'ECHELON' is a name used to describe a highly secretive world-wide
signals intelligence and analysis network said to be run by the
UKUSA Community (composed of intelligence agencies of five English-speaking nations), that has been reported by a number of sources including, in 2001, a committee of the
European Parliament (EP report
[1]). Its existence was first revealed by
Duncan Campbell in a 1988 article, "Someone's listening," published in the ''
New Statesman''. According to some sources ECHELON can capture
radio and
satellite communications,
telephone calls,
faxes,
e-mails and other data streams nearly anywhere in the world and includes computer automated analysis and sorting of intercepts.
[2] The EP committee, however, concluded that "the analysis carried out in the report has revealed that the technical capabilities of the system are probably not nearly as extensive as some sections of the media had assumed" (EP report, p. 11).
Name
The STOA committee stated that "it seems likely, in view of the evidence and the consistent pattern of statements from a very
wide range of individuals and organisations, including American sources, that its name is
in fact ECHELON, although this is a relatively minor detail." (STOA report, p. 11) The U.S. intelligence community uses many
code names. See, for example,
CIA cryptonym.
Margaret Newsham claims that she worked on the configuration and installation of some of the software that makes up the ECHELON system while employed at
Lockheed Martin, for whom she worked from 1974 to 1984 in
Sunnyvale,
California, USA and in
Menwith Hill,
England.
[3] At that time, according to Newsham, the code name ECHELON was NSA's term for the computer network itself. Lockheed called it ''P415''. The software programs were called ''SILKWORTH'' and ''SIRE''. A satellite named ''VORTEX'' would intercept communications. An image available on the internet of a fragment apparently torn from a job description shows Echelon listed along with several other code names.
[4]
History
Reportedly created to monitor the military and diplomatic communications of the
Soviet Union and its
East Bloc allies during the
Cold War in the early sixties, today ECHELON is believed to search also for hints of
terrorist plots, drug-dealers' plans, and political and diplomatic intelligence. But some critics, including the European Union committee that commissioned the EU report, claim the system is being used also for large-scale commercial theft and invasion of
privacy.
While details of methods and capabilities are highly sensitive and protected by special laws (e.g. 18 USC 798), gathering signals intelligence (
SIGINT) is an acknowledged mission of the U.S.
National Security Agency. As of August 2006, their web site had a
FAQ page on the topic,
[5] which states:
In 2001, the
STOA report (p. 19) recommended that citizens of member states routinely use
cryptography in their communications to protect their privacy.
[6] In the
UK, the government introduced the
Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act which gives authorities the power to demand that citizens hand over their
encryption keys, without a judge-approved warrant. In April 2004, the European Union decided to spend 11 million euros developing secure communication based on
quantum cryptography — the
SECOQC project — a system that would theoretically be unbreakable by ECHELON or any other espionage system. European governments have been leery of ECHELON since a December 3, 1995 story in the ''Baltimore Sun'' claiming that aerospace company
Airbus lost a $6 billion contract with
Saudi Arabia in 1994 after the NSA reported that Airbus officials had been bribing Saudi officials to secure the contract.
[7][8]
Capabilities
The ability to intercept communications depends on the medium used, be it
radio,
satellite,
microwave,
cellular or
fiber-optic (STOA report p. 30 ff)
During World War II and through the 1950s,
high frequency ("short wave") radio was widely used for military and diplomatic communication (''
The Codebreakers'', Ch. 10, 11), and could be intercepted at great distances (STOA report p. 33). The rise of
geostationary communications satellites in the 1960s presented new possibilities for intercepting international communications. The STOA report states (p. 34) "If UKUSA states operate listening
stations in the relevant regions of the earth, in principle they can intercept all telephone, fax and data traffic transmitted via such satellites." Many, if not most reports on ECHELON focus on satellite interception. (e.g.
