mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-25 07:19:31 -05:00
298 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
298 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
|
|
"How The Soviets Are Bugging America"
|
|
-------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
By Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan
|
|
|
|
From Popular Mechanics, April 1987
|
|
|
|
Soviet agents may be listening to your personal telephone
|
|
conversations. If you're involved in the government, in the
|
|
defense industry or in sensitive scientific activity, there
|
|
is a good chance they are.
|
|
|
|
In fact, a recent unclassified Senate Intelligence
|
|
Committee report on counterintelligence indicates more than
|
|
half of all telephone calls in the United States made over
|
|
any distance are vulnerable to interception. Every American
|
|
has a right to know this.
|
|
|
|
You should also know that the Reagan administration has
|
|
recognized this threat for a long time now, but so far, the
|
|
bureaucratic response has been piecemeal, and at times
|
|
reluctant.
|
|
|
|
Consider this as background: In 1975, when I was named
|
|
permanent U.S. representative to the United Nations, Vice
|
|
President Nelson Rockefeller summoned me to his office in the
|
|
Old Executive Office Building. There was something urgent he
|
|
had to tell me. The first thing I must know about the United
|
|
Nations, he said, is that the Soviets would be listening to
|
|
every call I made from our mission and from the ambassador's
|
|
suite in the Waldorf Towers. I thought this a very deep
|
|
secret, and treated it as such. Only later did I learn that
|
|
Rockefeller had publicly reported this intelligence breach to
|
|
the president in June 1975. The Rockefeller "Report to the
|
|
President on CIA Activities Within the United States" notes:
|
|
|
|
"We believe these countries (communist bloc) can monitor
|
|
and record thousands of private telephone conversations.
|
|
Americans have the right to be uneasy if not seriously
|
|
disturbed at the real possibility that their personal and
|
|
business activities, which they discuss freely over the
|
|
telephone, could be recorded and analyzed by agents of
|
|
foreign powers."
|
|
|
|
The Soviets conduct this eavesdropping from their
|
|
"diplomatic" facilities in New York City; Glen Cove, Long
|
|
Island; San Francisco; and Washington. By some estimates,
|
|
they have been doing so since 1958. President Reagan knows
|
|
this well. He sat on the Rockefeller Commission and signed
|
|
its final report concluding that such covert activities
|
|
existed.
|
|
|
|
If we had any doubts about this eavesdropping effort,
|
|
Arkady Schevchenko dispelled them when he came over in 1975
|
|
and subsequently defected in 1978. As you will recall,
|
|
Schevchenko was, at the time, the second-ranking Soviet at
|
|
the United Nations and an up-and-comer in the Soviet
|
|
hierarchy. He describes the listening operation in New York
|
|
City in his book "Breaking With Moscow": "The rooftops at
|
|
Glen Cove, the apartment building in Riverdale, and the
|
|
Mission are bristled with antennas for listening to American
|
|
conversations."
|
|
|
|
But we have to worry about more than just parabolic dish
|
|
antennas tucked behind the curtains in the Soviet "apartment"
|
|
building in Riverdale, New York.
|
|
|
|
There are also those Russian trawlers that travel up and
|
|
down our coast. They are fishing, but fishing for what?
|
|
Communications. And now the Soviets have taken their
|
|
eavesdropping a step further and have built two new classes
|
|
of AGI, or Auxiliary Gathering Intelligence, vessels. From
|
|
the hull up, these new vessels are floating antennas, I
|
|
suppose.
|
|
|
|
Most dangerous of all, perhaps, is the Soviet listening
|
|
complex in Lourdes, Cuba, just outside of Havana. This
|
|
facility is the largest such Soviet listening facility
|
|
outside its national territory. According to the president,
|
|
it "has grown by more than 60 percent in size and capability
|
|
during the past decade."
|
|
|
|
Lourdes allows instant communications with Moscow, and is
|
|
manned by 2100 Soviet technicians. 2100!
|
|
|
|
By comparison, our Department of State numbers some 4400
|
|
Foreign Service Officers - total.
|
|
|
|
Again, to cite the recent Senate Intelligence Committee
|
|
report: "The massive Soviet surveillance efforts from Cuba
|
|
and elsewhere demonstrate ... that the Soviet intelligence
|
|
payoff from the interception of unsecured communications is
|
|
immense." Intelligence specialists are not prone to
|
|
exaggeration, they do not last long that way. You can be
|
|
assured that "massive" and "immense" are not subtle words as
|
|
used in this context.
|
|
|
|
There are, however, two things you should know.
