass and take names, but are hung up in the Agency’s sea of red tape and culture of bureaucratic backside-covering. To many, the Central Intelligence Agency looks more like IBM (with managers only concerned with getting promoted) than the world’s premiere intelligence outfit.
But none of this is surprising, especially in light of the outrageous, irresponsible comments made Wednesday by CIA Director Leon Panetta, who wouldn’t know an Al Qaeda operative if he tripped over one.
According to Panetta, we’ve got Al Qaeda so disrupted and on the run that they’re now ineffectual. Hurray! The system worked!
I’ve got a message for Director Panetta. You haven’t been targeting Al Qaeda, you’ve been targeting the Taliban. Just because the occasional foreign fighter (who has traveled to Afghanistan or Pakistan to fight in the jihad) turns up in the rubble of a drone strike doesn’t mean you get to count him as AQ. And while we’re on the subject of drone strikes, you know darn well where most of the high-quality intel for those strikes is coming from – and it isn’t from the anti-gun, sit-on-the-F.O.B.-and-wait-for-the-intel-to-walk-in-barefooted culture of the CIA.

I know for certain the Director knows this. Everyone at Langley knows it, and that’s why an angry Pelton and Jordan were such easy marks to exploit. Emasculated, the only thing the CIA is capable of these days is sitting by the roadside throwing stones at the brave men and women who pass by on the way to courageously taking the fight to our enemies.
And as these men and women fight, there’s a despicable tactic occasionally employed in the world of espionage. It’s known as graymail. Graymail is when one party threatens to expose a nation’s classified information unless (and until) it gets what it wants. In this case, Pelton and Jordan will keep talking to anyone who’ll listen until they get what they want. And orchestrating everything, like one of the jealous, ugly stepsisters in Cinderella, is the Central Intelligence Agency.
Make no mistake, the CIA badly wants to humiliate the Department of Defense; even if it means destroying a great man like Mike Furlong in the process. Gotta love that graymail.
This is nothing more than a shakedown, plain and simple. It’s also something the CIA should be extremely ashamed of, especially considering that an agency which once so prided itself on tradecraft has, in this case, been so incredibly obvious.
Think about it. What are the odds that at a time when the CIA, Pelton, and Jordan were all upset with the Department of Defense, a memo was magically written and fortuitously leaked by the CIA station chief in Kabul complaining about “Furlong’s activities”? What an incredible coincidence! (And if you indeed believe it was a coincidence, I’ve got some original photos of Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid spitting on Lenin’s grave I’d like to sell you.)
Anyone with a modicum of brain power can see what’s going on here. If the Central Intelligence Agency would put half as much effort into repairing its own damaged house as it has into spewing venom at the D.O.D. and besmirching the character of an exceptional and honorable warrior like Mike Furlong, our nation would be a hell of a lot safer (despite what our clueless Leon Panetta says) than it is now.

And as for Pelton and Jordan, let me offer a small piece of advice. You fellas were incredibly lucky to get anywhere near the Department of Defense. I’ve got a strong feeling that’s not going to happen again. In the meantime, since the CIA is so fond of using you, maybe you should ask to be put on the books so at least you’ll get paid for it. Of course, in the immortal words of Dennis Miller, that’s just my opinion; I could be wrong.
Finally, I want to share an email regarding this situation that has been making the rounds in the intelligence community. I think most real Americans will agree with what it says:
Key players are providing intelligence that a legally hamstrung, do-little Agency is unable to provide. Who can blame the military – with lives on the line – for turning to another means to get fresh, valuable “force protection.” They’re not getting it from CIA.
Rather than restructure to provide better intelligence, what do we get? Politics and cries of foul play. And more rules drawn up by lawyers to hamper the Pentagon from hiring these effective “outsiders” who are getting the job done, taking incredible risks, and inadvertently making current Agency officers look ineffective.
Bravo. I couldn’t have said it better myself. The only thing I can add is a deeply heartfelt thank you to Mike Furlong and all of those who risk everything to keep our nation safe. America owes you a debt it can never repay. God bless you.






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675 Comments
The CIA represents the largest threat to American liberty. Hilarious how the neocons and even some paleocons who have not fully thought about it think they are fine. Let's see, a secretive, unaccountable government agency…..one that has been caught dealing drugs. One that commits MURDER. Nah, let's complain about people receiving unemployment after working their whole lives as the problem with big government. LOL!
