September 18, 2005:
               
                An FBI analyst was arrested for passing on over a hundred 
documents to the government of the Philippines. This is a typical case where 
HUMINT is involved. The Philippines have been beset by rumors of a military coup 
(which has happened before - there was a failed coup in 1989). The FBI analyst's 
contact, a former director of the Philippine National Police, who is affiliated 
with the opposition to Philippine President Gloria Arroyo, was also picked up 
for overstaying a tourist visa.
Human intelligence sources usually 
provide information for one of five reasons: Money, Ideology, Compromise, 
Conscience, or Ego (often the initials MICCE are used). In this case, the FBI 
analyst, a Filipino native who is a naturalized citizen, apparently had $500,000 
in debts. This would indicate that his revelation of the documents had a 
monetary motive. The FBI is not revealing how the suspect was caught - part of 
this is deliberate, to protect methods used in counter-intelligence. What is 
known is that much of this information seems to be at lower levels (out of the 
101 documents, only 37 were classified as "secret", and there is no information 
of any top secret documents), and that these documents contained information on 
various Filipino leaders.
There have been persistent coup rumors over the 
past year. One of the goals of the coup plotters would be to determine which 
leaders and units they would remain loyal to the government they are trying to 
topple and which leaders and units would support the coup. Access to American 
intelligence data on the Philippines would help them decide who they could 
trust.
The United States, having taken a position of promoting democracy, 
would be greatly embarrassed if a successful coup were to occur in the 
Philippines, where there has been a democracy since the departure of Ferdinand 
Marcos in 1986. There have been major problems since President Joseph Estrada 
was deposed by the Supreme Court in 2001, though. Currently, the coup rumors 
surround a scandal over rigging of the 2004 election by President Arroyo. A coup 
would apparently have popular support - recent polls indicated that 57.5 percent 
of the population felt she should not finish her term in office (which extends 
to 2010). - Harold C. Hutchison ([email protected])