Loud and Clear   By: James Bamford
source:
http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPcap/1999-11/14/019r-111499-idx.html

The most secret of secret agencies operates under outdated laws.

On the Yorkshire moors in northern England, dozens of enormous white globes
sit like a moon base, each one hiding a dish-shaped antenna aimed at a
satellite. Acres of buildings house advanced computers and receiving
equipment, while tall fences and roving guards keep the curious at a
distance. Known as Menwith Hill station, it is one of the most secret pieces
of real estate on Earth. It is also becoming one of the most controversial.

For decades, Menwith Hill has been the key link in a worldwide eavesdropping
network operated by America's super-secret National Security Agency (NSA),
the agency responsible, among other things, for electronic surveillance and
code breaking. It is the NSA's largest listening post anywhere in the world.
During the Cold War, the station played a major role in the West's ability to
monitor the diplomatic, military and commercial communication behind the Iron
Curtain. But
rather than shrinking in the decade since the fall of the Berlin Wall,
Menwith Hill has grown.

People in Europe and the United States are beginning to ask why. Has the NSA
turned from eavesdropping on the communists to eavesdropping on businesses
and private citizens in Europe and the United States? The concerns have
arisen because of the existence of a sophisticated network linking the NSA
and the spy agencies of several other nations. The NSA will not confirm the
existence of the project, code-named Echelon.

The allegations are serious. A report by the European Parliament has gone so
far as to say "within Europe all e-mail, telephone and fax communications are
routinely intercepted" by the NSA. As one of the few outsiders who have
followed the agency for years, I think the concerns are overblown--so far.
Based on everything I know about the agency, and countless conversations with
current and former NSA personnel, I am certain that the NSA is not
overstepping its mandate. But that doesn't mean it won't.

My real concern is that the technologies it is developing behind closed
doors, and the methods that have given rise to such fears, have given the
agency the ability to extend its eavesdropping network almost without limits.
And as the NSA speeds ahead in its development of satellites and computers
powerful enough to sift through mountains of intercepted data, the federal
laws (now a quarter-century old) that regulate the agency are still at the
starting gate. The communications
revolution--and all the new electronic devices susceptible to
monitoring--came long after the primary legislation governing the NSA.

The controversy comes at an interesting time. Throughout much of the
intelligence community, the cloak of secrecy is being pulled back. The CIA
recently sponsored a well-publicized reunion of former American spies in
Berlin and is planning a public symposium on intelligence during the Cold War
later this month in Texas. Even the National Reconnaissance Office, once so
secret that even its name was classified, now offers millions of pages of
documents and decades of spy satellite imagery to anyone with the time and
interest to review them.

The NSA is the exception. As more and more questions are being raised about
its activities, the agency is pulling its cloak even tighter. It is
obsessively secretive. Last spring, for the first time, it denied a routine
request for internal procedural information from a congressional intelligence
committee.

Headquartered at Fort Meade, halfway between Washington and Baltimore, the
NSA is by far America's largest spy agency. It has about 38,000 military and
civilian employees around the world; the CIA, roughly 17,000. The agency's
mandate is to monitor communications and break codes overseas; it also has a
limited domestic role, with targets such as foreign embassies. It can monitor
American citizens suspected of espionage with a warrant from a special court.
It is
potentially the most intrusive spy agency. Where scores of books have been
written about the CIA, the only book exclusively on the NSA is the one I
wrote in 1982.

Echelon, which links the NSA to its counterparts in the U.K., Canada,
Australia and New Zealand, amounts to a global listening network. With it,
those agencies are able to sift through great quantities of communications
intercepted by satellites and ground stations around the world, using
computers that search for specific names, words or phrases.

Whether the NSA will go too far with Echelon is not an idle question. In the
mid-1970s, the Senate and House Select Committees on Intelligence were
created in part as a result of NSA violations. For decades, the NSA had
secretly and illegally gained access to millions of private telegrams and
telephone calls in the United States. The agency acted as though the laws
that applied to the rest of government did not apply to it.

Based on the findings of a commission appointed by President Ford, the
Justice Department launched an unusually secret criminal investigation of the
agency, known only to a handful of people. Senior NSA officials were read
Miranda warnings and interrogated. It was the first time the Justice
Department had ever treated an entire federal agency as a suspect in a
criminal investigation. Eventually, despite finding numerous grounds on which
 to go forward with prosecution, Justice
attorneys recommended against it.  "There is the specter," said their report,
which the government still considers classified, "in the event of
prosecution, that there is likely to be much 'buck-passing' from subordinate
to superior, agency to agency, agency to board or committee, board or
committee to the President, and from the living to the dead."