Just look at the CIA's backing of a KING and overthrowing a democractic republic in Iran. Beyond the short term gain of a puppet dictator they KNEW there would be "blowback" (they used that very term) and radicalize the region. They were grooming the next boogeyman enemy for the US so the middle class slaves can be kept in fear and poverty.
If Pelton sent Furlong a threatening email to blow up the operation and then denied it, let's go to the email and see what he said. Pelton wouldn't be so stupid to do something like he threatened and then put it in writing would he?
Good-bye, Randy.
Isn't it possible that the CIA planted the story to get rid of Furlong? (With Pelton and Jordan as necessary collateral damage). They gain nothing from the story becoming public. And clearly some very senior and smart US military people thought their service was worth paying for. Maybe the CIA felt threatened/embarrassed and leaked everything for their own twisted purposes?? God forbid they should all be on the same side…..
For some odd reason, today I'm having trouble caring about the fight for freedom in Afghanistan when it's disappearing by the minute right here.
Sadly, I believe this story is essentially correct. Although there are some brave and competent people in the field, Langley is run by bureaucrats, lawyers and college boys and girls and the DOD knows it can't depend on them.
Great article. I would love to know the authors take on Valerie Plame and Joe Wilson. The bureacracy seemed to protect Ms.Plame.
Really? The attempt to overthrow Castro was…leftist? Gloryoski!
Thank you Mr.Thor for making crystal clear the picture at the CIA. It clearly is worse than I thought…
God Bless America
Banning any mention of the health care debate here, today, is a bad move. We look like defeated chickens, afraid to look.
Perhaps if our intelligence agencies, the DOJ and the White House would stop fighting amongst themselves and vying for superiority, they could do the job we pay them to do – protect us. This has been going on for years – it's one of the reasons 9/11 happened – and it's about time it stops. The egos and arrogance need to get out of the way and let those people who want to do their jobs do them.
If you're up to deciding for yourself, read Pelton's April '02 piece for Salon.com
http://www.salon.com/books/int/2002/04/23/pelton/...
Pelton's Jan '09 piece in Men's Journal, the Army response & his reply
http://www.mensjournal.com/new-war-for-hearts-and...
and this Mother Jones piece about the Pelton, Jordan & the DOD
http://motherjones.com/politics/2010/03/robert-yo...
As for me, I've saved copies of Pelton's pieces for redistribution & may never be back to this website again. I have no use for opinion pieces that freely mix politics, bias & quotes taken out of context.
ah, give the black community organizer a chance, whats the worse that can happen ???? huh ???
The CIA has been, from its very beginning, and will always be leftist.
"The CIA represents the largest threat to American liberty."
The Chinese, the Russians, the Islamists, the Castoristas, the Reconquista lovers, and the Chavistas would like a word with you….
"Let's see, a secretive, unaccountable government agency"
The CIA isn't "unaccountable" no matter HOW you try to spin it. It is overseen by all branches of the Federal government (which in and of itself brings of issues, but unaccountability isn't one of them).
And other than that, you mean EXACTLY like we have had in some form or another since THE REVOLUTION?
"one that has been caught dealing drugs."
Just like PRETTY MUCH EVERY SINGLE LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCY ON THE PLANET, even the ones who are NOT corrupt.
"One that commits MURDER."
It is an INTELLIGENCE ORGANIZATION. It is SUPPOSED to commit murder when it is necessary.
"Just look at the CIA's backing of a KING and overthrowing a democractic republic in Iran."
Because that "Democratic Republic" was a stooge of Moscow that was threatening to auction off the absolutely vital Anglo-Iranian oil concession to the Kremlin at a low ebb of Western power. I DO believe the CIA etc al. should have tried harder to strike a deal with Mossadegh to avoid it, but the overthrow in and of itself was hardly unjustifiable.
" Beyond the short term gain of a puppet dictator they KNEW there would be "blowback" (they used that very term) and radicalize the region."
…Unless said "puppet" dictator took the necessary steps to HEAD OFF the problem. Which is exactly what they TRIED to get the Shah to do pretty much since they placed him back on the throne. Unfortunately, the Shah was no puppet, as you assert. If he WAS, the Iranian Revolution might have been averted. But no, the Shah was too damned corrupt and incompetent to make the reforms necessary to prolong his regime and the entire world suffers as a result.
