ECHELON Committee
23 & 24 April 2001
Chairman:
Mr Hager, you have the floor.
Nicky Hager
Good morning. I am very pleased to be with your committee, and I think I should have to appear here as one of the people
who produce the information about Echelon. I think it's very important that you have the opportunity to challenge me and
question me so that as a committee you can feel confident about the information I provided to your work. But also it was
very useful for me to hear your discussion yesterday, as it is now clear to me what I should be talking about, the stage
you are at with your work. I had written quite a lot of notes, but I will change some of what I was going to say to you.
The questions which yesterday seemed to be on everyone's mind were about what you can, as a European Parliament
committee, reasonably include in your report, what you can think is true and what is not, and also about what exactly
you can do about this issue. So that's what I would like to talk about today. I'll also, of course, talk about the
Echelon system itself, but I won't go into huge detail on it, because I don't want to use up your time repeating things
which have already been provided in your papers, but I am very keen when I finish for people to be able to question me
and question my sources.
Listening to the talk yesterday the things which I would particularly like to cover today about what you as a committee
can believe on the subject and particularly the question of how much proof is enough before you can say, Echelon exists,
these kinds of systems exist, and move on from there.
The next thing that struck me yesterday is that I felt, at least from that discussion, this committee has got too caught
up in the question of whether Echelon has been used in the one narrow area of monitoring of European companies to the
advantage of United States companies. And so some of what I am going to say today is going to be about broadening the
inquiry in terms of what I saw as your terms of reference to look more generally at the kind of interception against
Europeans. That feels to me that you have been too focused down on that one yes or no to competitive and commercial
spying. I also (thought) about the foreign relation context of the spying by the American/British/New
Zealand/Australia/Canada alliance putting that in a foreign policy context, and then I'll move on - this is what I had
not intended to do, but because of the stage of your inquiry - I'll move on to what I think some specific
recommendations could be, the kind of things that could be adopted by a Committe like yours, hopefully not just to your
region but to the rest of the world.
But I'll start by introducing myself. I began to be a researcher 20 years ago when I left university. I first worked for
a government science organisation. I developed a personal interest in defence and have for some years been a writer and
a critic of defence policy in my country. But in the middle of the 1990s, while I was looking at different defence
subjects, I stumbled across information about our member of this signals intelligence alliance, an organisation - you'll
forget the name straight away, it's a forgettable name - it's called the Government Communication Security Bureau
(GCSB). That is the New Zealand equivalent of the National Security Agency or the British GCHQ. At that stage I would
not have found more than one or two politicians in our entire parliament who even knew the name GCSB, even though it is
by far our largest intelligence organisation, it was completely invisible. After that there ended up being 12 years of
my life where I was probing deeper and deeper in that organisation. Initially I had no inside sources, but I had some
lucky breaks, particularly - and this is probably what drove me on with the research - I discovered that I could find
out a lot of information about the inside of the organisation from public sources. What I discovered was that this most
secret of intelligence organisations had assumed that it would always be secret and so they had hidden the names of
their staff and details of their internal structures within all sorts of government records that were not confidential,
and by searching very methodically through all sorts of our government records I was able to get full lists of everyone
who worked in this most secret intelligence organisation and all the past people who had worked there, and look through
different records and find details of all their overseas postings and where they had gone and been trained in the
oversees agencies. And overall after a while I got a 40-year picture of where in New Zealand's most secret intelligence
people had been posted in this country and that country and trained in this particular city and started as an outsider
to get a sense of this organisation. Lists of names, though, were the key for me, because I live in a small country, our
capital city, where I live, is only 150.000 people. And within that city and with the knowledge of all the people who
worked in the agency and all the people who had worked there I started to be able to locate people who might be prepared
to talk to me.
And about in 1990, after a few years of gradually picking away at this job, I started to interview people who had worked
and were working inside the intelligence organisation. For the next five years I lived a slightly strange and secret
life, because I had a large number of secret interviews with different staff. These are people who, if they were caught
talking to me, would have lost their jobs and probably their careers would have ended. So we had to meet very secretly
and privately, I had to hide my interview notes, but gradually over the next 5 years I built up about several hundred of
pages of interview notes. Further characteristics of these intelligence agencies is that they are very
compartmentalised. The person working in this office quite likely doesn't have much idea at all of what the people would
do in the office next door, and they probably have no idea of what happens in the floor below them in the building or in
other facilities. And so to build up a picture of what was happening I had to locate people in all different parts of
the organisation who were prepared to talk to me. And there is something about the easygoing or casual character of New
Zealanders that meant that I was able to find a large number of people who would speak to me, and I could win their
trust and they provided me, as I say, with very secret information about the organisation.