As a result of the investigations, Congress in 1978 passed the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which stated in black and white what
the NSA could and could not do. To overcome the NSA's insistence that its
activities were too secret to be discussed before judges, Congress created a
special federal court, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, to hear
requests for warrants for national security eavesdropping. In case the court
ever turned down an NSA request, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Appeals Court was created. It has never heard a
case.

In the more than two decades since the FISA was passed, the law has remained
largely static, while cell phones, e-mail, faxes and the Internet have come
to dominate how we communicate. The point hasn't been lost on the NSA. Last
month, Air Force Lt. Gen. Michael Hayden, director of the NSA, gave a speech
inside the agency. I was one of the few outsiders invited to attend. Hayden
warned of the "new challenges" in "information technology" that the agency
now faces.
"The scale of change is alarmingly rapid," he said, noting that "the world
now contains 40 million cell phones, 14 million fax machines, 180 million
computers, and the Internet doubles every 90 days."

That's not all Hayden acknowledged. He had just returned from England, he
said, where he had met with colleagues at Government Communications
Headquarters (GCHQ), Britain's equivalent of the NSA. He added that they had
renewed a long-standing commitment to work together. No director had ever
spoken publicly of that close partnership. "We must go back to our roots with
GCHQ," Hayden said.

The cooperation between the Echelon countries is worrying. For decades, these
organizations have worked closely together, monitoring communications and
sharing the information gathered. Now, through Echelon, they are pooling
their resources and targets, maximizing the collection and analysis of
intercepted information. Officials from many of the European Union countries
fear that the NSA may be stealing their companies' economic secrets and
passing them on to
American competitors. "We're hoping we can use our position to alert other
parliaments and people throughout the European Union as to what's going on,"
Glyn Ford, a member of the European Parliament, told the BBC.  "Hopefully
that will lead to a situation where some proper controls are instituted and
that these things are done under controlled conditions."

The issue has also caught the attention of the House and Senate intelligence
committees, and the NSA's response has been anything but reassuring. As part
of its normal oversight responsibilities, the House Select Committee on
Intelligence last spring requested from the NSA a number of legal documents
that outline the agency's procedures for its eavesdropping operations. The
agency, in essence, told the committee to take a hike. It refused to release
any of the documents based on a unique claim of "government attorney-client
privilege." Despite repeated requests by the intelligence committee, the NSA
insisted that those documents "are
free from scrutiny by Congress." Eventually, after months of negotiation, the
NSA complied.

It is highly unlikely that Echelon is monitoring everyone everywhere, as
critics claim. It would be impossible for the NSA to capture all
communications. It has had personnel cutbacks in the past five years as its
national security targets have increased in number: North Korean missile
development, nuclear testing in India and Pakistan, the movement of suspected
terrorists and so on. Listening in on European business to help American
corporations would be a very low priority, and passing secret intercepts to
companies would quickly be discovered.

Still, the NSA's stonewalling of Congress should serve as a warning bell.
Under Section 502 of the National Security Act of 1947, as amended, the heads
of all U.S. spy agencies are obligated to furnish "any information or
material concerning intelligence activities . . . which is requested by
either of the intelligence committees in order to carry out its authorized
responsibilities." Rep. Porter J. Goss (R-Fla.), the House committee's
chairman and a former CIA officer, has long
argued for a stronger intelligence community, and even he seemed stunned by
the NSA's arrogance. The NSA's behavior, he said, "would seriously hobble the
legislative oversight process contemplated by the Constitution."

Rather than disappear further from view, the agency should publicly address
these concerns, and the intelligence committees should hold hearings to
update the laws governing the NSA and to close what now amount to loopholes.
For example, the 1978 FISA prohibits the NSA from using its "electronic
surveillance" technology to target American citizens. But that still leaves
open the possibility that Britain's GCHQ or another foreign agency could
target Americans and turn the data over to the NSA. Another problem is that
the FISA appears not to apply to the NSA's
monitoring of the Internet. While covering such things as "wire" and "radio"
communications, there is no mention of "electronic communications," which is
the legal term for communicating over the Internet as defined by the
Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986. Worse, FISA applies only
"under circumstances in which a person has a reasonable expectation of
privacy."

In the recent film, "Enemy of the State," the NSA was portrayed as an
out-of-control agency listening in on unwitting citizens. As the nation
begins a new century, congressional hearings to redefine the agency's
boundaries are the best way to prevent life from imitating art.

James Bamford, author of "The Puzzle Palace: A Report on America's Most
Secret Agency" (Viking Penguin), is working on a new book about the NSA.

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