"They were grooming the next boogeyman enemy for the US so the middle class slaves can be kept in fear and poverty."
Um, no they weren't, as the effing DOCUMENTATION of Operation Ajax shows. If for no other reason than that boogeyman was already in existence, and it was named THE UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS. You remember that, when your teacher taught you about the Cold War? Didn't think so. They tried as hard as they could to try and eliminate that future radicalization, and it wasn't entirely their fault that it happened (particularly since it had been going on for half a century by the time Mossadegh was kicked out).
There are plenty of health-care stories on the site. Feel free to comment on any or all of them.
Randy,
Please get off your mom's couch and put your pants on. It's time to take your medicine
C.I.A. has covered up the 'Fort Hood Massacre' and the 'Detroit Bomber'. The C.I.A is an inept govt. 'spy organization' that couldn't 'Find it's Ass with both hands.' Obama has given a 'green light' to our enemys. That if you attack us, there are no consequences. The Justice Department is full of subversives that will tip off any 'accused' with inside information on the government's cases against them. Eric Holder is an 'Enemy of the United States.' He should be put in hand-cuffs and frog marched thru the streets. Citizens should be allowed to throw rotting vegetables at this Imposter. Holder has 'terrorized the United States long enough.
The CIA represents the largest threat to American liberty
Yeah right! Our greatest threat is Obama at the moment and if you can't see that you are blind and dumb.
I read Gen. Flynn's report when it first came out. His call for Defense Dept civilian intelligence analysts to go to Afghanistan and get involved in local politics made me ask myself, "Isn't that the CIA's job?" I am glad someone with a Breitbart column recognized this too.
I read all of the articles you linked to and didn't find your evidence compelling at all. While he makes some valid points there's huge bias in all his pieces, the interview and even his replies in the comments of his MJ article.
There is obvious bias in his disdain for our troops (90% of his commentary was negative except for his admittance that it is indeed a just war in the interview article).
There is obvious bias in pointing out the problems with intelligence gathering on the ground when everyone involved openly admits they are learning as they go. He's writing these pieces and doing that interview knowing full well that he has a project he was hoping to make millions on from our government that looks all that much better the more bad press our current efforts get.
He has two fully different sets of bias going on all throughout those articles.
In the interview piece he was commenting on the Military disdain for Media and said "…the press is actually faster and more intelligent than the military is. They can assess a military situation long before the military figures it out."
That comment could only come out of the mouth of yet another liberal journalist that thinks his s*it doesn't stink. Military would love journalists if they could report evenly and show a shred of patriotism.
It's sad how many journalists think they're being patriots by regularly ripping on our military. At least a lot of the other ones are really just liberal journalists, this guy also has millions of dollars riding on making military intelligence gathering look bad.
Index Mother Jones by subject, and see if they give anything even handed treatment.
I used to read it regularly, then missed about 4 months worth. The last one I read before the break hauled a politician over the coals for /not/ doing something. The first one I read after the break raked the same politicitian over the coals for /doing/ what they were jumping him for not doing just 4 months before.
The first issue I read after the break was also the last one I ever picked up.
[...] In this case, the Agency jumped right into an offensive operation targeting this DoD sponsored program totally by-passing the age old accepted ritual of hijacking or at least “piggybacking” What does that tell us? Well, it tells me that whatever these guys are doing is kicking somebody’s ass! It tells me that whatever these guys are doing is reverberating in hallow halls where budgets are being decided! In other words, the Agency could not afford to let this go on in its current iteration. Not because the Agency sits around and dreams up ways to scuttle effective programs which help the war effort. It’s simply because someday very soon, someone is going to say to the Director “Who are these guys and why don’t they work for you?” and the subsequent conversation will along the lines of “Well, we need to continue to fund them” And that is unacceptable to the Director. You have to understand, not since Colby has a Director of CIA been an actual spy. (One could argue Gates but that brings personal issues of mine into play so let’s not go there.) [...]
They are heavily influenced by the Dept of State, and meddled with by Congress. Neither are really interested in reality.
Mike Furlong is a close personal friend and colleague. I also have known the principal operational player involved for thirty plus years, am familiar with the operation and some of its stellar components and results, which made OGA not only look inept, but incompetent as well. This was exacerbated by the fact that OGA knew full well that the contracted net would continue to run circles around them, would never work for OGA under any circumstances and therefore couldn't be hijacked, co-opted or controlled. OGA decided to burn down a vital and life-saving enterprise because they felt they owned the land. The operation saved many lives, averted deadly disasters and accomplished far more than OGA.
