Tuesday, July 19, 2011

The National Cryptologic School - On Watch

NSA main building at Fort Meade
The National Cryptologic School On Watch, Profiles from the National Security Agency's Past 40 Years, is a 76 page document that highlights some of the key moments in the history of the National Security Agency (NSA).

The document starts with Japan's last days of war and the transition from the different American wartime cryptology efforts into one post-war agency in Arlington Hall that controlled the Army Security Agency, the Naval Security Group, and the Air Force Security Service. However, the in 1949 created Armed Forces Security Agency (AFSA) lacked the power to enforce a real centralized coordination between the individual parts of the intelligence community.

Meanwhile, the 1945 defection of GRU officer Igor Gouzenko in the Soviet Embassy of Ottawa was used by U.S. intelligence as a cover to release communications intelligence. The Soviets however knew, through a source inside Arlington Hall, that their communications were not compromised by Gouzenko but by the vulnerability of their systems.

It was the start of a Soviet research program to improve their Communications Security, which resulted in the 1948 blackout of American and British intelligence on the Soviet communications. The sudden change in radio procedures and the use of one-time pads for all Soviet high level traffic was a disaster that took six years to overcome.

In 1949, AFSA codebreakers discovered the double use of one-time pads in old Soviet intelligence traffic, giving them various clues on Soviet infiltration of U.S. intelligence services. This initiated several counter-intelligence operations. The results of this operation, now called VENONA, eventually unveiled the Cambridge spy ring (Phylby, Maclean, Blunt and Burgess), atom bomb spy Klaus Fuchs and many other agents (see also VENONA Declassified).

AFSA's successor, the National Security Agency, was created in 1952. The United States finally had its centralised cryptologic intelligence agency.  The Korean War was NSA's trial of fire, which resulted in a dearly needed reorganisation of its communications capabilities. The explosion of the French-Vietnamese conflict and fear for Soviet expansion initiated a major SIGINT buildup in Southeast Asia in the early 1960's. It was soon followed by thousands of U.S. military advisors. In the 1964 Gulf of Tonking incident, USS Maddox, a destroyer on DESOTO patrol (SIGINT missions in hostile waters), was attacked by North Vietnamese torpedo boats. It would be the prelude to a complete involvement of American armed forces and intelligence in Vietnam.

NSA's SIGINT efforts would continue to play a major role in combat operation, with signals collection both on the ground and in the air, until the end of the Vietnam war in 1975. Vietnam also fueled the development of miniaturized voice encryption equipment. The secure voice system NESTOR became a widely used standard during that war. During this conflict, NSA also suffered many losses, as you can read in my Silent Warriors post.

The agency quickly outgrew its former girl's school in Arlington. In 1966, NSA relocated to its current buildings in Fort Meade to keep up with the ever growing work load. Nothing, however, could prevent the intelligence disaster that struck NSA two years later, when USS Pueblo AGER-2, a SIGINT vessel, operating near North Korean waters, was attacked and seized by the North Koreans. Loaded with SIGINT equipment and a vast amount of highly classified documents, the ship was a treasure trove for the North Koreans and their Soviet allies. The compromise of equipment, documents and knowledge effected NSA's SIGINT capabilities for many years. See also USS Pueblo Incident.

The paper has some minor redactions, but gives a good view on NSA's achievements and some of its failures. On Watch is available as document 5 at The Secret Sentry Declassified (alternative link here).

Friday, July 08, 2011

FedFlix on the Internet Archive

Fedflix is a project to digitize a large number of U.S. Government movies. It is a Joint Venture between the National Technical Information Service and Public Resource Org, which is also supported by the National Archives.

The FedFlix archive is published on the Internet Archive and it is a real treasure trove of Government movies related to intelligence agencies, espionage, the Cold War and various other subjects. There's a wide variety of historical movies, instruction movies, documentaries and interviews, and best of all, they are available as free download.

Many movies are also made available on Youtube, but at the FedFlix website you can download each movie in various video formats (MPEG4 and h.264 are the most commonly used). Just right-click the proper video format link and select "Save Target As...".

From the numerous titles, and I have selected here below a few that fit the profile of this weblog. Of course, there are many more movies, from how to fly a P-47, over Morse techniques, to atomic bombs, available on the FedFlix section of the Internet Archive. In total, there are more than 7,000 movies to discover! Select this link to view the complete list of movies and enter FedFlix AND your keyword in the search box and hit the GO! button to find your desired movies.


Enjoy watching them! If you discover any other interesting movies in the FedFlix database, please post them in the comments of this post.

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Science of Spying

Allan W. Dulles
Science of Spying is a 52 minutes documentary, produced by NBC in 1965. The video was made available to the U.S. government and is now available at the Internet Archive in cooperation with FedFlix, which makes available various government movies. Science of Spying presents several operations, carried out by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), in Cuba, Vietnam, Iran, Latin America and Congo.