[9])
The role of satellites in point-to-point voice and data communications has largely been supplanted by
fiber optics. As of 2006, 99 percent of the world's long-distance voice and data traffic is carried over optical-fiber cables.
[10] The 2001 EP report (p. 37) states that "the proportion of international communications accounted for by satellite links has decreased substantially over the past few years in Central Europe; it lies between 0.4 and 5%." Even in less developed parts of the world, such as Latin America, communications satellites are used largely for point-to-multipoint applications, such as video.
[11] The EU report concludes (p. 11) "this means that the majority of communications cannot be intercepted by earth stations, but only by tapping cables and intercepting radio signals, something which — as the investigations carried out in connection with the report have shown — is possible only to a limited extent."
One approach is to place intercept equipment at locations where fiber optic communications are switched. For the Internet, much of the switching occurs at a relatively small number of sites. There have been reports of
one such intercept site in the United States. In the past, much Internet traffic was routed through the U.S. and the UK. However this is less true at present. According to the 2001 STOA report (p. 33), "95% of intra-German Internet communications are routed via a switch in Frankfurt." Thus for a worldwide surveillance network to be comprehensive, either illegal intercept sites would be required on the territory of friendly nations or cooperation of local authorities would be needed. The STOA report points out (p. 27) "interception of private communications by foreign intelligence services is by no means confined to the US or British foreign intelligence services."
U.S. intelligence maintains liaison relationships with countries all over the world.
[12] Some reports of cooperation involving signals intelligence have come to light since the
September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. Monitoring of mobile phones in
Pakistan was reportedly used to track
Khalid Shaikh Mohammed before he was arrested in
Rawalpindi on
March 1,
2003 (''How Tiny Swiss Cellphone Chips Helped Track Global Terror Web'', New York Times, March 4, 2004).
Controversy
US intelligence agencies are generally prohibited from spying on people inside the US, and other Western countries' intelligence services generally faced similar restrictions within their own countries.
Conspiracy theorists allege that ECHELON and the
UKUSA alliance might have been used to circumvent these restrictions by, for example, having the UK facilities spy on people inside the US and the US facilities spy on people in the UK, with the agencies exchanging data. There is, however, no evidence to suggest this is the case [citation needed], and in fact it would be just as illegal as spying directly. The
NSA states on its
SIGINT FAQ web page that "we have been prohibited by executive order since 1978 from having any person or government agency, whether foreign or U.S., conduct any activity on our behalf that we are prohibited from conducting ourselves. Therefore, NSA/CSS does not ask its allies to conduct such activities on its behalf nor does NSA/CSS do so on behalf of its allies."
The proposed US-only "
Total Information Awareness" program relied on technology similar to that supposedly used by ECHELON, and is believed to have been intended to integrate the extensive sources it is legally permitted to survey domestically with the "taps" already supposedly compiled by ECHELON. It was canceled by the U.S. Congress in 2004. It was later discovered in 2005 that the CIA had not dismantled the program, but had simply blacklisted it as classified and funded it using CIA money allocated for such top secret operations, thereby defying Congress.
It has been alleged that in 2002 the
Bush Administration extended the ECHELON program to
domestic surveillance. This controversy was the subject of the
New York Times eavesdropping exposé of December, 2005.
[13][14][15][16]
Former CSE agent, Fred Stock, revealed in the Ottawa Citizen (May 22, 1999) that Canada had used the surveillance system known as ECHELON to spy on the French Government over the
Saint-Pierre and Miquelon boundary dispute.
Industrial spying
The ECHELON system has also allegedly been used to advance American commercial interests by gathering proprietary information. Examples include the gear-less
wind turbine technology designed by the German firm
Enercon[17] [18] and the speech technology developed by the Belgian firm
Lernout & Hauspie.
Organization
The
UKUSA intelligence alliance has maintained ties in collecting and sharing intelligence since
World War II. Each member of the UKUSA alliance is allegedly assigned responsibilities for monitoring different parts of the globe.