Mike supervised the contract under the most difficult circumstances imaginable with everyone scrambling for the intel, taking credit for the resulting outstanding success while trying to avoid accountability at all costs. Mike found himself running a great contract, but because of its almost unbelievable success, it inevitably attracted the unwanted attention and predictable wrath of OGA locally, because it did a much better job than OGA could, for a fraction of the money and with relatively few, but extremely effective resources. Operationally Mike and the operation under discussion performed no function that OGA could not and would not have legally performed themselves, had they been capable or competent to do so. The only outstanding issue is which DOD pot the small amount of money involved came out of and who authorized its expenditure. I am dismayed to see what has been done to Mike by those who will never know or appreciate what a wonderful job he has done. I hope that someone will have the guts to retrieve him from under the bus and give him the commendation he so richly deserves from all I know, but as an old hand at this sort of thing, I doubt that it will happen.
Brad Thor has done a wonderful job here. He has hit the nail on the head and done so with insight, research and verifiable facts and quotes. I say this knowing the people involved and the facts surrounding the story. Great wotk, Brad. Hats off and thanks.
Sandab
I agree with the comments that point out the incompetency of the CIA, but I would like to point out the old addage that even a broken clock is right 2 times per day. In the particular instance of Afghanistan, I have an even more sinister theory. So, far, its the only one that covers all the facts. The American military is down to like 1 year on an 18 month deadline to start pulling out of Afghanistan. What if a secret deal has already been cut. In exchange for a peaceful Afghanistan after the Americans leave (Power sharing and opium revenue sharing. No attempts to overthrow Karzai), The CIA and OGA have agreed to give the military lousy or no intel. It has also agreed to protect key Taliban and Al Queda leaders. It will do as much as possible to mitigate or destroy any DOD intelligence operations that are a threat to key Taliban leadership. The government has complied with Paki requests to keep the American military out of Waziristan province (where AQ is being protected). Why is Karzai "angry" when Taliban #2 is captured? Why is the CIA so sensitive to Karzai's "soft on the Taliban policy." I think the American people would be ready to fold up the tents and bring the troops home tomorrow if they realized we were propping up another evil head of state who is making non-agression pacts with the 9/11 conspirators and the Talibans (Afghanistan and Pakistani varieties).
[...] players who are unhappy with how the D.O.D. has been gathering its intelligence and is providing force protection for our [...]
It is well known in covert circles that the CIA often uses Mark Mazetti when they want to leak a story. If Furlong's operation were to be exposed in the NYT, even if he is later cleared, he would be ruined as a covert operator. It is also well known that Jerry O'Shea over at the CIA has been "out to get" Furlong for decades.
[...] chronicled here, here, here, and here the Central Intelligence Agency via the New York Times has been waging a nasty [...]
I like Pelton's work. His books have been very enlightening and I am happy to see him get coverage.
Isn't Pelton the exact same guy that wrote the book on detailing exactly what CIA and DoD contractors do in Afghanistan and Pakistan? And if I remember it correclty, he wrote it from the ground not his mom's basement. And didn't he do it in a level headed, fair manner that helped everyone understand the need for these "black ops"? Seems like out of all the people in the mix in this story he is the only one some serious hard on the ground time going back to his time with the taliban and he has put his money where his mouth is instead of throwing rocks from the sidelines.
From everything I read, it seems like the top commander in Afghanistan doesn't want targeting patriots for hire wandering around Pakistan and McChrystal has even shut special operations down or put them directly under his control. Furlong was kicked out of his office by his DoD bosses on alledged criminal charges (stealing or diverting contract money through his buddies company IMV). And he is a hero?. Sorry you fail.
You are protecting a burn out bureaucrat who stole tax payer's money, a guy who directly went against his boss in Afghanistan and back home in Texas. And you whine about the New York Times getting the story right.
McChrystal has a history of working just fine with the Agency (you do know who he is right?), in this case it appears that Furlong's pretend pay by the day spies needed to go and the other contractors, CIA and DoD actually agreed. If DoD officers agree with the assessment on record that Furlong was off the reservation, not providing much value and stealing my April 15 money, the system clearly works.
All I see is a wannabe "black ops" blog writer defending another wannabe black ops money grubber and big organizations shedding parasites. Kudos to those who fight the fight from the ground and a broken keyboard to the peanut gallery who hide behind patriotism.