|
|
|
|
First, our most secret government messages are now
|
|
protected from interception or are scrambled, and all
|
|
classified message and data communications are secure. In
|
|
addition, protected communications zones are being
|
|
established in Washington, San Francisco and New York by
|
|
rerouting most government circuits and by encrypting
|
|
microwave links which continue to be vulnerable to intercept.
|
|
But there are still communications links which carry
|
|
unclassified, but sensitive, information that we need to
|
|
protect.
|
|
|
|
Second, it is a truism in the intelligence field that
|
|
while bits of information may be unclassified, in aggregate
|
|
they can present a classified whole. The Senate Intelligence
|
|
Committee informs us, "Due to inherent human weakness,
|
|
government and contractor officials, at all levels,
|
|
inevitable fail to follow strict security rules ... Security
|
|
briefings and penalties were simply not adequate to prevent
|
|
discussion of classified information on open lines." If the
|
|
Soviets CAN piece it together, you must assume they WILL
|
|
given the resources they invest toward this effort.
|
|
|
|
But the intelligence community needs no reminder that we
|
|
are up against a determined and crafty opponent. In 1983, for
|
|
example, a delegation of Soviet scientists were invited to
|
|
tour a Grumman plant on Long Island. No cameras. No notes.
|
|
All secure, right? Wrong. The delegation had attached
|
|
adhesive tape to the soles of their shoes to gather metal
|
|
fragments from the plant floor for further study at home. The
|
|
Soviets are pretty good at metallurgy - probably the best in
|
|
the world - and we don't need to help them any further.
|
|
|
|
But concern is not always translated into budgetary
|
|
action, at least not in the realm of communications security.
|
|
Let us take a look at the technical problem confronting us.
|
|
|
|
As you know, there are two basic ways voice can be
|
|
transmitted over telephone media: digital and analog. Analog
|
|
refers to voice waves which are modulated (amplified) up to a
|
|
very high frequency (HF). That is, they are increased in
|
|
speed from hundreds of cycles per second to thousands of
|
|
cycles per second. This facilitates their passage over
|
|
distance.
|
|
|
|
Nevertheless, because analog radio waves diminish rapidly
|
|
over distance, it's necessary to periodically amplify, or
|
|
boost, the signal either at a microwave relay tower repeater
|
|
or satellite transponder. (Actually, the signals are
|
|
diminished in frequency to voice quality and then brought
|
|
back up to high frequency.)
|
|
|
|
Digital transmissions are voice or data vibration signals
|
|
which are converted into a series of on-and-off pulses, zeros
|
|
and ones, as in a computer. Like analog telephone calls,
|
|
digital calls go through a process of modulation and
|
|
demodulation.
|
|
|
|
For the purposes of this discussion, we need only
|
|
remember two things about analog and digital telephony.
|
|
|
|
First, analog telephony is fast being replaced by digital
|
|
telephony because it better translates computer language.
|
|
But, more importantly, after a high initial overhaul cost,
|
|
it's possible to send thousands of digital calls (bundles)
|
|
over a single conduit. Therefore, as we expand our digital
|
|
capacity, we must ensure that both our analog and digital
|
|
communications are protected from Soviet eavesdropping.
|
|
|
|
Second, sending bundles over a single conduit is the base
|
|
block at which we introduce the encryption I am talking
|
|
about.
|
|
|
|
When you place a long-distance telephone call from point
|
|
A to point B, there are three communications paths, or
|
|
circuits, over which your call might travel: microwave,
|
|
satellite or cable.
|
|
|
|
Cable is the most secure. However, it is the least
|
|
practical and economical method for bulk transmission over
|
|
long distances. As a result, 90 percent of our long-distance
|
|
telephone traffic is sent by microwave or satellite, and that
|
|
which is in the air can be readily intercepted.
|
|
|
|
As your signal travels along the cable from your home to
|
|
the local switching station and then on to a long-haul
|
|
switching station, it is combined (stacked and bundled might
|
|
better describe the process) with as many as 1200 other
|
|
signals trying to get to the same region of the country.
|
|
|
|
This system of stacking and bundling signals is called
|
|
multiplexing and it's how the telecommunications industry
|
|
gets around the problem of 7 million New Yorkers all trying
|
|
to call their senator at the same time on the same copper
|
|
wire or radio frequency.
|
|
|
|
If you use a common carrier, that is, if you have not
|
|
rented a dedicated channel from a telecommunications company,
|
|
a computer at the long-haul switching station will select the
|
|
first available route to establish a circuit over which your
|
|
call signals may travel.
