Testimony of F. Michael
Maloof
Chief, Technology Security Operations
Defense Threat Reduction Agency
Department of Defense
Before the House
Committee on Government Reform
24 June 1999
Mr. Chairman, Members of the Committee.
I am appearing today in response to a
subpoena from the Committee.
My name is F. Michael Maloof. I am Chief
of the Technology Security Operations
Division in the Technology Security
Directorate of the Defense Threat Reduction
Agency, in the Department of Defense.
You asked that I address the
Administrations efforts to curb the
flow of dual-use technology to China and
efforts to safeguard U.S. facilities. You
also asked for my testimony on intimidation
or retaliation against government employees
who have been involved in these policy areas
and have expressed either reservations or
opposition to Administration policies.
Im not in a position to discuss the
Administrations efforts to safeguard
U.S. facilities. However, I can address the
issues of dual-use technology flows to China,
and intimidation.
By way of brief background, Mr. Chairman,
I have been with the Department of Defense
since 1982. I have been a member of senior
management in the Technology Security
Directorate since the creation of the Defense
Threat Reduction Agency last year.
Before that, I had been Director since May
1985 of Technology Security Operations in the
Defense Technology Security Administration
when it was in the Office of the Secretary of
Defense.
The duties of my staff are to work with
other agencies to monitor and act as a
catalyst to halt the diversion of sensitive
technology to proscribed destinations, their
weapons of mass destruction and strategic
conventional weapons development programs.
From the data collected and detailed
analysis conducted relating to diversion
activity, my staff determines what
technologies are being targeted and by whom,
and then identifies and develops policy
issues, and appropriate responses.
In this connection, my office also works
closely with the intelligence community and
enforcement agencies.
This was the case during the Cold War
period in which we were responsible for
halting diversions of sensitive technologies
to COCOM proscribed countries of the former
Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact, as well as
China.
One of our major cases during that period
was the highly-publicized Toshiba case, in
which the former Soviet Union illegally
acquired militarily-sensitive embargoed
technology used in manufacturing
specially-skewed propellers to quiet
submarines and thereby prevent their
detection.
Our efforts not only included the
detection of this development but, working
with the governments of other COCOM members,
we were able to stop further western
assistance to that program.
During Desert Shield and Desert Storm, my
staff, along with a Naval Intelligence
Reserve unit assigned to our organization,
identified, analyzed and sought to halt
western technologies on which Iraq depended
for its conventional and unconventional
weapons development programs.
One of those cases involved uncovering the
diversion of sensitive night vision devices
to Iraq by a Dutch company. The timeliness of
this discovery allowed for appropriate
counter-measures to be developed and
delivered to our troops on the ground prior
to the start of Desert Storm. I like to
believe that our efforts resulted in saving
the lives of many of our troops.
Another case involved the ultimate seizure
by U.S. Customs of a high temperature furnace
which was about to be exported to Iraq. It
was to be combined with a number of other
uncontrolled furnaces to form a complex for
the melting of materials essential for
nuclear weapons development. After the Gulf
War, this case served as a basis for
expanding export regulations to include a
"catch-all" provision for
uncontrolled technologies with application
for chemical and biological weapons
development, and their delivery systems.
The duties of my office also include doing
end-user/end-use checks for license
applications, whether dual-use or munitions.
We make every effort to apply analysis,
information from the intelligence community
and enforcement data to every application.
With this background, Mr. Chairman, it was
natural for me in the early 1990s to
raise concerns with my management over what I
would call the beginning of wholesale
liberalization and decontrol of militarily
critical technologies without the benefit of
thorough strategic analysis. In my opinion,
such sweeping initiatives made virtually
irrelevant any analysis as to their strategic
consequence.
Technologies included such areas as
machine tools, high performance computers,
telecommunications, propulsion for power
projection, stealth and technologies with
application for nuclear uses.
Even though we were undergoing a change in
policy, it was apparent that it was designed
to allow greater technologies to go to China.
This policy change assumed a good
end-user/end-use. In China, that was almost
impossible to detail, since Chinese officials
had placed a ban on U.S. officials from
undertaking pre-license and post-delivery
shipment checks for sensitive technology
exports.
The previous policy, in coordination with
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, had identified six
special mission areas for which technologies
for any one of them would be subject to close
scrutiny, regardless of end-user and end use.
On a number of occasions, I had suggested
to my management that a policy review of
those special mission areas was necessary to
update them and steer away from what I
believe was a questionable end-user/end-use
approach.
I also expressed concern many times to my
Front Office about not escalating cases on
which we initially would recommend denial in
interagency appeal sessions. All that the
other agencies had to do was wait us out,
knowing that our Front Office would not
escalate a serious case to higher level
policymakers, and it would be approved.
In addition, I suggested on numerous
occasions that we needed to undertake
cumulative impact assessments of those
technologies which had been approved to
determine the strategic impact of those
exports.
One of a number of such cases which
manifested all of these concerns was the
export in 1994 to China of a considerable
number of controlled and uncontrolled machine
tools from a McDonnell-Douglas facility in
Columbus, Ohio. My concern here was over the
potential for diversion of some or all of
those machine tools, and that is exactly what
happened. And because that case almost five
years later still is under criminal
investigation by the Justice Department, it
would not be appropriate for me to go into
detail of it here.