Pelton has written about a number of accomplished operators I know and trust who all claim that he did so with absolutely no respect for truth or accuracy. I do not know Mr. Pelton and am not familiar with his work, but I choose to believe them.
Ren seems to feel that Mike Furlong was charged with stealing money and was "kicked out of his office" on that basis. For Ren's information, Mike's access was revoked for administrative reasons on Monday when the NYT story broke, and he was fully reinstated that Thursday.
No one is trying to protect Mike, whose clearance level, rank and exemplary record full of decorations and commendations clearly speak to his worthiness. There is a full IG investigation under way and SECDEF has ordered a senior level top to bottom review of all DOD intelligence gathering practices. Until both are concluded, reviewed and commented upon by SECDEF, any comment by anyone else in the chain would be inappropriate. Take heart, Ren. The system does work, it just doesn't work the way you think.
Those who are totally ignorant of the many operations involved and the stellar fruits of those operations and who ignore the credentials of both Brad and Mike while extolling the virtues of the likes of canadian "journalist" Pelton are the ultimate wannabes – armchair experts with no knowledge or experience who are armed with nothing but uninformed opinions and a keyboard. Ren looks to me like a thinly veiled shill for Pelton who has never served in any capacity himself and is ignorant of the facts and circumstances involved. Maybe Ren IS Pelton.
Pelton has written about a number of accomplished operators I know and trust who all claim that he did so with absolutely no respect for truth or accuracy. I do not know Mr. Pelton and am not familiar with his work, but I choose to believe them.
Ren seems to feel that Mike Furlong was charged with stealing money and was "kicked out of his office" on that basis. For Ren's information, Mike's access was revoked for administrative reasons on Monday when the NYT story broke, and he was fully reinstated that Thursday.
No one is trying to protect Mike, whose clearance level, rank and exemplary record full of decorations and commendations clearly speak to his worthiness. There is a full IG investigation under way and SECDEF has ordered a senior level top to bottom review of all DOD intelligence gathering practices. Until both are concluded, reviewed and commented upon by SECDEF, any comment by anyone else in the chain would be inappropriate. Take heart, Ren. The system does work, it just doesn't work the way you think.
Those who are totally ignorant of the many operations involved and the stellar fruits of those operations and who ignore the credentials of both Brad and Mike while extolling the virtues of the likes of canadian "journalist" Pelton are the ultimate wannabes – armchair experts with no knowledge or experience who are armed with nothing but uninformed opinions and a keyboard. Ren looks to me like a thinly veiled shill for Pelton who has never served in any capacity himself and is ignorant of the facts and circumstances involved. Maybe Ren IS Pelton.
Very good Ren, and very wrong Sandab. I know all the players involved also (big deal right?) and you are talking out of your Arse. Your Hero Mike hijacked and looted Afpax (Pelton/Jordans) Operations. He saw how well it worked, its intelligent design & simplicity, then stole the idea and sources and formed IVM through the help of his Hungarian girlfriend he keeps on the side. Just because he is the Contracting Officer in charge gives him no right to do so. He used his advantageous position to do what he wanted to do, and that was to steal another companies ideas and use them as his own. I think the IG will see it the same way. Mr Thor would do well to get his facts right before tarnishing others who have done no wrong.
Wrong again Sandab. You would do well to background the people you comment on and know nothing about before inserting your foot in your mouth. Pelton has been deployed longer as a civilian in just about any war or conflict you could name here, longer than most military people have been deployed. If you had ever bothered to background him you would see it has given him keen insight and knowledge of players on all sides, and how things really work in differing conflicts. One of the reasons it was easy to make the Agency/OGA look bad, and make Furlong look good. You starting to get it now ? I also veiw Mr Furlong as a true patriot, but greed does have a way of getting the best of people, even good people, and that will be his downfall.
*sigh* Yes, RYP has some broad experience, and additionally that experience is valuable. But to say that "Pelton has been deployed longer as a civilian in just about any war or conflict you could name here, longer than most military people have been deployed" is simply incorrect. Yes, he has gone to a large number of dangerous places, but to call that a 'deployment' is disingenuous. Spending 9 days with a HTT in Afghanistan is hardly an extended embed, let alone a real 'deployment' of 6-18 months, as is typical. Pelton is a bit of a sensationalist and self promoter who didn't even get into his current business until his forties.
