The national security interests of the UK are intimately
entwined in a complex web of international arrangements
and agreements, binding us to the national security interests
of other nations. In 1943, the British and US governments
signed a pact , appropriately called the "British - United
States" (BRUSA) agreement, which established procedures
for the sharing of information and facilities in the intelligence
efforts of the two countries.
Immediately following the Second World War, in 1947, the
governments of the United States, the United Kingdom,
Canada, Australia and New Zealand signed a National
Security pact known as the "Quadrapartite", or "United
Kingdom - United States" (UKUSA) agreement. Its intention
was to seal an Intelligence bond in which a common National
Security objective was created. The five nations carved up
the earth into five spheres of influence, and each country was
assigned particular targets (Britain, for example, was
responsible for intercepting the Chinese , through its Hong
Kong listening post, while the US was given other
responsibilities to cover from its listening posts in Taiwan,
Japan and Korea).
The UKUSA Agreement standardised terminology, code
words, intercept handling procedures, arrangements for
cooperation, sharing of information, and access to facilities. It
is generally understood to be the most secretive agreement
in the English speaking world, and creates an intelligence
dependence which British journalist Chapman Pincher
described as "so great and (its) cooperation so close that I am
convinced security chiefs would go to any lengths to protect
the link-up".
One important component of the agreement was the
exchange of data and personnel. The link means that
operatives from, say, the New Zealand signals intelligence
agency GCSD, could work from the Canberra facilities of
Australia's Defence Signals Directorate, to intercept local
communications, and pass on the contents to the Australian
Intelligence agencies, without either nation having to formally
approve or disclose the interception.
The strongest alliance within the UKUSA relationship is the
one between the US National Security Agency (NSA), and
GCHQ. The NSA, a brainchild of the Truman administration,
was designed as a global infrastructure for eavesdropping on
military, diplomatic and economic traffic on the world's
emerging telecommunications networks. It was born in
silence, with no congressional debate, no controlling
authority, and no legislation. Not much has changed in the
decades since. The biggest spy organisation on earth
conducts its affairs in absolute secrecy.
It is widely understood that the NSA contributes several
hundred million pounds each year to GCHQ In return,
GCHQ provides full access to the NSA and its operatives in
the UK.
In the 1950s, during the development of the "special
relationship" between the US and the UK, the NSA received
approval to set up a network of spy stations throughout
Britain. Their role was to provide military, diplomatic and
economic intelligence by intercepting communications from
throughout the Northern Hemisphere. One of the bases,
Menwith Hill, near Harrogate, was to become the biggest spy
station in the world. Its ears - known as radomes - are
capable of listening in to vast chunks of the communications
spectrum throughout Europe and the old Soviet Union.
The land at Menwith Hill is owned by the British Ministry of
Defence who allow the US government to use it. The US Air
Force and British War Office signed an initial agreement
concerning the land on 11 December 1951. The agreement
provided for the land to be acquired and stipulated that the
US could "remain in occupation until this agreement, unless
otherwise excepted, is either terminated or modified."
Construction work started in 1955, and the station became
operational in 1959. Inside the closely-guarded 560 acre
base are two large operations blocks and many satellite
tracking dishes and domes. Initial operations focused on
monitoring international cable and microwave
communications passing through Britain. In the early 1960s
Menwith Hill was one of the first sites in the world to receive
sophisticated early IBM computers, with which NSA
automated the labor-intensive watch-list scrutiny of
intercepted but unenciphered telex messages. Since then,
Menwith Hill has sifted the international messages,
telegrams, and telephone calls of citizens, corporations or
governments to select information of political, military or
economic value to the United States.
Every detail of Menwith Hill's operations has been kept an
absolute secret. The official cover story is that the all-civilian
base is a Department of Defense communications station.
The British Ministry of Defence describe Menwith Hill as a
"communications relay centre." Like all good cover stories,
this has a strong element of truth to it. Until 1974, Menwith
Hill's Sigint specialty was evidently the interception of
International Leased Carrier signals, the communications
links run by civil agencies -- the Post, Telegraph and
Telephone ministries of eastern and western European
countries. The National Security Agency took over Menwith
Hill in 1966. Interception of satellite communications began at
Menwith Hill as early as 1974, when the first of more than
eight large satellite communications dishes were installed.
According to James Bamford's study of the NSA 'The Puzzle
Palace', the relationship between the US and UK agencies
is so intimate, that they could be considered to be one
organisation :
"Sharing seats alongside the NSA operators, at least in some
areas, are SIGINT (signals intelligence) specialists from
Britain's Government Communications Headquarters
(GCHQ). According to the former Menwith Hill official, the two
groups work very closely together. "In fact," he said, "the
cooperation was so smooth that when the Brits would put
down their earphones for their ten AM tea break, the
Americans would simply cover their positions. "
Cooperation between the two agencies is not confined to the
interception of non-english speaking countries. It is one of the
worst kept secrets in Whitehall that the NSA conducts large
numbers of unauthorised wiretaps on British citizens, and
passes on the information to GCHQ. Such exchanges are not
covered by law (GCHQ operatives also work out of the NSA's
headquarters at Fort Meade in Maryland, and reciprocate the
activity). In 1994 the Home Secretary authorised 871 new
wiretaps, yet Menwith Hill is.reported to have 40,000 active
telephone lines connected to it. This tactic has been used for
decades, but new data and telecommunications technology
gives the potential for total surveillance of countless
individuals.
