By Ellen McCarthy
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, March 18, 2006; Page D01
Edward Nadworny's bosses at CGI Group Inc. are just up the road in Montreal, but to the U.S. government he still works for a foreign company, which means logging every phone call to Canada, submitting his e-mails for audits, and being supervised by a local board whose members have been approved by the Defense Department.
If he and his colleagues from other parts of the company chat about work at happy hour, they must tell a Pentagon-approved security officer what they discussed. It's inconvenient but a fact of life for the dozens of foreign-owned companies authorized to do high-level security work for the U.S. government.
~snip~
As politicians battled in recent weeks over a Dubai firm's plan to take control of a company that operates U.S. ports, the fight stood in relief to a reality that local government contractors know well: Foreign-owned companies already help manage some of the nation's most sensitive business, working on classified weapons and information programs and dealing daily with government secrets.
At least 98 foreign-owned firms like CGI have agreements with the Pentagon that allow them access to classified government programs, up from 58 a decade ago, according to the Defense Security Service, the office of the Pentagon that oversees companies that do classified work. With joint defense projects among allies common, and the need for the best technology ever more acute, contracting experts say they expect the trend to continue.
more:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/17/AR2006031702121.html?nav=rss_technology/techpolicy