|
|
|
|
Therefore, calls that the caller believes to be on less
|
|
vulnerable circuits may be automatically switched to more
|
|
vulnerable ones. All this takes place in 1 to 3 seconds.
|
|
|
|
So let's follow your call as it goes by either microwave
|
|
or satellite.
|
|
|
|
If your call goes via microwave, it will be relayed
|
|
across the country as a radio wave in about 25-mile intervals
|
|
from tower to tower (watch for the towers the next time you
|
|
drive on an interstate route) until it eventually reaches a
|
|
distant switching station where it is unlinked from the other
|
|
signals, passed over cable to your friend's telephone, and
|
|
converted back into voice.
|
|
|
|
The problem with this system: Along these microwave paths
|
|
there is what we call "spill". This measures about 12.5
|
|
meters in width and the full 25 miles between towers. This is
|
|
where the microwave signal is most at risk. Using a well-
|
|
aimed parabolic dish antenna (located, let's say, on the top
|
|
of Mount Alto, one of the highest hills in the District of
|
|
Columbia, and the site of the new Soviet embassy) you can
|
|
intercept this signal and pull it in. And that is just what
|
|
the Soviets are doing.
|
|
|
|
My solution: Throw the bastards out if they are listening
|
|
to our microwave signals. Nothing technical about it. On
|
|
three occasions I have introduced legislation requiring the
|
|
president to do just that, unless in doing so, he might
|
|
compromise an intelligence source. On June 7, 1985, this
|
|
measure was adopted by the Senate as Title VII to the Foreign
|
|
Relations Authorization Bill, but it was dropped in
|
|
conference with the House of Representatives at the urging of
|
|
the administration.
|
|
|
|
Nevertheless, I think the administration accepted the
|
|
simple logic behind the proposal when at the end of October,
|
|
55 Soviet diplomats were ordered to leave the country,
|
|
including, The New York Times tells us, "operatives for
|
|
intercepting communications." Now, let's not let the Soviets
|
|
just replace one agent with another.
|
|
|
|
The process is much the same for a satellite telephone
|
|
call. Today, approximately eight telecommunications carriers
|
|
offer satellite service using something like 25 satellites.
|
|
Let's suppose your signal has traveled to a long-haul
|
|
switching station and all microwave paths are filled. The
|
|
carrier's computer searches for an alternative path to send
|
|
the signal and picks out a satellite connection. At the
|
|
ground station, your call is sent by a transponder up to a
|
|
satellite and then down again to a distant ground station.
|
|
|
|
Using an array of satellite dishes at Lourdes, the
|
|
Soviets can seize these signals from the sky just as a
|
|
backyard satellite dish can pull in television (and
|
|
telephone) signals. High speed computers then sort through
|
|
the calls and identify topics and numbers of particular
|
|
interest. And if the information provided is real time
|
|
intelligence, the Soviets have the ability to transmit it
|
|
instantaneously to Moscow. And yes, the Soviets have the
|
|
range at Lourdes to grasp our satellite transmissions as they
|
|
travel from New York to Los Angeles or Washington to Omaha.
|
|
|
|
Here, too, there is a solution: Develop and procure
|
|
cryptographic hardware for use at the common-carrier long-
|
|
haul switching stations. This hardware will encrypt the
|
|
multiplexed telephone signals (that is, approximately 1200
|
|
calls at a time) before they are transmitted as radio waves
|
|
from ground station to ground station, a technique analogous
|
|
to the cable networks scrambling their signals. This can be
|
|
done for under $1 billion. If we start by encrypting just
|
|
those unclassified signals we categorize as sensitive, those
|
|
having greatest impact on the national defense or foreign
|
|
relations of the U.S. government, it would cost us about half
|
|
as much. It would cost us so much more not to do so.
|
|
|
|
Communications security has no constituency. There is no
|
|
tangible product and the public can never really be sure that
|
|
we have done anything. But National Security Decision
|
|
Directive 145 says it is a national policy and the national
|
|
responsibility to offer assistance to the private sector in
|
|
protecting communications. It's time to make communications
|
|
security (ComSec in the lingo) a true national security
|
|
priority supported with resources as well as rhetoric. This
|
|
was certainly the conclusion of the comprehensive
|
|
Intelligence Committee report.
|
|
|
|
I agree, and have suggested a way to get on with it. If
|
|
someone has a better idea - if you have another idea - I
|
|
would be happy to know it. The important thing is that we
|
|
stop this massive leak of sensitive information and protect
|
|
your privacy.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|