NSA leak prompts questions over US reliance on contractors
The US government may have to reconsider how much it relies on outside defence contractors who are given top security clearances after an NSA contractor exposed top-secret phone and internet surveillance programmes.
Edward Snowden, a 29-year-old systems technician at Booz Allen Hamilton, admitted on Sunday that he divulged details of the National Security Agency’s programmes to and .
Booz shares fell 2.6 per cent on Monday, and peers such as SAIC and General Dynamics fell as much as 1.7 per cent.
“We do need to take another, closer look at how we control information and how good we are at identifying what people are doing with that information,” said Stewart Baker, former general counsel at the NSA and former assistant secretary for policy at the Department of Homeland Security.
Baker said Snowden’s leaks show the need for the government to tighten up what can be seen by contractors, as well as government employees.
“Are we challenging him, are we auditing him? Are we taking measures to be sure he doesn’t have wide-ranging access to stuff that is not relevant to him?” Baker said of a theoretical contractor with wide-ranging access.