[See the 13th reply in this discussion thread for a report that top Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) Cuba analyst Ana Belen Montes, who was a Cuban double agent throughout her 16-years of employment with DIA, took and passed at least one counterintelligence-scope polygraph "test."] In what seems likely to be yet another failure of polygraph "testing" to detect or deter espionage, the
Defense Intelligence Agency's (DIA's) senior analyst for matters involving Cuba, Ana Belen Montes, was charged on Friday, 21 Sep. 2001 with conspiracy to commit espionage for Cuba. According to the DIA website, employees are required to submit to initial and aperiodic counterintelligence-scope polygraph screening.
The arrest of DIA analyst Montes comes on the heels of the arrest in August of
Brian P. Regan, a National Reconaissance Organization (NRO) contractor subject to polygraph screening, on charges of conspiracy to commit espionage.
Bill Miller and Walter Pincus of the
Washington Post detail the arrest of accused Cuban spy Montes in a 22 Sep. 2001 article titled,
"Defense Analyst Accused of Spying for Cuba." Miller and Pincus note:
Quote:"This is a clandestine agent for the Cuban intelligence service," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Ronald L. Walutes Jr. "This has been going on for quite some time."
If indeed Montes spied for Cuba "for quite some time," then it is likely that polygraph screening not only failed to deter her alleged espionage, but also failed to detect it, that is, that she passed a polygraph interrogation while spying for Cuba. That a spy should pass a Department of Defense (DoD) polygraph screening "test" should surprise no one. As I noted in a January 2001
open letter to Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, during fiscal year 2000, the only persons who "failed" the DoD counterintelligence-scope polygraph "test" were those who made "substantive" admissions.
Everyone who did not make a "substantive" admission ultimately passed! Some test, huh? (I received no reply from Secretary Rumsfeld.)
For further reading on the Montes case, see also the Associated Press article
"Se nior Defense Analyst is Charged as Cuban Spy" in the 22 Sep. 2001
New York Times. A
press release is also available on the FBI website, where an
affidavit filed in the case may be downloaded in PDF format.