So it is not surprising that my management
would regard me and my views on China as a,
quote, "Cold War throwback who
cant reconcile himself to the
inevitable easing of export controls,"
end-quote, according to the attached November
27, 1998 Wall Street Journal.
My concerns, however, were and remain over
the strategic impact of these exports, not
the commercial advantage they would give to
certain companies.
I can only presume that it is this
perspective which led to an open clash
between me and my management over China,
beginning in April 1998, over the
Hughes-Loral satellite matter.
A New York Times article had
detailed how the administration was allowing
further space activities with China despite
the fact that a grand jury was meeting
concerning the possible illegal release of
sensitive technical data to the Chinese.
The technical data involved assisting
China in solving certain guidance problems of
rockets used to orbit commercial satellites.
On the day of the New York Times
piece, I received a call from Assistant
Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs, Ken
Bacon. He said he wanted to know what was
behind the story, that the Secretary of
Defense had been having breakfast with
reporters and was "blindsided" by
events surrounding the story. I gave him a
brief summary.
He called back later to ask for more
details and I offered to go to his office to
show him what we had on the case as
background for the Secretary. He accepted. I
also informed my front office.
The initial Front Office reaction was that
no materials were going to be provided to Mr.
Bacon. Later, Mr. Bacon called my Front
Office and it was agreed that my boss would
take the meeting with Mr. Bacon, but I was
not to accompany him. My boss said that he
had to inform Mr. Bacon of events which were
occurring on this case, but he would not
elaborate.
I then received a call from an individual
in C3I inquiring about the background of the
news story. That individual did an electronic
mail summary to her boss. My Front Office
obtained a copy. I was called in, asked why I
had discussed the issue on something which I
was not working.
I corrected my bosses and informed them
that we had been involved earlier in the
process and I had some ten volumes of binders
from the exporters in my office to prove it.
The immediate response was disbelief and a
further admonition that I had not been
working the issue.
This comment was my first indication that
issues relating to satellites were being
handled, but only by a few people in our
entire organization, with my office being
bypassed for the most part.
Furthermore, my Front Office accused me of
using "poor judgment" in talking to
the individual at C3I. This reaction, and its
vitriolic tone, took me totally by surprise.
I sought to obtain what the New York
Times described as a "highly
classified Pentagon report" on the
satellite issue, but was informed that I
could not have access to it, since I did not
have a "need to know."
It is my understanding that the report,
developed in cooperation with the Department
of State, was very critical of certain U.S.
satellite exporters.
Indeed, in subsequent cases relating to
China, my front office continued to use this
mantra of not having a "need to
know" as justification to keep me from
learning details or the outcome of certain
China cases, many of which I had worked at
various stages.
I expressed my dismay to the Front office
over this kind of treatment. I informed them
that in all the years I had worked at the
Defense Department and looked into possible
diversions, I never had been told to refrain
from looking into possible export control
violations.
Despite the admonition not to speak to
anyone about the Hughes-Loral matter, I
called our U.S. Customs liaison officer, who
confirmed that there had been an ongoing
Justice Department investigation of the case
for almost a year. Customs was pursuing the
investigation on behalf of the Justice
Department. He further stated that continued
approval of satellite exports was damaging
the case.
It then became apparent to me that the
reason for handling Chinese satellite issues
among a very few people and keeping quiet any
information concerning an investigation was
to insure that satellite cases continued to
be approved, unimpeded.
I can only surmise that my Front Office
recalled previous cases in which we had
suspended all license applications of an
applicant prior to any indictments or
convictions even before the completion of an
investigation. There were two such cases, one
of which involved the Dutch company diversion
of night vision devices to Iraq, a case I
referred to earlier.
Given the admonition not to speak to
anyone outside DTSA about the Hughes-Loral
matter, I did not think such a restriction
applied to people within DTSA.
I approached our satellite technical
expert, who immediately became quite nervous.
I specifically wanted to know if we were
seeing any of the Presidential waivers, and
what technologies they may have encompassed.
The waivers were required because of
Tiananmen Square sanctions to satellite
exports to China.
The engineer stated that he was under a
gag order, had been interviewed a year
earlier by the Justice Department concerning
its investigation and that our boss had known
about the investigation for all that time.
In response, the engineer said that our
boss had electronically
"firewalled" any recommendations to
the Front Office that he made on the cases so
that even he could not retrieve them. In
addition, the engineer said that he had been
ordered to destroy any hardcopy of his
recommendations.
As a career employee, I felt obliged to
report this episode to U.S. Customs agents
who were investigating the Hughes-Loral
matter on behalf of the Justice Department.
By this time, I had been working with the
investigators to provide background papers
and positions on previous cases, all relating
to China.
The Assistant U.S. Attorney and Customs
investigators interviewed the engineer. He
returned after a number of hours, confronted
me and said that the Assistant U.S. Attorney
and Customs agents had identified me as the
source of their information. The engineer
then proceeded to inform the Front Office.