Of course, the interviews with former CIA director Allen Dulles, Deputy Director for Plans Richard Bissell and others must be met with enough skepticism. Many of the facts, presented back in 1965, were either inaccurate or deliberately wrong, as some of the many currently declassified documents have shown. Nevertheless, it is an interesting movie that gives an insight in the view on intelligence work in the 1950's and 1960's.

You can view the complete movie here below, or you can download it for free at the Internet Archive's FedFlix collection.


Saturday, May 14, 2011

OXCART and ELINT Research

The National Security Archive published a paper from Gene Poteat about electronic intelligence on Soviet air defence to assisted research of stealth technology for the OXCART spy program. Gene Poteat, an electrical engineer and physicist, worked on the OXCART project.

By the end of the 1950's, the CIA's regular U-2 spy plane missions over the Soviets Union collected most valuable intelligence. The U-2's were also equipped with basic ELINT (Electronic Intelligence) and discovered a build-up of Soviet surface-to-air radars. The new radar, codenamed TALL KING by NATO, would become a serious threat to the vulnerable U-2 reconnaissance flights.

To Spy and Deny

Meanwhile, CIA's top secret OXCART program was to produce a stealthy high-speed high-altitude spy plane and Kelly Johnson's legendary Skunk Works started the development of OXCART's Lockheed A-12. The first shootdown of a U-2 plane in 1960, over Soviet airspace, only urged the CIA even more for a solution to the radar threat.

Lockheed A-12 OXCART serial 60-6932 (source: DVIC)

In 1959, Gene Poteat was assigned to the CIA's ELINT Staff Office to assist in the development of the stealth technology to make OXCART invisible to Soviet radar. However, before devising an answer to Soviet radar, they first had to know what kind of radar the Soviets used, how it performed and where it was located. At that time, there was hardly any information on Soviet radar capabilities, let alone to make an intelligence estimate on the subject. ELINT on Soviet systems was virtually non-existing, but OXCART should be invisible to radar.

Know Your Enemy and His Radar

Soviet P-14 VHF Radar "TALL KING"
source: wiki commons
The CIA engineers had to find ways to intercept and analyse radar signals from very large distance. The C-97 and RB-47 airborne ELINT platforms, flying near East-German and Soviet borders, provided the first information to develop precise measurement systems and radar jamming equipment. ELINT missions with this new equipment, placed on C-97, RB-47, C-130 and RC-135 platforms, supplemented with clandestine CIA missions, provided lots of valuable information. They could finally map the locations and coverage of the TALL KING radars.
 
They also developed the MELODY system, a so-called bistatic interception that uses objects like the Soviet's own missiles, or even the moon, to reflect radar signals over very large distance, far beyond the horizon. This enabled tracking and analysis of remote radar locations inside Russia.

A new project, codenamed PALLADIUM, measured the sensitivity of Soviet radar and the skills of Soviet radar personnel. To do so, PALLADIUM platforms received the radar signals, manipulated the signal and sent it back to the Soviets. This way, they could create any type of ghost aircraft from any size, at any speed. CIA cooperated with NSA, whose SIGINT capabilities could intercept the Soviet military reactions, or the lack of it, to these bogus radar information. These performance tests on Soviet radar provided the engineers with a basis for the required specifications for the OXCART stealth program.

In the end, it turned out that OXCART could never be stealthy enough to evade Soviet radar. Fortunately, the A-12 OXCART could outfly any surface-to-air missile with its incredible speed of 3.35 Mach (2,550 mph, 4.103 km/h) and was even faster than its successor SR-71.

Building a Fast Family
 
Only eighteen A-12's and variants were ever build:
  • Thirteen A-12 reconnaissance aircraft for the CIA with a first flight in 1962. The program was terminated in 1968.
  • Three prototype KEDLOCK YF-12A interceptors for the USAF (see video below) had their maiden flight in 1963 and continued to fly for many years, but a planned USAF order under de name F-12B was cancelled due to high costs.
  • Two TAGBOARD M-21 drone carriers with D-21 ramjet reconnaissance drone had their first flight in 1964. USAF took over the M-21 project, which was cancelled in 1966 after a fatal collision between the D-21 drone and its M-21 airplane.
The US Air Force SR-71 Blackbird strategic reconnaissance aircraft was developed from the A-12 and had its maiden flight in 1964. Thirty SR-71 were build. The SR-71 retired from USAF in 1998 and the last two SR-71's retired in 1999 from NASA. CIA published an excellent timeline of the OXCART planes.

Lockheed M-21 TAGBOARD with D-21 drone (source: CIA)

An interesting sidenote. 92% of the A-12 and SR-71 is titanium (Ti) but the U.S. had not enough titanium to produce these airplanes. The Soviet Union was the main supplier of rutile ore, containing the required titanium dioxide (TiO2). They of course would never sell their titanium to produce U.S. spy planes, so the CIA ran an operation with front companies, pretending to be third world companies, to buy the Soviet titanium under a false flag. Below are videos about the production and machining of titanium for the A-12 and SR-71.