Really though, he's somewhat inconsequential to this whole story. So what; he was one of the contractors Furlong used. Big deal. Isn't what Furlong was supposedly doing (which RYP neither confirms or denies through his statements) the CIA's job? Read it here and I think you can see into the situation a bit more:http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/15/world/asia/15co...
Good lord, it sounds like we need more Furlongs!
Did somebody say » ‘Journalists’ Pelton and Jordan Get All Wet Carrying Water For Inept CIA – Big Journalism ; )
Ren is Pelton. I recognize his verbage from a comment he posted to the San Antonio paper. Its too bad Pelton and Jordan could not qualify for the minimum security clearance to get a government contract, otherwise he would have a clearer picture of just how tight government contracting is. The idea that you just go steal government money and run off do whatever the hell you want with it, is totally asinine. I have produced produced government contracts and it is almost a nightmare. Pelton's check would have come from the DFAS, not from Furlong. Pelton is just still steaming cause he was salivating over all those millions of dollars he would have gotten for doing nothing. Hell he wanted the government to front the money to create his web site. The he would have plagiarized other people's work like he did in Iraq. And, he would have left a string of unpaid ex-employees and stringers behind like he did in Iraq. Robert Young Pelton, aka Ren, is a sack of cr*p. Go back to Canada.
Pelton is a hypocrite. Here is a quote from MotherJones.com about Pelton, "But one of the companies established by Pelton and Jordan, International Safety Networks (ISN), offered to do more than just information gathering. It pitched services that merged reporting, intelligence, connection-peddling, and strategic communications. ISN’s web site boasts that it can "create sustainable solutions for clients who operate in high risk areas"—by providing "Ground Truth/Atmospherics/Street/Metrics," "Situational Awareness/Exclusive Sources," "First and exclusive access to Taliban/Hostile Media," "Tribal Liaison," and "Behind the scenes engagement" with "hostiles/locals/tribals/politicians/powerbrokers/fence-sitters…and more." As for clientele, the site indicates ISN has sought corporate and government customers, including military outfits. Pretty darn mercenary stuff for a couple of dudes who have made a career criticizing the military for using contractors.
Actually I am Robert Young Pelton. I find this site amusing because Brad Thor's fiction writing gives him exactly what hard ground time, insight and expertise to comment on… anything?
I am entertained by Mr Thor's strategically positioning myself in this story and taking great pains to worship someone under criminal investigation. Sadly much of what he invents or suspects simply is…well…fiction.
My two decades of work are available for all to see and read. Despite the fictional inventions of this blog, the record of my involvement in Pakistan and Afghanistan as well as my intimate knowledge of jihadi groups, warlords and key players is neither anonymous or vague.
I have also gone on record in a number of places like Fox TV in which I detail exactly what the DoD requested from us (a major buy in to our new subscription service) I have never accused Michael Furlong of anything, the U.S. Government and his coworkers and other entities have and there are multiple investigations into his activities. None of this has anything to do with me but from what I have read his fears, allegations, dates, facts and recollection don't match the legal record.
Suffice it to say that his employers are investigating him and I have no part in making allegations nor do I have any stake in the outcome. Furlong was a guy commanded by a four star to urgently find funding for a critical need to support the warfighter. He failed. End of story.
Mr Thor presents my company as being somehow miffed or in a competitive position. We offered a subscription much like IraqSlogger, the taxpayers, media, embassies, military or even bloggers are free to sign on or not or cancel their subscription at any time. I don't quite get the problem with that. I continue to advise and support our efforts overseas. Usually on an unpaid basis since I have many friends over there.
I have no idea what Michael Furlong was doing and I never worked for Admiral Smith nor did the DoD opt in to our services. I sense an anti-CIA agenda here and I find the select trashing of serving Americans overseas to be the epitome of hypocrisy. Many, if not most, of the people Furlong financed were former Agency employees. So how can you praise the quality of their work and then trash them?
As for the other speculation here, I see "Old Blue" the Kansas blowhard doing his obsessive anonymous stalking and a few other anonymous, unsourced allegations. Please publish "the operators" names and specifically point out your grievances. They dont' exist but they sound good to type it on a blog.
My record stands. I have spent more time in Afghanistan with more groups than most and I travel freely throughout the country. I am happy to share my resources and insight with those that want to make a difference.