Canada's main task used to be monitoring northern portions of the former
Soviet Union and conducting sweeps of all communications traffic that could be picked up from
embassies around the world. In the post-
Cold War era, a greater emphasis has been placed on monitoring satellite, radio and cellphone traffic originating from
Central and
South America, primarily in an effort to track drugs and non-aligned paramilitary groups in the region. The
United States, with its vast array of spy satellites and listening posts, monitors most of
Latin America,
Asia, Asiatic
Russia and northern
mainland China. Britain listens in on
Europe and
Russia west of the
Urals as well as
Africa.
Australia hunts for communications originating in
Indochina,
Indonesia and southern mainland China.
New Zealand sweeps the western
Pacific.
As the EP report concludes, it seems likely that, rather than being an all-seeing surveillance system, ECHELON is simply a method of sorting captured signals, and is just one of the many arrows in the intelligence community's quiver, along with increasingly sophisticated
bugging and
communications interception techniques, satellite tracking, through-clothing scanning, automated biometric recognition systems that can recognize faces, fingerprints &
retina patterns.
The U.S. communications-intelligence agency is the
National Security Agency (NSA), which is headquartered at
Fort Meade, just outside
Washington, DC. Although the NSA budget is classified,
[19] as of 1996 the agency was estimated to have a global staff of roughly 38,000 and a budget of approximately US$3.6-billion.
[20] The UK equivalent organisation is the Government Communications Headquarters
GCHQ based at
Cheltenham,
Gloucestershire. Further, smaller organisations exist to provide communications technology and expertise (e.g.
Her Majesty's Government Communication Centre).
By comparison,
Canada's communications-intelligence operations are conducted by the
Communications Security Establishment (CSE), a branch of the Canadian
Department of National Defence. It has a staff of over 1600 people
[21] and an annual budget of $225 million CAD.
[22] The CSE's headquarters is the Sir
Leonard Tilley Building on Heron Road in the nation's capital of
Ottawa,
Ontario, and its main communications intercept site is located on an
armed-forces radio station in
Leitrim, just south of Ottawa.
On July 6, 2000 the
BBC published an article called ''Echelon: Big brother without a cause?'' that said:
:The Echelon spy system, whose existence has only recently been acknowledged by US officials, is capable of hoovering up millions of phone calls, faxes and emails a minute. [...] Echelon evolved out of Cold War espionage arrangements set up by the US and UK in 1948, and later bringing in Australia, Canada and New Zealand, in their capacity as Britain's Commonwealth partners. The biggest of Echelon's global network of listening posts is at Menwith Hill, North Yorkshire, where about 30 "giant golf balls" called radomes litter the landscape. The system also boasts 120 American satellites in geostationary orbit. Bases in the five countries are linked directly to the headquarters of the secretive US National Security Agency (NSA) headquarters at Fort Meade, Maryland. The system's superpowerful speech recognition capability enables it to filter billions of international communications for whatever key words or word patterns are programmed in.
[23]
The claim that there are 120 American satellites involved in signals intelligence collection is a common error that apparently originated in a misreading of British researcher Duncan Campbell's report that, as of the year 2000, the UKUSA nations were "operating at least 120 satellite based collection systems", including 40 satellite dishes monitoring commercial communications satellites, 50 monitoring or formerly monitoring ex-Soviet communications satellites, and 30 operating signals intelligence satellites.
[24] The presence of errors of this nature casts some doubt on the reliability of this BBC article.
Hardware
According to its web site the US NSA is "a high technology organization, ... on the frontiers of communications and data processing."
In 2006, the
Baltimore Sun reported that the NSA was at risk of electrical overload, because of insufficient internal electrical infrastructure at Fort Meade to support the amount of computer equipment being installed.
[25]
While there are occasional stories speculating on the types of computers involved,
[26]
Jonathan Meier, in his biography, has stated of his time at the NSA that:
:"Conjecture and speculation were rampant on the [ECHELON] projects, even internally. Truthfully, very few individuals were privy to the logistics involved."
