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              | Date: 2001-01-14 
 
 ECHELON & ein Phantom/satellit-.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.-
 
 Ein Spionagesatellit namens "Rhyolite" als Teil von
 ECHELON mit nachgerade  ungeheurem Abhörpotential
 geistert wieder einmal durch die britischen Medien. Wie
 beinah alle ECHELON-Geschichten ist diese erstens alt,
 zweitens völlig übertrieben dargestellt und spielt damit den
 Interessen  der Dienste in die Hände, denen jede falsche
 Nachricht recht ist. Auf der UK-Crypto List stellt ein
 geduldiger Duncan Campbell essentielle Dinge klar.
 
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 Date sent: 	Sat, 13 Jan 2001 01:19:01 +0000 To:
 ukcrypto@chiark.greenend.org.uk From: 	Duncan Campbell
 <duncan@gn.apc.org> Subject: 	Commentary on the
 evdidence for Echelon Send reply to:
 ukcrypto@chiark.greenend.org.uk
 
 A number of comments have been made recently about the
 question of the evidence for Echelon, coupled to some odd
 speculation.  I would hope that the outlook of subscribers to
 this list generally would be to look for evidence, test its
 robustness, look for corroboration, and assess it all
 intellectually and scientifically.  That is my approach,
 anyway, and I will try and help.  This is a long posting, but it
 provides eno ugh facts and references, I hope, for readers to
 make a sensible assessment of their own answer to the
 question does ECHELON exist.
 
 With that in mind, I first offer a comparison between two
 alleged NSA projects commonly reported in the press;
 RHYOLITE and ECHELON.
 
 Here is a recent UK source for RHYOLITE, which claims that
 its a top secret spy satellite with almost unbelievable
 capabilities.  The quote comes from UK Eyes Alpha, by Mark
 Urban (1996), at page 58.RHYOLITE was placed in a
 geosynchronous orbit - positioned 24,000 miles from earth
 with its spee d exactly matching the turning of the globe 
 It
 was equipped with a large parabolic dish so that the feeble
 fragments of microwave energy could be refocused on its
 receiver. Each microwave circuit could carry hundreds of
 conversations.
 -
 The possibilities of RHYOLITE were, says one Sigint insider,
 'mindblowing'. Under the Anglo-Saxon Sigint arrangements,
 GCHQ was a full party to the product of this satellite. Owen
 Lewis, then an Army officer working in Sigint and now a
 communications security consultant in industry, remembers,
 "When RHYOLITE came in, the take was so enormous that
 there was no way of hand ling it. Years of development and
 billions of dollars then went into developing systems capable
 of handling it."
 
 NSAs response to the explosion of information coming from
 space included passing large amounts of it over to GCHQ for
 transcription and analysis. The USA developed two types of
 geostationary sigint payloads: one descending from
 RHYOLITE was used mainly to gather interesting UHF
 signals such as m issile telemetry and various forms of
 communications; the other specifically targeted microwave
 traffic. Each type required three satellites continuously in
 geosynchronous orbit over the Equator to provide global
 coverage. The NSA found that the amount of information
 being picked up from microwav e circuits was so large that it
 had to be immediately beamed down to an earth station
 within line of sight.
 
 The problem with RHYOLITE is that there is no documentary
 evidence that it ever existed.  True, a Californian drug dealer
 was once accused by the FBI or persuading an old
 schoolfriend who happened to get a job in a unbelievably top
 secret defence contractor's black vault where they used the
 docu ment shredder to mix cocktails is supposed to have got
 hold of a Rhyolite system manual and other goodies and
 thrown it over the fence of the Soviet embassy in Mexico
 City.  Hollywood made a film about all this (The Falcon and
 the Snowman), which certainly ought to raise the credibility
 of the R HYOLITE story to equal with the splendid recent
 NSA paranoia epic, Enemy of the State.  And theres a
 British Sigint type who once made claims about RHYOLITE
 to Mark Urban.  But no documentation.  No one has ever
 reported that they have seen a RHYOLITE satellites.
 Descriptions have been publis hed,
 
 (Point of information : the Owen Lewis above who used to
 work for the GCHQ Sigint organisation is the same Owen
 (Lewis, not Blacker) who has written on the list on this
 subject.)
 
