Gold9472
02-04-2009, 07:31 PM
PBS: The Shadow Factory
Video
Click Here (http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/spyfactory/program.html) (PBS Video)
'Nova' examines the spy business
http://www.freep.com/article/20090203/ENT03/902030345
BY HAL BOEDEKER • ORLANDO SENTINEL • February 3, 2009
PBS's "Nova" tackles questions it can't answer in "The Spy Factory." Usually, that means failure. But not this time. The documentary is valuable for analyzing the mysterious National Security Agency.
The program asks why the NSA didn't share intelligence that might have averted the 9/11 attacks. It also ponders whether the agency, a hidden city between Washington and Baltimore where 35,000 work, improved as its power to spy on Americans grew under the Bush administration.
Not surprisingly, no one with NSA talked to "Nova." The documentary is based on James Bamford's "The Shadow Factory: The Ultra-Secret NSA from 9/11 to the Eavesdropping on America."
Speakers explain how the agency awkwardly moved from focusing on the Soviets to Al Qaeda. Bamford notes that before Sept. 11, 2001, the agency never told the FBI that terrorist calls were coming from the United States. In a terrible irony, some 9/11 terrorists were in Laurel, Md., near the NSA.
The program shifts to describe how the NSA can spy on just about anything and to ask whether the agency can make sense of it. The documentary assembles maps, graphics and newsreels with flair and sets them to haunting mood music.
Experts previewed the program for TV critics last month. Why didn't the NSA share its intelligence before 9/11?
"NSA has not answered that question, and the 9/11 Commission never bothered to look into it," Bamford said. "I would like to get the answer sometime, as well as a lot of people in Washington and around the country would like to get that answered."
Has the agency improved? "There's been a lot of money thrown at NSA," Bamford said. "It's been built up enormously in terms of technology and people. But whether they've corrected these problems or not, it's hard to say."
Former CIA analyst Michael Scheurer, who is featured in the program, said he doesn't think the country is any safer. "Our borders remain open," Scheurer said. "Al Qaeda, according to Gen. Hayden, who I think has done a very good job at CIA, is more powerful, or at least as powerful as it was on 9/11." (Michael Hayden was NSA director before he became CIA chief.) Scheurer added: "We still behave as if it's not a serious threat."
The eye-opening "Spy Factory" suggests that approach needs to change.
Video
Click Here (http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/spyfactory/program.html) (PBS Video)
'Nova' examines the spy business
http://www.freep.com/article/20090203/ENT03/902030345
BY HAL BOEDEKER • ORLANDO SENTINEL • February 3, 2009
PBS's "Nova" tackles questions it can't answer in "The Spy Factory." Usually, that means failure. But not this time. The documentary is valuable for analyzing the mysterious National Security Agency.
The program asks why the NSA didn't share intelligence that might have averted the 9/11 attacks. It also ponders whether the agency, a hidden city between Washington and Baltimore where 35,000 work, improved as its power to spy on Americans grew under the Bush administration.
Not surprisingly, no one with NSA talked to "Nova." The documentary is based on James Bamford's "The Shadow Factory: The Ultra-Secret NSA from 9/11 to the Eavesdropping on America."
Speakers explain how the agency awkwardly moved from focusing on the Soviets to Al Qaeda. Bamford notes that before Sept. 11, 2001, the agency never told the FBI that terrorist calls were coming from the United States. In a terrible irony, some 9/11 terrorists were in Laurel, Md., near the NSA.
The program shifts to describe how the NSA can spy on just about anything and to ask whether the agency can make sense of it. The documentary assembles maps, graphics and newsreels with flair and sets them to haunting mood music.
Experts previewed the program for TV critics last month. Why didn't the NSA share its intelligence before 9/11?
"NSA has not answered that question, and the 9/11 Commission never bothered to look into it," Bamford said. "I would like to get the answer sometime, as well as a lot of people in Washington and around the country would like to get that answered."
Has the agency improved? "There's been a lot of money thrown at NSA," Bamford said. "It's been built up enormously in terms of technology and people. But whether they've corrected these problems or not, it's hard to say."
Former CIA analyst Michael Scheurer, who is featured in the program, said he doesn't think the country is any safer. "Our borders remain open," Scheurer said. "Al Qaeda, according to Gen. Hayden, who I think has done a very good job at CIA, is more powerful, or at least as powerful as it was on 9/11." (Michael Hayden was NSA director before he became CIA chief.) Scheurer added: "We still behave as if it's not a serious threat."
The eye-opening "Spy Factory" suggests that approach needs to change.