Although my research was about a New Zealand agency, that is, one agency in the south of the South Pacific, what I very
quickly started to learn as these people told me the details of their jobs, was that in fact I was learning about not a
New Zealand operation but a five-country operation. I was learning detailed information which was giving an insight into
the United States and the British and the Canadian and the Australian agencies just as much. It quickly became clear to
me that the technical systems they were using and the targetting lists and the regulations and manuals, the intelligence
distributions systems, all the different specific parts of their work were not New Zealand systems, they had another
agency's name on the manuals, and the target lists came from the NSA, and so finding out that New Zealand was actually a
little window into finding out about the whole alliance. Likewise, the officers who I was talking to had been trained in
London, in Washington, in Canberra, and the new equipment that they were installing had been planned in five-nation
working groups, usually in Washington, and a lot of the specific intelligence operations, I came to learn, were joint
operations where two or more of the agencies were working together. And so that meant that even though it's a strange
thing that international systems should be exposed from a far-flung country like New Zealand, because these people were
prepared to talk to me they gave me an opportunity to find out about international networks.
It was during an interview with one of the operations division staff in the early 1990s that I first heard about the
Echelon system and I first heard that word Echelon, which I had never heard before, of course. I had a series of
interviews with that officer and then other staff where I built up the description of Echelon which I have got in my
book and which you have seen many of the details of in the STOA reports and other reports which have been presented to
this committee. As I said, I really invite you to question me when I finish about any doubts you have about whether my
information is solid or the details of the system to dispell any questions that there are about whether the system
exists and also about the capabilities and limitations of the systems. I should say that it is very important that we
should discuss not only the power of a system like Echelon, but also what its limitations are. The reason we should look
at the limitations is that there has been many exaggerated second-hand accounts of what I and other people have written
about Echelon. In my view they give an air of unreality to the subject of Echelon and intelligence. In my opinion it is
in the interest of the intelligence agencies that when the public talks about intelligence it all sounds very vague and
rather akin to talking about flying saucers or something and not really the real world, it suits their interest. It is
very much in the interest of people like us here, people with a serious interest in the subject, to be able to be as
precise and factual as possible, as it is only in that way that we can get proper public scrutiny and questioning of
what is going on.
I want to begin by mentioning the limits of my knowledge of the subject, because there is, of course, a great deal that
I don't know. My sources were intelligence officers working in the south of the South Pacific, and their targets were
within the Pacific. I have no knowledge of specific operations in this part of the world. I don't know about which
particular companies or agencies or organisations in Europe have been spied upon. The most I have ever heard about
Europe was intelligence officers talking about their knowledge of an interaction with their sister facilities, like the
one at Morwenstow in Britain, which they were working in parallel with, but I don't know the specific details. What I
can provide you with today is a detailed understanding of the world-wide systems which work just as much in Britain and
the US as they do in New Zealand, and an understanding from my years of work on this about the scale of the interception
and the specific kinds of targetting which happen in our part of the world, which I think which will be quite closely
mirrored in your part of the world. But I want to be clear about that if you will ask me whether somebody has been
spying on Boeing or this company or that company, I haven't got the faintest idea, it is not worth asking me.
The first question then which I want to discuss with you in detail is the question of what in this highly secretive
subject your committee can reasonably believe and what you should doubt, that central issue when you are studying a
highly secretive thing. And I want to tell three brief stories from my part of the world, the first one comes from June
12, 1984, when our then Prime Minister, Robert Muldoon, first admitted to the New Zealand Parliament that our agency,
the GCSB, existed. He told the Parliament that this organisation existed, but he reassured the members of parliament
that "it does not monitor New Zealand's friends in the South Pacific". The same statement was made by two future prime
ministers over the following decade. The point is, this statement was completely untrue, in fact it utterly turned the
truth on its head, because the main work of the GCSB was to routinely and continuously monitor all the nations of the
South Pacific, that is the nations from French Polynesia in the east across to the Salomon Islands in the west and every
country in between, except for Australia, of course, that's countries with names like Fidji, Tonga, Kiribati and Tuvalu.
This was part of the world-wide division of responsibilities between the UKUSA group, and New Zealand got their
particular slice of the Pacific to do. I have interviewed people whose whole job was monitoring those friendly countries
of New Zealand in the South Pacific, and yet every prime minister had told Parliament that they did not do that.