At least one company,
Narus, is publicly selling systems for mass surveillance of Internet traffic and one of its systems was apparently installed in 2003 in
Room 641A, allegedly an intercept station run by
AT&T on behalf of the NSA.
In 1999 the
Australian Senate Joint Standing Committee on Treaties was told by Professor
Desmond Ball that the
Pine Gap facility was used as a ground station for a satellite based
interception network. The satellites are claimed to be large
radio dishes between 20 and 100 meters across, parked in
geostationary orbits. The original purpose of the network was to monitor the
telemetry from 1970s ,
air defense radar,
communications satellites and ground based
microwave communications.
[27] The network is still operational and coordinated by US, British and Australian intelligence communities.
Ground stations
Some of the ground stations suspected of belonging to or participating in the ECHELON network include:
Likely satellite intercept stations
The following stations are listed in the EP report (p.54 ff) as likely to have a role in
intercepting transmissions from telecommunications satellites:
★ Hong Kong (since closed)
★
Australian Defence Satellite Communications Station (
Geraldton, Western Australia)
★
Menwith Hill (
Yorkshire, UK)
Map
★
Misawa Air Base (
Japan)
★
GCHQ Bude (
Cornwall, UK)
★
Pine Gap (
Northern Territory, Australia - close to
Alice Springs)
★
Sabana Seca (
Puerto Rico - US)
★
Sugar Grove (
West Virginia, US)
★
Yakima (
Washington, US)
Map
★
GCSB Waihopai (New Zealand)
★
Troodos, Mt. Olympus peak (
Cyprus)
Possible satellite intercept stations
The following stations are listed in the EP report (p.57 ff) as ones whose roles "cannot be clearly established":
★
Agios Nikolaos (
Cyprus - UK)
★
Bad Aibling (
Germany - US) - moved to
Griesheim in 2004
★
Buckley Air Force Base (
Colorado, US)
★
Fort Gordon (
Georgia, US)
★
Guam (
Pacific Ocean, US)
★
Kunia (
Hawaii, US)
★
Leitrim (south of
Ottawa, Canada)
★
Medina Annex (
Texas, US)
Various other ground stations
The following facilities have been claimed to host various intelligence gathering stations of U.S. intelligence agencies and armed forces or their allies.
★
Alert (
Ellesmere Island,
Nunavut, Canada)
★
Bremerhaven (
Germany - UK)
★
RAF Chicksands (
Bedfordshire, UK)
★
Diego Garcia (
Indian Ocean - US-UK)
★
RAF Digby (
Lincolnshire, UK)
★
Elmendorf Air Force Base (
Alaska - US)
★
Feltwell (
Norfolk, UK)
★
Fort Meade (
Maryland, US) (headquarters of
NSA)
★
Gander (
Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada)
★
Gibraltar (UK)
Map
★
Griesheim (near
Darmstadt,
Germany - US)
★
Jessheim (
Norway - Echelon/Internet data)
★
Vardø (
Norway - SDI with Russian- or spacetrash monitoring)
★
Viksjofellet (
Norway - US)
★
Lucas Gonzalez (near
Rosario,
Argentina - US)
★
Mount Gabriel,
Schull,
Co. Cork,
Ireland (satellite communications station)
★
Malta (
Malta - UK)
★
Masset (
British Columbia, Canada)
★ Mount Olympus,
Troodos range,
Cyprus (UK)
★
Osan Air Base (
South Korea, US)
★
Rota, Spain (
Spain, US)
★
Shoal Bay Receiving Station (