As for Brad Thor's "advice". Thanks but no thanks. I will let the top command decide who they trust and my guess it will be based on results not an impressive history of writing fiction. You are entitled to your opinion but its not based on anything other being fed "insider" information. Psyops is a beautiful thing Brad.
Peace out
RYP
[...] Big Journalism: “Emasculated, the only thing the CIA is capable of these days is sitting by the roadside [...]
Perhaps if our intelligence agencies, the DOJ and the White House would stop fighting amongst themselves and vying for superiority, they could do the job we pay them to do – protect us. This has been going on for years – it's one of the reasons 9/11 happened – and it's about time it stops. The egos and arrogance need to get out of the way and let those people who want to do their jobs do them. Bearings|Bearing|Bearing news|power transmission
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Nice piece of work from Brad Thor, most articles about this subject are so prejudged. He has done his homework before writing this article as always.
The different departments have to understand that they are on the same side, or at least have a lot of the same goals.
It is always a mystery about what is really going on when you are dealing with the CIA. They spread so many half truths and false intelligence to throw people off the trail of where they are really headed to. But that is why they are successful at what they do.
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I fully agree with "Rather than restructure to provide better intelligence, what do we get? Politics and cries of foul play. And more rules drawn up by lawyers to hamper the Pentagon from hiring these effective “outsiders” who are getting the job done, taking incredible risks, and inadvertently making current Agency officers look ineffective."
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Pelton has written about a number of accomplished operators I know and trust who all claim that he did so with absolutely no respect for truth or accuracy. I do not know Mr. Pelton and am not familiar with his work, but I choose to believe them.
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Unfortunately, I think this story is essentially correct. Although there are good people and responsible, Langley is run by bureaucrats, lawyers and college boys and girls and the Defense Department knows it can count on them.
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I will never trust CIA this agency should not exist.
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It is well known in covert circles that the CIA often uses Mark Mazetti when they want to leak a story. If Furlong's operation were to be exposed in the NYT, even if he is later cleared, he would be ruined as a covert operator. It is also well known that Jerry O'Shea over at the CIA has been "out to get" Furlong for decades.
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I wonder how this whole thing works out after the series of Wikileaks publications? This will probably affect how these agencies will do business in the future. The thing that will happen now is less documentation due to fear of being suddenly in public.
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Seems like we keep spending more and more to protect less and less. Must we become a totalitarian state so that we can become free?
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Pieces of advice for Jordan and Pelton…you guys are lucky enough, you can go anywhere around the Dept. of Defense. Stick to it.
Good word Pelton and Jordan.
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Good word Pelton and Jordan.
CIA shouldn't be existed you know
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Omg… This is another tragic story… People should be looking more after each other.
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Every government institution is like this. They keep hiding what makes them look bad. They will do anything in their power just to stay on top. Even if it makes the people suffer. they say they do these things to protect the people but in reality they are just covering their mistakes and always thinking on how to earn more money. CIA is not different. -
Becouse of people like Mike Furlong the history secure nation could still continue.We need people like he is.
When I read the history like that I realise that so much cash going into secure ,war and cover the mistake of security service.On the end of every organisatio always stay people – and we are the same –Egoistic and not free from mistakes
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The CIA are playing with the lives of their agents. They must protect every asset they have. Information are vital but how can you get your information if all your asset are dead.
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Inept CIA – isn't that redundant? They should take the I out of CIA. pheromones for women
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Becouse of people like Mike Furlong the history secure nation could still continue.We need people like he is.
When I read the history like that I realise that so much cash going into secure ,war and cover the mistake of security service.On the end of every organisatio always stay people – and we are the same –Egoistic and not free from mistakes
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Glory to the CIA and USA for be a life action movie…
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I really agree with David Ignatius " The starting point for understanding this covert intrigue is that the U.S. military has long been unhappy about the quality of CIA intelligence in Afghanistan."
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No one is trying to protect Mike, whose clearance level, rank and exemplary record full of decorations and commendations clearly speak to his worthiness. There is a full IG investigation under way and SECDEF has ordered a senior level top to bottom review of all DOD intelligence gathering practices. Until both are concluded, reviewed and commented upon by SECDEF, any comment by anyone else in the chain would be inappropriate. Take heart, Ren. The system does work, it just doesn't work the way you think.
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It is really none of our our business how the CIA conducts its actions because this structure keeps our country safe. So i think that we should thank them for existing and not be interested if they are leftists or right wingers.
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