Via The Intercept....
The Pentagon lost track of sensitive equipment from a $750 million
program to help U.S. soldiers spot roadside bombs — and some of it wound
up for sale on eBay, Craigslist and other websites, according to a Navy
intelligence document obtained by The Intercept.
The missing equipment includes thermal optic imaging and night vision
devices that were supplied to U.S. forces to help locate improvised
explosive devices, the leading killer of U.S. troops in Afghanistan, as
well as related threats. “Since 2009, some of this advanced hardware has
been reported as missing and is actively being sold or discussed on the
global market on a variety of websites,” says an intelligence brief by
the U.S. Naval Criminal Investigative Service and its Multiple Threat
Alert Center.
The March 12, 2014 document is titled “Diversion and Illegal Sales of
Restricted USG Optical Systems” and is marked “For Official Use Only.”
It lists 13 websites where the military equipment was listed for sale,
including Craigslist, eBay, texasguntalk.com and sportfishermen.com,
among others. “Items have been marketed as sporting goods; hunting
equipment; bird-watching equipment and camping supplies,” the report
notes.
The report went on to state that “more than 32,000 pieces of
equipment were issued” under the program, and the items “are NOT for
civilian use and are controlled under the International Traffic in Arms
Regulations.” The devices went missing because the military units had
poor control over equipment distributed to them, according to the
intelligence brief.
The bomb-detecting equipment was provided as part of a larger program
called RCOS/Keyhole, which was funded by the Pentagon’s bomb fighting
agency, known as the Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat
Organization (JIEDDO), and administered by the U.S. Navy.
JIEDDO has been heavily criticized over the years for expending large sums of money without attaining clear results. According to a 2012 report by the Government Accountability Office, JIEDDO had spent over $18 billion yet lacked an effective way to oversee its programs.
The bomb-fighting agency is about to be reorganized and scaled back, Military.com reported earlier this month.
David Small, a spokesman for JIEDDO, disputed that account, saying no
decisions have been made about cuts to the agency, adding that recent
changes have “solidified JIEDDO as a permanent part of the department
designated as a combat support agency.” Small also said the agency
finished handing over the RCOS/Keyhole program to the Navy in 2014, and
is no longer involved with it.
The RCOS/Keyhole program attracted attention in 2011 when Medal of
Honor recipient Dakota Meyer sued BAE Systems, accusing the company of
retaliating against him for criticizing the company’s possible sale of
night vision equipment to Pakistan. Meyer was concerned that advanced
U.S. technology sold to Pakistan could end up being used against U.S.
forces.
Ironically, the NCIS expressed similar concerns, though not
specifically about Pakistan: “NCIS asks for your help in identifying and
recovering these items to keep foreign entities from exploiting the
technologies in these devices and using them against the U.S. military,
NATO allies, or civilian law enforcement personnel during the course of
their duties,” the NCIS document stated.
In his lawsuit, Meyer alleged that after he raised his concerns, his
supervisor at BAE Systems made negative comments about him, including to
another company he wanted to work for, costing him a job. The new job
would have involved working on the RCOS/Keyhole program. Meyer dropped
the lawsuit in late 2011, saying that the two sides had settled their
differences.
Meyer, through his lawyer Tom Nesbitt, declined to comment about the concerns raised in the report or his lawsuit.
The Intercept found an eBay listing from Dec. 2014
for one of the pieces of equipment listed in the the NCIS document —
the OASYS-BAE Systems Universal Thermal Monocular; it was listed for
sale in Dec. 2014 for $6,000, with free standard shipping. Another item,
currently listed for sale, is a CNVD-T Clip-On Night Vision Device Thermal System; it is advertised for $16,599.00 in “new condition!”
NCIS did not respond to email queries or a phone message requesting comment on the report.
https://firstlook.org/theintercept/2015/03/26/missing-military-tech-ended-ebay-craiglist/
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