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Pentagon faults US official for creating spy ring in Pakistan: NYT

A senior U.S. Defence Department official violated the department’s rules and “deliberately misled” senior military officers when he set up a spy operation using private contractors in Pakistan and Afghanistan, The New York Times reported Friday, citing a Pentagon inquiry report.
The report accuses Michael Furlong, the official, of running what amounted to an illegal spying ring of military contractors.
The Times quoted Pentagon spokesman Colonel David Lapan as saying the probe found that “further investigation is warranted of the misleading and incorrect statements the individual made” about the legality of the spy programme.
The allegations about the off-the-books spy operation centered on Michael Furlong, a senior U.S. Air Force civilian official who hired contractors from private security companies that employed former CIA and military operatives, the Times reported.
Defence Secretary Robert Gates ordered the investigation in March.
The contractors gathered intelligence on the whereabouts of suspected militants and the location of insurgent camps and then sent that material to military units and intelligence officials for possible lethal action on both sides of the Afghan-Pakistan border, according to the paper.
The Times quoted Furlong as saying in a telephone interview that he is angry about the conclusions of the Pentagon’s investigation and that the Defense Department had never interviewed him as part of the probe.
“This is a lot like kangaroo court justice,” Furlong said, according to the Times.
The newspaper quoted him as saying that his work had been approved by a number of senior officers in Afghanistan, and that he had never misled anyone.
The U.S. government’s use of private security contractors has been controversial in Afghanistan as well as elsewhere.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai issued a decree in August banning all private security contractors in Afghanistan, with an exception for those guarding embassies, military installations, diplomatic residences and the transport of diplomatic personnel, straining ties with Washington.
According to the Times, Furlong’s operation, using companies that employed agents inside Afghanistan and Pakistan to gather intelligence on militant groups, operated under a $22 million contract run by Lockheed Martin Corp.
The Times said one of the companies used a group of U.S., Afghan and Pakistani agents overseen by Duane Clarridge, a CIA veteran known for his role in the 1980s Iran-contra scandal. The Nation

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