
Menwith Hill is the largest electronic monitoring station in the
world. It is run by the US National Security Agency (NSA),
which monitors the world's communication for US
intelligence. Menwith Hill employs 1,200 US civilians and
servicemen to work around the clock inside "hardened"
buildings intercepting and analysing communications mainly
from Europe, Russia and the Middle East. Until a few years
ago, the existence of the NSA was a secret and its charter
and any mention of its duties are still classified. But, it does
have a Web site in which it describes itself as being
responsible for the signals intelligence and communications
security activities of the US government.
In its first decade the base sucked data from cables and
microwave links running through a nearby Post Office tower,
but the communications revolutions of the 1970s and 1980s
gave the base a capability that even its architects could
scarcely have been able to imagine. With the creation of
Intelsat and digital telecommunications, Menwith and other
stations developed the capability to eavesdrop on an
extensive scale on fax, telex and voice messages. Then, with
the development of the internet, electronic mail and electronic
commerce, the listening posts were able to increase their
monitoring capability to eavesdrop on an unprecedented
spectrum of personal and business communications.

All telecommunications traffic to and from Europe and
passing through Britain is intercepted at the base, including
private telephone calls, faxes, emails and other
communications. Much of the information is collected,
processed and relayed back to the United States
automatically. A great deal of this information comes from spy
satellites and the base has a number of large white golfballs
or "radomes" containing satellite receiving dishes.

And the base keeps growing. Since June 1996, Menwith Hill
has lodged two dozen development applications with the
local council for eight additional radomes and a string of
unidentified structures (the NSA describes its proposed
buildings as "P6" and "Hazardous storage facilities", without
naming the hazards).