All of this took place in April 1998. It
was during this period and succeeding months
that all of our records pertaining to China,
including past cases, were subpoenaed by law
enforcement authorities. The same materials
were made available in a central reading room
under the control of the Defense Department
General Counsel to the myriad of
congressional committee investigators from
the House of Representatives and the Senate.
I personally received two congressional
subpoenas one from Senator Fred
Thompson, Chairman of the Senate Governmental
Affairs Committee, and the other from
Representative Christopher Cox. All of my
records pertaining to China also were in the
hands of the Cox Committee, and I was asked
about them in depositions to the Committee
Staff.
Since then, the Front Office has
systematically isolated me from any of the
major issues with which our organization is
involved. In seeking to find out what those
issues are, my bosses interpreted my
inquiries as "spying" and asked me
why I wanted to know.
In addition, virtually all weekly
Directors meetings had ceased, which
remains the case to this day. The Front
Office also had created a so-called COMSAT
group comprised of representatives from every
division within DTSA, except mine. I and my
staff were kept from any satellite
discussions.
This also was the period in which job
appraisals were due. I was informed that I
would be given an "Outstanding"
rating, but would not be given a cash bonus.
I later was informed that I was the only DTSA
director who received an
"Outstanding" rating but did not
receive any cash bonus.
The reason given was that I needed to do
work more in keeping with senior DTSA
management priorities. I asked my bosses how
I could be accused of "spying" on
the one hand to determine DTSA priorities but
be admonished for not following them in view
of the isolation treatment. There was no
ready answer.
In my opinion, this action constituted
political retribution.
The isolation continues to this day.
Discussion and action on issues are conducted
by the Front Office, with the participation
of a chosen few.
In addition, as people have rotated from
my staff, the positions either are not
allowed to be filled, or the billet is taken
away. This was the case recently when one of
my Navy personnel retired. This billet was
transferred to accommodate an increase in
satellite monitors. Congress recently
authorized some 30 such billets to DTSA. I
then asked if that slot could be returned,
due to the need we have to fulfill our
analytical and monitoring duties. I never
received a response.
My deputy of many years recently
transferred to another part of the agency
but, to this day, the Front Office has not
allowed me to fill that billet either.
Instead, I have had to write a series of
memos to justify the need to fill it. Still,
no response. This slow chipping away comes at
a time when we should be doing more analysis
and cumulative assessments of technology
transfers and determining their impact on
U.S. strategic capabilities. In my opinion,
this is one of the value-added roles of the
Department of Defense in the export licensing
process.
I say this, notwithstanding the fact that
the intelligence community for the most part
is not providing such analysis, whether for
conventional or unconventional weapons
development programs in countries and
suppliers of strategic concern.
Last July, I decided to do such a limited
analysis on my own. I determined that the
cumulative effect of just some of those
exported technologies have provided the
Chinese military with an integrated Command,
Control, Communications, Computer and
Intelligence (C4I) encrypted network not only
for modernizing its military but also for its
emerging intercontinental ballistic missiles.
I let our technical experts review it, as
well as DIA analysts. To this day, there has
been no challenge to the analysis, which I
interpret to mean that it is valid.
In addition to an enhanced C4I capability,
I believe that the cumulative effect of other
technologies provided to China over the past
seven years has given China insights into
MIRVing its developing ICBM force and
miniaturizing nuclear warheads.
In addition, I believe technology
transfers over time have helped China improve
power projection for its surface fleets,
submarines and long-range cruise missiles,
apply stealth technologies to weapons
development programs and permitted
Chinas military to produce more
proficient fighter and bomber aircraft
capable of greater distances and speed.
These advances happen to coincide with
those special mission areas identified in the
mid-1980s by the Joint Chiefs of Staff to be
concerned about regarding technology
transfers.
Those special mission areas were nuclear
weapons and their delivery systems,
intelligence gathering, electronic warfare,
anti-submarine warfare, air superiority and
power projection.
In referring back to the Nov. 28, l998 Wall
Street Journal, Mr. Ken Bacon, the
Defense Secretarys spokesman said,
quote, "In talking to Mr. Maloofs
bosses and others, we do not believe we have
allowed the transfer of technology to China
that presents national security
vulnerabilities," end-quote.
Mr. Chairman, I would suggest that this
conclusion is at extreme variance with the
results of the Cox Committee study.
I have come to realize that there is
little recourse for professionals to sound an
alarm when the system is unresponsive.
Two years ago, for example, Peter Leitner
and I approached the DoD Inspector
Generals office because of our belief
that strategic concerns in the handling of
China cases were being ignored. We were told
to leave.
I am equally dismayed over the magnitude
of the strategic contributions from
cumulative technology transfers to China,
that they have occurred on my watch even
though I sought to avoid such a development
but instead was isolated, ignored and subject
to political retribution.
The tragedy is not what is being done to
me now. The real tragedy is that we will not
realize the full military impact and national
security threat from these technology
transfers for another five to ten years. Only
then, will we understand the extent and true
cost for having mortgaged the security of our
children and our Nations wellbeing.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. That concludes my
statement.
http://www.globalsecurity.org/intell/library/congress/1999_hr/990624-maloof.htm