Northern Territory, Australia)
★
West Point, New York (
NY, US)
★
Aflandshage, Denmark (
Denmark)
[28]
★
GCSB stations at
Tangimoana and
Waihopai, New Zealand
★
Naval Communication Station Harold E. Holt (
Exmouth, Western Australia)
Former ground stations
★
Augsburg (
Germany - US) - closed in 1996
★
Clark Air Base (
Philippines - US) - closed in 1997
★
Edzell (
Scotland, UK) - closed in 1997
★
Kabkan (
Iran - US) - closed in 1979
★
Karamursel (
Turkey - US) - closed in 1975
★
Little Sai Wan (
Hong Kong - UK) - closed in 1984
★
Nurrungar (
South Australia, Australia - south of
Woomera, South Australia) - closed in 1999
★
San Vito dei Normanni Air Station (
Italy - US) - closed in 1994
★
Teufelsberg (
West Berlin,
Germany - US) - closed in 1989
★
Silvermine (near
Cape Town,
South Africa - US)
★
Bad Aibling, southern
Germany - closed 2004
★
Bad Tölz, southern
Germany - closed 1998
See also
★
ANCHORY SIGINT intercept database
★
Cabinet noir
★
Carnivore
★
COINTELPRO
★
CALEA ''to make clear a telecommunications carrier's duty to cooperate in the interception of communications for Law Enforcement purposes, and for other purposes''
★
Counterintelligence Field Activity is a US Department of Defense (DoD) agency that has legal authority to spy on Americans.
★
Frenchelon
★
Magic Lantern
★
Mass surveillance
★
Oasis
★
Onyx (interception system), the Swiss "Echelon" equivalent
★
Policeware
★
Project MINARET
★
Privacy
★
Synthetic Environment for Analysis and Simulations
★
Text mining
Further reading
★
Bamford, James; ''
Body of Secrets'', Anchor, ISBN 0-385-49908-6; 2002
★ Bamford, James; ''
The Puzzle Palace'', Penguin, ISBN 0-14-006748-5; 1983
★
Hager, Nicky; ''Secret Power, New Zealand's Role in the International Spy Network''; Craig Potton Publishing, Nelson, NZ; ISBN 0-908802-35-8; 1996
★ Keefe, Patrick Radden ''Chatter: dispatches from the secret world of global eavesdropping''; Random House Publishing, New York, NY; ISBN 1-4000-6034-6; 2005
★ Michael Barker.
Online privacy? Surveillance of social movements on the Internet,
The Change Agency, November 2005.
★
EMA International
Sources and notes
1. European Parliament Report on ECHELON
2. ECHELON; WORLDWIDE CONVERSATIONS BEING RECEIVED BY THE ECHELON SYSTEM MAY FALL INTO THE WRONG HANDS AND INNOCENT PEOPLE MAY BE TAGGED AS SPIES
3.
ECHELON Was My Baby Bo Elkjær ''“Unfortunately, I can’t tell you all my duties. I am still bound by professional secrecy, and I would hate to go to prison or get involved in any trouble, if you know what I mean. In general, I can tell you that I was responsible for compiling the various systems and programs, configuring the whole thing and making it operational on main frames"''; ''"Margaret Newsham worked for the NSA through her employment at Ford and Lockheed from 1974 to 1984. In 1977 and 1978, Newsham was stationed at the largest listening post in the world at Menwith Hill, England...'Ekstra Bladet' has Margaret Newsham’s stationing orders from the US Department of Defense. She possessed the high security classification TOP SECRET CRYPTO."''
