Dispositivo Alteracion Mental
by Malditos Cyborgs.org
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Exposing the Global Surveillance System
For
over 40 years, New Zealand's largest intelligence agency,
the Government Communications Security Bureau (GCSB), has
been helping its Western allies to spy on countries throughout
the Pacific region. Neither the public nor the majority
of New Zealand's top elected officials had knowledge of
these activities, activities which have operated since 1948
under a secret, Cold War-era intelligence alliance between
the United States, Britain, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand
(the UKUSA agreement). But in the late 1980s, in a decision
it probably regrets, the U.S. prompted New Zealand to join
a new and highly secret global intelligence system. Author
Hager's investigation into this system and his discovery
of the ECHELON Dictionary has revealed one of the world's
biggest, most closely held intelligence projects, one which
allows spy agencies to monitor most of the telephone, e-mail,
and telex communications carried over the world's telecommunication
networks. It potentially affects every person communicating
between (and sometimes within) countries anywhere in the
world.
The
ECHELON system, designed and coordinated by the U.S. National
Security Agency (NSA) is one of the world's biggest, most
closely held intelligence projects. Unlike many of the Cold
War electronic spy systems, ECHELON is designed primarily
to gather electronic transmissions from nonmilitary targets:
governments, organizations, businesses, and individuals
in virtually every country. The system works by indiscriminately
intercepting very large quantities of communications and
using computers to identify and extract messages of interest
from the mass of unwanted ones. Computers at each secret
station in the ECHELON network automatically search millions
of messages for pre-programmed keywords. For each message
containing one of those keywords, the computer automatically
notes time and place of origin and interception, and gives
the message a four-digit code for future reference. Computers
that can automatically search through traffic for keywords
have existed since at least the 1970Os, but the ECHELON
system was designed by NSA to interconnect all these computers
and allow the stations to function as components of an integrated
whole. Using the ECHELON system, an agency in one country
may automatically pick up information gathered elsewhere
in the system. Thus, the stations of the junior UKUSA allies
function for the NSA no differently than if they were overtly
NSA-run bases located on their soil.
The
exposure of ECHELON occurred after more than fifty people
who work or have worked in intelligence and related fields,
concerned that the UKUSA activities had been secret too
long and were going too far, agreed to be interviewed by
Hager, a long-time researcher of spying and intelligence.
Materials leaked to Hager included precise information on
where the spying is conducted, how the system works, the
system's capabilities and shortcomings, and other details
such as code names.
The
potential abuses of and few restraints around the use of
ECHELON have motivated other intelligence workers to come
forward. In one example, a group of "highly placed
intelligence operatives" from the British Government
Communications Headquarters came forward protesting what
they regarded as "gross malpractice and negligence"
within the establishments in which they operate, citing
cases of GCHQ interception of charitable organizations such
as Amnesty International and Christian Aid.
Nicky
Hager states: "The main thing that protects these agencies
from change is their secrecy. On the day my book [Secret
Power] arrived in the bookshops, without prior publicity,
there was an all-day meeting of the intelligence bureaucrats
in the prime minister's department trying to decide if they
could prevent it from being distributed. They eventually
concluded, sensibly, that the political costs were too high.
It is understandable that they were so agitated."
Student
Researchers: Bryan Way, Brad Smith
Faculty Evaluator: David Van Nuys, Ph.D.
Source:
CAQ
Title: "Secret Power: Exposing the Global Surveillance
System"
Date: Winter 1996/1997
Author: Nicky Hager