 Now consider the claims about ECHELON stations.  Theres
 a large paper trail available, including official documents that
 span from 1981 to date.  They include a string of US
 government operational instructions.
 
 The first listing of ECHELON in an NSA document appears in
 my European Parliament report, Interception Capabilties
 2000. It is dated 1981 and refers to Menwith Hill.
 http://www.europarl.eu.int/dg4/stoa/en/publi/pdf/98-14-01-
 2en.pdf At the time that was published, that was a fragment
 rather than a full sheet.  That was done to protect the source.
 In January 2000, Margaret Newsham said she was willing to
 identify herself as the source.  A statement about this (by
 me) appears on John Youngs site.  It reveals that Margaret
 wa s the main source for the original article about Echelon,
 which was published in 1988.
 
 http://www.gn.apc.org/duncan/echelon-dc.htm Later in 2000,
 John Young published extensive technical details of the
 original plan for the component parts of the Echelon system,
 known as Project 377 or CARBOY II. According to the P-377
 specifications and documents at cryptome.org, the project
 provided for the commonality of automated data p rocessing
 equipment (ADPE) in the Echelon system (my emphasis).
 
 CARBOY includes all the units needed to that would break
 down satellite links into component parts of telephone and
 telegraph channels.  The telegraphy components could be
 either analogue or digital.  Their output was fed to the
 telegraphy message processing subsystem.  Other
 ECHELON component s were a facsimile processing
 subsystem, a voice processing subsystem, a voice
 collection module and a[voice] Tape Production Facility.
 
 By the time my IC2000 report was published, the US
 intelligence specialist Dr Jeff Richelson had located and
 obtained US Navy and Air Force documents from the 1990s,
 giving many details of US ECHELON sites. This material is
 referenced carefully in the IC2000 report, which says that the
 documents provide original new documentary and other
 evidence about the ECHELON system and its involvement in
 the interception of communication satellites". They are
 references 47-51.
 
 
 Although these references were not on-line when IC2000 was
 first published, Jeff Richelson has now put them and other
 official documents on-line in the NSA section of the National
 Security Archive.
 http://www.hfni.gsehd.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB2
 3 They show, for example, that the first task of the
 commander of the US Naval Security Group satellite station
 at Sugar Grove, West Virginia is to maintain and operate an
 ECHELON site.  For the sake of the avoidance of doubt, this
 does not mean echelon its military meaning of "formation".
 Thi s is made clear by other documents referring to
 ECHELON training departments and similar functions.
 
 http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB23/09-
 03.htm Other documents that Richelson obtained from the
 US Air Force Intelligence Agency give further details of more
 units, and scope out a plan developed in January 1995 for the
 Air Force to post groups of its intelligence people into Sugar
 Grove and other bases for the activation of ECHELON units.
 
 
 http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB23/12-
 02.htm
 http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB23/12-
 03.htm One might reasonably ask - what are these
 ECHELON units? What do they actually do? The last
 mentioned URL refers to the US Air Force component of the
 ECHELON stations.  Its the 544th Intelligence Group, based
 in Colorado Springs.  Their 1995 reports describe Sugar
 Grove as a COMSAT intercept station.  That description is
 still current in 2001, and is repeated on their web site.
 
 http://www.aia.af.mil/common/homepages/pa/cyberspokesma
 n/jan/atc7.htm#DET3
 
 You can click now, or read on. This is what it says:
 Detachment 3, 544th Intelligence Group is fully integrated
 with Naval Security Group Activity, located at Sugar Grove,
 W. Va. Its mission is to direct satellite communications
 equipment supporting research and development for multi-
 service nat ional missions. It provides enhanced intelligence
 support to Air Force operational commanders and other
 consumers of communications satellite information collected
 by Navy-commanded field stations. This is achieved by
 embedding personnel into field station operations and by
 providing a trained ca dre of collection system operators,
 analysts and managers for AIA.
 
