A quite stunning report by the Inspector-General of Intelligence. He has found that the GCSB hosted in New Zealand a signals intelligence system controlled by a foreign partner agency, and failed to even mention it to their Minister, or indeed their incoming Director!
He finds that the capability operated at GCSB:
- without adequate record keeping;
- without due diligence by GCSB on the capability tasking requests;
- without full visibility for GCSB of the capability tasking;
- without adequate training, support or guidance for GCSB operational staff;
- with negligible awareness of the capability at a senior level within GCSB after the
- signing of the MOU in 2012 and until the system was shut down in 2020;
- with no apparent access for GCSB to the outcomes of the capability's operation at
- GCSB;
- without any auditing;
- without the required review of the MOU;
- without due attention to the possibility, recognised within the Bureau, that
- support for the capability could contribute to military targeting; and
- without clarity, in consequence, as to whether data supplied by the GCSB to the
- capability did in fact support military action.
Late in 2011, the then Director-general, Simon Murdoch, noted in an email that GCSB legal would need to be closely involved in the matter and that it would potentially require the awareness or consent of the Minister, as well as consultation with the igis. This inquiry found no record that the legal analysis, consultation and engagement with the Minister or
IGIS contemplated by Mr Murdoch occurred.
So Murdoch correctly said the Minister and IGIS should be consulted and a legal analysis done. It never happened.
Simon Murdoch's tenure as Acting Director-General ended the week before christmas 2011. On 3 February 2012 Ian Fletcher took over as Director-General.
The MOU was signed in March 2012 by a GCSB Deputy Director. My inquiry found no records to indicate the Director-General was involved. Mr Fletcher advised the inquiry that he did not recall being briefed on the capability when he started at the GCSB, and has no recollection of the capability operating at GCSB or of Simon Murdoch's concerns.
So a Deputy Director signed the MOU without doing what the Director had asked, and didn't even mention it to the new Director.
I think it would be appropriate for the Deputy Director responsible to be named. Not briefing the Minister, the IGIS or the new Director undermines accountability.
David Farrar runs Curia Market Research, a specialist opinion polling and research agency, and the popular Kiwiblog where this article was sourced. He previously worked in the Parliament for eight years, serving two National Party Prime Ministers and three Opposition Leaders.
1 comment:
I suspect that a review of virtually any Government Department will produce similar findings. Certainly the Auditor-Generals reports of late have been pretty scathing and how many other court cases and reviews have come out in favour of the Governments actions over the last 6 years? What we are seeing are the results of useless Ministers who couldn't run a bath supervising (Senior) Management remarkable only for their total incompetence.
Regrettably, the GCSB effort will be inconsequential when compared with the findings of the Bill English led report on Housing NZ.
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