The New Zealand Herald

Undercover jobs out in the open

As competitio­n in the intelligen­ce field heats up, experts tell Sam Dean old-school tactics are still best

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For a man who has spent so much of his life in the shadows, the glare of the internatio­nal spotlight must feel blindingly bright to Christophe­r Steele.

The 52-year-old, who is believed to have compiled the now-infamous dossier that alleged Russia possesses lurid material that could be used to blackmail Donald Trump, has spent much of the new year in hiding, but will know that his work — and, indeed, his life — have been thrust on to the most global of stages.

So too has his industry. A former MI6 spy who founded his own intelligen­ce company upon leaving public service, Steele is one of many former spooks who have decided to put their considerab­le skills to use in the private sector.

It goes without saying that the industry does not revolve entirely around shady, James Bond-style figures jetting across the world. The bulk of the intelligen­ce business is focused on due diligence services, or providing companies with strategic insight, opposition research or risk analysis.

Because the barriers for entry are so low, anyone can set up shop and claim to be an expert. There is no regulation and the increased competitio­n has driven prices down.

But, as Steele has showed, the highend, glamorous side of intelligen­ce can be just as exciting and dangerous in the private intelligen­ce business as it is with MI6 or the CIA.

Steele, who runs Orbis Business Intelligen­ce in London, was reportedly paid £130,000 (NZ$223,000) for the Trump dossier, a figure former intelligen­ce profession­als said was “not a surprise”. This is an internatio­nal, high-stakes game and it features some high-stakes players.

According to defence strategist Sven Hughes, the founder of strategic consultanc­y Global Influence, around 20pc of the intelligen­ce industry is taken up by people who are trained in surveillan­ce operations or come from background­s in the security services.

“Former intelligen­ce agency people sit very comfortabl­y in that area,” says Hughes, who himself was trained as a high-risk security operative for private-sector work. These companies are largely very discreet, he says, and often do not have anything more than a one-page website.

They get their business through word of mouth and through recommenda­tion. Law firms and investment firms, eager to leave no stone unturned, are regular clients, while they can also be used on a more political stage.

Eric O’Neill, national security strategist at US firm Carbon Black, is a former FBI counterint­elligence operative whose role in uncovering an agent spying for the Soviet Union

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 ?? Pictures / AP ?? A statue stands in a square across the street from a building where offices of Orbis Business Intelligen­ce Ltd are located in central London. Below, a house believed to be where Christophe­r Steele lives in Farnham, England
Pictures / AP A statue stands in a square across the street from a building where offices of Orbis Business Intelligen­ce Ltd are located in central London. Below, a house believed to be where Christophe­r Steele lives in Farnham, England
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