 
 Det. 3's vision is to provide AIA a highly trained cadre of
 people to capitalize on emerging technologies to meet
 consumer requirements and to establish itself as a leader in
 the COMSAT environment by remaining on the cutting edge
 well into the 21st century.
 
 Det. 3 is comprised of four 1N2 signal analysts, a
 superintendent and a commander. The personnel of Det. 3
 are expected to be on the forefront of technologic advances in
 communications. Therefore,the ECHELON site at Sugar
 Grove is a COMSAT intercept station which produces
 intelligence and gives it to consumers.  Perusing the rest of
 the documents referred to in these sites shows that it is part
 of a network including, for example, the NSA station at
 Yakima, Washington state.
 
 This is exactly the same account of what ECHELON is (and
 isnt) as was published by the original authors on this
 subject, Nicky Hager (the author of the 1996 book, Secret
 Power) and myself.  More recently, Richelson has written an
 article which neatly separates the wheat from the chaff,
 distingu ishing the factual existence and capabilities of the
 ECHELON stations from the torrent of inaccurate
 enlargement which has marked most of the derivative
 secondary reporting on the same subject.  This appeared in
 the March-April 2000 edition of the Bulletin of the Atomic
 Scientists.
 
 http://www.bullatomsci.org/issues/2000/ma00/ma00richelson.
 html This article makes it clear - and I unhesitatingly agree -
 that much of what one reads about ECHELON in the press or
 on TV is nonsense.  But ECHELON is shown to be the still
 extant name for the SATCOM intercept component of the US
 SIGINT system, even though they could have opted to
 change the nam e long ago.
 
 Australia doesn't use that name, but admits running part of
 the intergrated system under a different name.  New Zealand
 and Canada have ECHELON stations. References to the
 Australian governments confirmation that they participate in
 the system as Hager describes it (but under a different and
 as yet undisclosed name) appear in the IC2000 report.  So
 do references to government documents obtained in Canada
 (under their FOI provisions), identifying the substantial mid
 1990s budget expenditure on ECHELON by CSE, the
 Canadian equivalent of CSE and GCHQ.
 
 
 No-one knows if British SATCOM intercept stations now use
 the name.  We do know from the US that one US SATCOM
 intercept station (Misawa, Japan) uses a different codename,
 LADYLOVE.
 
 Sure, you have to do some reading to get all this.  But thats
 wiser than hitting the keyboard in wilfull ignorance. To take
 up just one other point, Owen asked rhetorically why no call
 has been made on [EU] member states for authoritative
 information.  That is what the EP Echelon committee has
 been doing since last September.  To find out about this, you
 can read their web side and/or the well-informed Germa n on-
 line publication Telepolis.
 
 http://www.europarl.eu.int/committees/echelon_home.htm
 http://www.heise.de/tp Unlike RHYOLITE satellites, you can
 go and look at or see pictures of the alleged ECHELON
 stations.  Pictures of all of them, except Guam, are on the
 web.  They all have windowless buildings and arrays of
 medium to large satellite dishes aimed at geostationery
 positions along the Clark Belt.  The y have double fences,
 lots of security, and mean looking guards.  They look exactly
 like SATCOM intercept and intelligence stations.
 
 Thus, in contrast to undocumented allegations about
 RHYOLITE satellites that no one has ever seen, the
 ECHELON system is (in the form described in the primary
 reporting) robustly supported by authenticated and
 authenticatable evidence, official documents, and physical
 observation, as well as by n amed sources with proven
 access to information on the subject.
 
 I do believe that RHYOLITE once orbited our skies. What I
 dont believe in is bizarre theories of global illuminati sourced
 in nothing at all and advanced in comprehensive disregard of
 available evidence.  When that is coupled to snide personal
 remarks, it lowers only the public estimation of th e writer.
 
 
 The above is offered in the interests of open evaluation of this
 interesting issue.
 
 Duncan Campbell
 
 
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 edited by
 published on: 2001-01-14
 comments to office@quintessenz.at
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