Although not achieving a small enough radar cross section on the A-12's for full stealth, PALLADIUM made possible the development of sophisticated radar jammers and warning systems, and assisted in the research to reduce a plane's radar cross section. The OXCART planes eventually retired to be succeeded by its notorious sister plane SR-71.

CIA's ELINT Staff Office continued with various other projects, related to Soviet radar. Satellite imagery disclosed a huge radar, deep inside the Soviet Union. The HEN HOUSE, as this radar was codenamed, was a high powered over-the-horizon radar, capable of following U.S. satellites and distant missiles or aircraft. The CIA installed a receiver on a Baltic Sea island to intercept and analyse that radar. The MELODY system, with its bistatic intercepts, also provide electronic intelligence, showing that the Soviets were cheating on the 1972 ABM treaty negotiations. Many more projects will probably never be disclosed.

The small group of CIA engineers were among the first who used the aether to understand and deceive the enemy's electronic systems. This secretive and highly technical black art eventually evolved into today's indispensable Information Warfare.

Going Full Stealth

Already in 1964, Soviet mathematician Pyotr Ufimtsev showed that the radar cross section of an airplane could be reduced by specific configuration of its edges, but such design would make the aircraft aerodynamically unstable and impossible to fly. However, by the 1970s, flight computers had become advanced enough to keep such weird shaped aircraft stable and DARPA initiated a research program.

Lockheed requested to participate in the program. In 1977, Skunk Works' Have Blue project finally succeeded to build two prototype Have Blue stealth fighters, invisible to radar. The Lockheed YF-117A stealth fighter made its maiden flight on 18 June 1981 and became the first aircraft to remain invisible to Russian air defence. The production of the Lockheed F-117 Nighthawk stealth aircraft started in 1982.

Lockheed F-117 Nighthawk (source: SSgt Aaron Allmon)

The IWP has an interesting alumnus interview with Gene Poteat about his CIA career and work, and Poteat's bio.

Gene Poteat's paper can be downloaded from this National Security Archive link on their Science, Technology and the CIA pages, or alternatively at this link (better readable).

Archangel: CIA's Supersonic A-12 Reconnaissance Aircraft is available at CIA's Center for the Study of Intelligence. They also have a page explaining the difference between CIA's A-12 OXCART and the US Air Force SR-71 Blackbird.

Flying spy missions with the A-12 or SR-71 was not a walk in the park and had its risks. The A-12 serial 60-6932 from the photo at the top was lost at sea, killing CIA pilot Jack Weeks. SR-71 pilots are a special breed, as you can read in SR-71 – Not Average Plane for Not Average Brian Shul. Below also a video of an SR-71 that lost one engine.

In 2013, Lockheed Martin revealed plans for a successor of the SR-71. Their CEO announced in 2016 the development of the SR-72, an unmanned hypersonic drone, capable of reaching Mach 6. No further news about the project has been released since.

More about flying ELINT missions on my Silent Warriors and ELINT at NSA posts. See also DARPA's advanced research projects. An example of a high-power over-the-horizon radars is found on Mysterious Cold War Signals.

There are two excellent documentaries. Blackbird Stealth is about the SR-71 missions. Blackbird SR-71 explains its origins and development by Skunk Works. See also Kelly Johnson and Lockheed Story.

Below also the presentation of the prototype KEDLOCK YF-12A interceptor. Next, two excellent videos about the ingeneering of the A-12 and SR-71, and the titanium they were made of. Finally, the story of an SR-71 saved by the Swedish Air Force
 

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Bart Lee's Radio Spies

lurking on radio waves near Czech border
Source: ASA Det J Schneeberg
Bart Lee (K6VK) from the California Historical Radio Society and Antique Wireless Association has written extensively on early radio communications and signals intelligence. He has the technical knowledge on radio communications but also did thorough research on the subject. One of his splendid works is "Radio Spies, Episodes in the Ether Wars", a comprehensive 134 page work on radio interception and signals intelligence.

The papers traces the origins of radio intelligence in the early 1900's and covers its rapid evolution due to the exponential rise of wireless telegraphy during Word War I. Radio communications were used by all of the military forces, and friend and foe discovered the benefits of radio communications, but also its drawbacks. Exploiting the disadvantages became an essential part of military strategy, politics, diplomacy and espionage.

Signals intelligence, traffic analysis and cryptology developed rapidly into a race between those who were seeking secure communications and those who intercepted and exploited it. If World War I was the kick-off for radio intelligence, then World War II confirmed that signals intelligence and codebreaking had become a vital part of modern warfare. Since then, radio is a powerful weapon. Bart Lee did a wonderful job on explaining the evolution of radio interception and the efforts by American, British, Soviet, Japanese and German intelligence organisations to master the radio waves.

I can highly recommend Radio Spies, Episodes in the Ether Wars (pdf) on Bart's web pages. The images that go with the paper are found in this pdf file. Many more great publications, related to radio communications history and technology, are found on Bart Lee's web page, hosted on the California Historical Radio Society's Radio History section.

Discover more posts about signals intelligence and also visit the Cold War Signals page on our website.