Gates, Panetta Worried: One-Third of 854,000 Americans with Top-Secret Clearance Are Contractors
US War Secretary Robert Gates and CIA Director Leon Panetta are concerned about the role private contractors play in intelligence operations, The Washington Post reported Tuesday.
In the second installment of a series about the sprawling U.S. intelligence apparatus, the Post estimated that nearly one-third of the 854,000 Americans with top-secret security clearances are private contractors.
Panetta told the Post he agrees that is a problem.
"For too long, we've depended on contractors to do the operational work that ought to be done" by CIA employees, Panetta said.
Panetta also said he was concerned that corporations owe more responsibility to their
shareholders than to their country, "and that does present an inherent conflict."
Gates agreed, telling the Post, "You want somebody who's really in it for a career because they're passionate about it and because they care about the country and not just because of the money."
Rep. Peter Hoekstra of Michigan, the senior Republican on the House Intelligence Committee, said he believes "the report that came out today is relatively accurate."
"The intelligence community continues to be very dependent on contractors," he said on CBS's "The Early Show."
Hoekstra said too many contractors are doing work that "you would believe should inherently be done by government employees."
"I don't think they are compromising safety," he said, "but I think it's inherently a bad management practice. ... I think it will change, but it will change very, very slowly."
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