By Phillip Knightley, The Independent - UK
http://educate-yourself.org/cn/hownsalistensin27feb04.shtml
Feb. 27. 2004
From the National Security Agency's imposing headquarters
at Fort Meade, Maryland, ringed by a double-chain fence topped by barbed
wire with strands of electrified wire between them, America "bugs"
the world.
Nothing politically or militarily significant, whether mentioned in a telephone
call, in a conversation in the office of the secretary general of the United
Nations, Kofi Annan, or in a company fax or e-mail, escapes its attention.
Its computers - measured in acres occupied by them rather than simple figures
- "vacuum the entire electromagnetic spectrum", homing in on "key
words" which may suggest something of interest to NSA customers is
being conveyed.
The NSA costs at least $3.5bn (£1.9bn) a year to run. It employs at
least 20,000 officers (not counting the 100,000 servicemen and civilians
around the world over whom it has control). Its shredders process 40 tons
of paper a day.
Its junior partner is Britain's Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ)
at Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, the eavesdropping organisation for which
Katharine Gun worked. Like NSA, GCHQ is a highly secret operation. Until
1983, when one of its officers, Geoffrey Prime, was charged with spying
for the Russians, the Government had refused to reveal what GCHQ's real
role was, no doubt because its operations in peacetime were without a legal
basis. Its security is maintained by massive and deliberately intimidating
security.
Newspapers have been discouraged from mentioning it; a book by a former
GCHQ officer, Jock Kane, was seized by Special Branch police officers and
a still photograph of its headquarters was banned by the Independent Broadcasting
Authority, leaving a blank screen during a World in Action programme. As
with NSA, the size of GCHQ's staff at Cheltenham, about 6,500, gives no
real indication of its strength. It has monitoring stations in Cyprus, West
Germany, and Australia and smaller ones elsewhere. Much of its overseas
work is done by service personnel.
Its budget is thought to be more than £300m a year. A large part of
this is funded by the United States in return for the right to run NSA listening
stations in Britain - Chicksands, Bedfordshire; Edzell, Scotland; Mentworth
Hill, Harrogate; Brawdy, Wales - and on British territory around the world.
The collaboration between the two agencies offers many advantages to both.
Not only does it make monitoring the globe easier, it solves tricky legal
problems and is the basis of the Prime Minister's statement yesterday that
all Britain's bugging is lawful. The two agencies simply swap each other's
dirty work.
GCHQ eavesdrops on calls made by American citizens and the NSA monitors
calls made by British citizens, thus allowing each government plausibly
to deny it has tapped its own citizens' calls, as they do. The NSA station
at Menwith Hill intercepts all international telephone calls made from Britain
and GCHQ has a list of American citizens whose phone conversations interest
the NSA.
The NSA request to GCHQ for help in bugging the diplomats from those nations
who were holding out for a second Security Council resolution to authorise
an attack on Iraq is unsurprising. Nor is it surprising that both organisations
wanted to provide their political masters with recordings of private conversations
of high-ranking international diplomats.
It is not difficult. Listening "bugs" can be planted in phones,
electrical plugs, desk lamps and book spines. Given a clear line of sight,
one device enables someone to detect and and interpret sound waves vibrating
against the glass window panes of an office.
Bugging the world is not the problem. The problem is avoiding drowning in
a sea of information. We should not be surprised that GCHQ and NSA eavesdrop
on us. We pay them to do it. We should be asking: "Do they earn their
keep?" And, unless we get a few more whistle-blowers like Ms Gun, we
will not know, because both agencies surround themselves with a wall of
secrecy.
WHO DO WE BUG?
Although under domestic law GCHQ needs a warrant from the Home Secretary
to tap telephones in Britain, it can do so abroad without such authorisation.
But the United Nations headquarters in New York is considered sovereign
territory, and placing a bug there would be illegal under international
law.
Intelligence services spy on hostile and friendly countries, the latter
mainly for commercial reasons, but also to gain an edge in diplomatic negotiations.
Nato allies are not always immune from intelligence operations by Britain.
Staff working for the UN inspection teams in Iraq were convinced they were
under surveillance.
France, Germany and Russia complained of a rise in espionage against them.
There was intense activity directed at Jordan and Syria, as well as Saudi
Arabia, Yemen and Egypt.
Officials say the only shock about Katharine Gun's discovery of an e-mail
from the National Security Agency is that she was surprised by it.
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