SPOTLIGHT EMAIL NEWSLETTER #17


Station F83: Menwith Hill Station, UK

A vast "communications" complex in the UK, known as Station F83, is really
an incredible surveillance facility occupied by NSA agents and the U.S.
military.

EXCLUSIVE TO THE SPOTLIGHT

By Christopher Petherick

MENWITH HILL, England-Last week, The SPOTLIGHT reported on the vast signals
intelligence (SIGINT) surveillance system known as Echelon which has the
technology to tap into every conceivable form of domestic and international
communication.

One of the largest facilities in Echelon-and arguably one of the most
public-is located on a British military base at Menwith Hill in England near
the town of Harrogate, called Station F83.

According to Jon Pike, a director at the Federation of American Scientists,
the cover story for the facility is that Menwith Hill is "a communications
relay center." Interestingly enough, this base was awarded the National
Security Agency's (NSA) "Station of the Year" prize in 1991 for its role in
the Gulf War.
Critics of the base point out that the same countries involved in a secret
alliance dating back to 1948 and privy to information provided by Menwith
Hill, "were the same countries prepared to support American military action
against Iraq."

The history of this facility is no doubt complicated, rooted in secret
agreements and alliances between the United States and Britain.
The Menwith facility is owned by the British Ministry of Defense, but began
with an alliance called UKUSA, banding together the intelligence agencies of
the United States and England. An arrangement between the two governments
dated Dec. 11, 1951, stated that the United States could "remain in
occupation until this agreement, unless otherwise excepted, is either
terminated or modified."

As of 1956, the U.S. Army Security Agency controlled the facility, but the
station did not actually become operational until 1959. Shortly thereafter,
in 1966, the operation was turned over to NSA with the Army 713th MI Group
handling the daily administration.

Much of the information that has been gathered on this facility has come
from political activists in England, angry at U.S. military troops and NSA
officials occupying British land and snooping on, among others, Europeans.

Until recently, since the land was "officially" British, British citizens
could "jump the fence," break in to the operations buildings and steal files
facing mere trespassing charges. However, with the recent addition of razor
wire on the fences and changes in the British courts, trespassers have seen
much stiffer penalties. In one case, British officials recently jailed one
activist, Tracy Hart, for breaking into the base more than 300 times.

The UK-based organization, Campaign for the Accountability of American
Bases, headed by Anni and Lindis Indigo, is one such group that keeps a
constant vigil over the ever-expanding base.

WIRE TAPPING

Through such activists as the Indigos, it is known that prior to 1974, the
base focused on intercepting communications between governments and ordinary
commercial traffic, known as leased carrier traffic. This was done by
linking into the telegraph and telephone ministries of eastern and western
Europe. In 1974, with the completion of eight large satellite dishes,
Menwith Hill began intercepting the first satellite communications.

The Indigos say the facility operates on more than 560 acres. There are
currently two large operations buildings, antennae and a large number of
radar dishes, most of which are enclosed in radomes, bubble-like structures
covering the radar, protecting them from weather and obstructing their
angle. There are a number of large generators on base also, which supply the
buildings with an independent power source.

The main section of the base where all satellite intercepts are downloaded
is referred to as "The Runway." This part of the facility consists of a
score of radomes, running east to west across the south edge, linking up
with advanced satellites intercepting communications. This may have been
updated recently by another system known as "Rutley," which compliments the
Runway.

Josef Tarkowski, former head of counter-espionage for the German government,
told the Sunday Times that there are over 1,400 American staff based at
Menwith, "including engineers, physicists, mathematicians, linguists and
computer scientists, plus 370 staff from [Britain's] Ministry of Defense. In
total, the seemingly quiet Station F83 has a staff as large as MI5,
Britain's domestic secret service."

The base is reportedly broken down into systems, each one performing a vital
intelligence function.

The Silkworth system, according to Pike, began intercepting satellite
transmissions in 1979, targeting microwave radio communications all over
Europe and parts of Asia. Using this system, "Operators in Menwith Hill can
monitor messages and conversations passing between companies and individuals
within, say, Jordan or Ukraine. Other international messages and
conversations being conveyed by the same route can also be intercepted." It
was constructed by the Lockheed Corp.

The Moonpenny system consists of radar dishes and antennae that intercept
all other signals broadcast to Earth by communication satellites. Pike says
"these may include satellites launched by single nations, such as Russia or
Israel, or by groups of nations, such as ARABSAT [a group of Middle Eastern
countries involved in satellite technology], or by the international
community as a whole."

The United States and Britain have been dumping huge amounts of money,
developing the site and improving upon existing technologies.
Pike states that in 1984, the British and U.S. government spent more than
$160 million in a project codenamed Steeplebush upgrading the existing
satellite surveillance system with an expansion of their operations
building, new power generators and special monitoring equipment.

In the early '90s, in a project codenamed Steeplebush II, "a subterranean,
radiation-hardened facility, had also been installed to process information
from the Runway satellites . . . " This system is believed to be involved in
downloading information from the newer and more technologically-advanced
geosynchronous SIGINT satellites known as Vortex or Magnum."

According to Tarkowski, there is now a third phase in construction,
enlarging the base and increasing the number of satellite dishes. The
Indigos say that as of Oct. 17, 1998, new infra-red cameras have been
installed and new radomes are being constructed, suggesting more satellite
dishes are on their way.

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