4. Names of ECHELON associated projects - image without any context
5. SIGINT Frequently Asked Questions
6. On the existence of a global system for the interception of private and commercial communications (ECHELON interception system) - Temporary Committee on the ECHELON Interception System, (2001/2098(INI))
7. BBC News
8. Interception capabilities 2000
9. Nicky Hager Appearance before the European Parliament ECHELON Committee
10. NSA eavesdropping: How it might work
11. Commercial Geostationary Satellite Transponder Markets for Latin America : Market Research Report
12. International Cooperation
13. Bush Lets U.S. Spy on Callers Without Courts
14. NSA uses ECHELON against US citizens
15. Posner to the Left: Get a Life
16. MOUNTAIN VIEWS: EAVESDROPPING REVELATIONS STUNNING
17. Die Zeit: 40/1999 ''"Verrat unter Freunden"'' ("Treachery among friends", German), available at archiv.zeit.de
18. Report A5-0264/2001 of the European Parliament (English), available at European Parliament website
19. MSA Extends Budget Secrecy, , S., Aftergood, Secrecy News from the FAS Project on Government Secrecy, 2004 , ''"Previously, SIGINT resource information was UNCLASSIFIED if the information was 25 years or older but SECRET if less than 25 years old. It is now SECRET for all time frames," according to a February 12, 2001 NSA policy decision obtained by Secrecy News.''
20. Intelligence Agency Budgets: Commission Recommends No Release But Releases Them Anyway , ''"The NSA budget is around .6 billion..."''
21. Population Affiliation Report
22. Report on Plans and Priorities 2006-2007 National Defence
23. Echelon: Big brother without a cause?
24. Interception Capabilities 2000
25. NSA risking electrical overload Gorman, Siobhan
26.
Want to know the hardware behind Echelon? Chris Mellor , ''"Echelon is a global surveillance network set up in Cold War days to provide the US government with intelligence data about Russia. One of the main contractors is Raytheon. Lockheed Martin has been involved in writing software for it...Hutsell says the SAM systems, 'are supplied to intelligence agencies and the military though system integrators like Raytheon, Lockheed Martin and Zeta...'"''
27. Official Committee Hansard, JOINT STANDING COMMITTEE ON TREATIES, Reference: Pine Gap, MONDAY, 9 AUGUST 1999
28. Where the Spies are Listening
External links
★
Echelon Spoofer System
★
Project Echelon intercepting global communications
★
Overview from the Federation of American Scientists
★
Development of Surveillance Technology & Risk of Abuse of Economic Information | PDF
★
European Parliament report on ECHELON | (PDF)
★
Big Brother Capabilities in an Online World. State Surveillance in the Internet (academic research), by Francisco J. Bernal
★
Report to the US Congress about ECHELON, by Patrick S. Poole
★
Echelon Research Resources, by Patrick S. Poole
★
GlobalSecurity.org's page on ECHELON
★
Cryptome article reporting claimed interview with 'architect of ECHELON II'
★
Echelon Watch
★
Inside Echelon: The history, structure and function of the global surveillance system known as Echelon (comprehensive article)
★
"How mobile phones and an £18m bribe trapped 9/11 mastermind",
The Guardian,
March 11 2003
★
Pictures of Radomes used for Echelon in Griesheim - Germany
★
World Infostructure - ECHELON
★
US expands Echelon spying in UK
★
translation of LE MONDE DIPLOMATIQUE - January 1999 article TOP SECRET SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM : How the United States spies on us all - by PHILIPPE RIVIERE
★
Inside Echelon - The history, structure und function of the global surveillance system known as Echelon by Duncan Campbell 25.07.2000 same article here at Global Policy and here at Heise.de
★
Sources about echelon including "STOA, An appraisal of technologies of political control, Interim study, Luxemburg 19 January 1998."
★
PDF file titled "Chapter six: Politics, Parapolitics, and the State"
★
Executive Order 12139 on 23 May 1979 "the Attorney General is authorized to approve electronic surveillance to acquire foreign intelligence information without a court order" via Federation of American Scientists
★ Michael Barker.
Online privacy? Surveillance of social movements on the Internet,
The Change Agency, November 2005.
★ Jeffrey Richelson.
Desperately Seeking Signals, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, March/April 2000.
★ Kurt Nimmo.
NSA snoop story: Tell me something I don’t already know, ''Another Day in the Empire'',
December 24 2005.
★
"The Listening" - Movie that involves ECHELON