The UK-US link-up has the effect of ensuring that US national
security interests are instantly reflected in UK domestic policy.
This activity has been all but ignored by Parliament. When
MPs such as Max Madden, Alice Mahon and the late Bob
Cryer raised questions about the activities of the NSA, the
response from government has been to invoke secrecy rules.
It has been thus for forty years. In 1996, in a Commons
question, Madden asked the Minister for Defence, Nicholas
Soames, if he would arrange for Members to be given
access to Menwith Hill station. Soames refused on the
grounds of "disruption to the operational activities of the
station and for security reasons." Only MPs with the highest
security clearance are given access - and then only on
government business.
In 1984, British Telecom and MoD staff completed a $25
million extension to Menwith Hill Station known as
STEEPLEBUSH. The British government constructed new
communications facilities and buildings for STEEPLEBUSH,
worth £7.4 million. The expansion plan includes a 50,000
square foot extension to the Operations Building and new
generators to provide 5 Megawatts of electrical power. The
purpose of the new construction was to boost and cater for an
'expanded mission' of satellite surveillance. It also provides a
new (satellite) earth terminal system to support the classified
systems at the site. With another $17.2 million being spent on
special monitoring equipment, this section of the Menwith Hill
base alone cost almost $160 million dollars.
British journalist Duncan Campbell spent a great deal of time
in the 1980s showing how the MOONPENNY series of
radomes were aimed at commercial communication
satellites.
Early this decade - after Campbell did most of his major
investigative work - a series of identical radomes, known as
the RUNWAY, was constructed running east and west across
the south edge of Menwith. These are believed to be involved
in downloading information from the geosynchronous SIGINT
satellites known as Vortex or Magnum.
STEEPLEBUSH II, a subterranean, radiation-hardened
facility, has also been installed to process information from
the RUNWAY satellites. At the end of 1996, a gigantic radome
known as GT-6 was constructed on the southeast end of the
base and appears to be dedicated to receiving information
from the geosynchronous satellites informally known as
Advanced Orion or Advanced Vortex.
The construction of new radome families at Menwith Hill
implies that radomes are being used in two ways to violate
the civil liberties of British citizens: The geosynchronous
satellites downloaded at STEEPLEBUSH II intercept
commercial as well as military communications from orbit,
and the Moonpenny radomes listen in from the ground on
commercial traffic transmitted from space via commercial
relay satellites.
The bases are not confined to spying on overseasd
communications. A recent report commissioned by the
European Commission - "Assessing the Technologies of
Political Control" - says Menwith Hill "routinely" and
"indiscriminately" monitors countless phone, fax and email
messages within Britain.
The report states "Within Europe all email telephone and fax
communications are routinely intercepted by the United
States National Security Agency transfering all target
information from the European mainland via the strategic hub
of London then by satellite to Fort Meade in Maryland via the
crucial hub at Menwith Hill in the North York moors in the
UK".
The report confirms for the first time the existence of a the
secretive ECHELON system.
"The ECHELON system forms part of the UKUSA system but
unlike many of the electronic spy systems developed during
the cold war, ECHELON is designed primarily for non-military
targets : governments, organizations and businesses in
virtually every country The ECHELON system works by
indiscriminately intercepting very large quantities of
communications and then siphoring out what is valuable
using artificial intelligence aids like MEMEX to find key
words".
According to the report, the ECHELON system uses a number
of national dictionaries containing key words of interest to
each country. If Britain detects key words of interest to, say,
Canadian or US national security, details of the
communication will be forwarded to those countries.
The report recommends a variety of measures for dealing
with the increasing power of the technologies of surveillance
being used at Menwith Hill and other centres. It bluntly
advises "The European Parliament should reject proposals
from the United States for making private messages via the
global communications network (internet) accessible to US
intelligence agencies". The report also urges a fundamental
review of the involvement of the NSA (National Security
Agency) in Europe, suggesting that the activities be more
open and accountable.
Such concerns have been privately expressed by
governments and MEPs since the cold war, but surveillance
has continued to expand. US intelligence activity in Britain
has enjoyed a steady growth throughout the past two
decades. The principal motivation for this rush of
development is the US interest in commercial espionage, a
fact acknowledged to Congress by the NSA during the
presidency of George Bush.
The report caused widespread controversy throughout
Europe, and resulted in a full debate in the European
Parliament. On September 14 1998, the plenary session of
the Parliament, convening in Strasbourg,took the
unprecedented step of demanding that the Americans come
clean about the activities of the NSA.