The second story is from 1995, when the world was told by angry US spokespeople and New Zealand and Australian
politicians that New Zealand's intelligence ties had been completely cut with the United States as a retaliation against
New Zealand's ban on port visits by US nuclear-armed ships. Like everyone else I believed those statements at the time,
it did not seem that they would be wrong. But it turned out that they were also completely untrue. Since then I have
interviewed the people who worked inside these most secret agencies at the time, who were watching the intelligence come
from the US every day, and they say that apart from a few weekly digests which stopped for several months, the vast bulk
of the intelligence from the US and the cooperation continued completely unimpeded. Once again, the public had been
completely mislead - and the New Zealand Parliament.
The final example is from later in the 1980s when our then Prime Minister, David Lange, had the job of approving and
signing the funding for a new intelligence base, the Waihopai base, New Zealand's Echelon station in this part of the
network. He said that the reason why New Zealand had had to set up the station was because we had been cut off from US
intelligence and we needed to set up an independent operation to help New Zealand. He said, "For years there has been
concern about our dependence on others for intelligence, being hooked up to the network of others and all that implies.
This Government is committed to standing on its own two feet." David Lange believed that statement when he made it, but
like in the other examples, it was completely untrue. The Waihopai station had been designed from before his government
was elected, and it actually represented the greatest integration of New Zealand into the intelligence alliance which
there had been to date. It was the exact opposite of becoming more independent.
When years later I quietly took the draft of my book to David Lange and asked him to read it before it was published,
and sat in his office with him through two long sessions while he read through the thing, he was so annoyed at the
extent to which he had been mislead over that and other subjects, that he agreed to write the foreword to the book. So,
the foreword to this book is by that former prime minister. So, that is three pretty fundamental untruths, one was about
the targetting, one was about the alliances New Zealand was part of, and one was the degree of independence of our
intelligence service, that they were quite willing to mislead the public.
I think there is a very important point or lesson in this for your committee. If the GCSB staff had not risked their
careers, their jobs, to talk to me, New Zealand intelligence chiefs and politicians would very likely still be telling
New Zealanders and the world that our GCSB does not spy on our friends in the South Pacific, we have been cut off from
American intelligence, the Waihopai stations is there to be independent, and they could have kept doing it, because no
one could have contradicted it. The point is, these lies, this misleading of the public is standard practice in the
intelligence world, and the people who do this misleading are not bad people. Within the intelligence agencies senior
staff believe sincerely that the secrecy of their operations are of paramount importance. They feel completely justified
in misleading the public and their own governments and European Parliament committees when they need to, if that is what
is required to protect their operations and stop political interference and what they believe are important long-term
relationships.
What I found when working on the subject is that much of what passes for fact in the news media and the debates about
intelligence is actually more or less fiction, it is mistakes or it is half-truths, which the intelligence agencies have
allowed or encouraged the public to repeat year after year in their ignorance. I have talked to senior retired
intelligence officers who have earnestly argued the need for the secrecy and deception. The relevance of this for your
committee is obvious, if you don't want to be deflected from your job, then what I'm saying is, you must not take it
seriously when you get the standard denials about Echelon and other subjects. Of course, they are going to deny it. No
US or British spy agency is ever going to confirm that they intensively monitor European nations, and so the denials and
the evasions that they make cannot be taken seriously. Any deception - so-called - is what they would see as necessary
protection of important operations and intelligence relationships. When, for instance, the CIA director talked about
there only being spying in Europe to track down bribery - that old story - that might be true, but equally it might not
be true. Another example on this, the people I interviewed - and these were the people who saw thousands of intelligence
reports a week coming from the US across the wire and to our intelligence agencies - said to me that the standard sort
of good spying examples that people hear about in public is things like terrorism, transport of weapons and so on. In
other words, the targets that the public hears about are not the real targets of these systems generally. Those targets
like terrorism and weapons transport are used as a cover for the traditional areas of spying, the predominant areas of
spying, which are political, diplomatic, economic and military. This is a point I want to come back to with you. In
summary, what I am saying is that intelligence agencies routinely and continuously see it as their duty to mislead their
publics and even their politicians, and they may also tell you the truth when it serves their interests, but this of no
help to your committee, as you are probing a subject which they don't want to be probed.
Moving on to the foreign policy implications, what I found in my research is that very secret intelligence activities
allow there to be a gap between public policies, that's what the governments say their foreign policies are and what the
ministers say in their speeches, and what is actually doing in their secret operations. In our region this is shown
graphically by the example I gave of who is targetted. In public, New Zealand is a benevolent friend, the big brother of
all those South Pacific nations that helps them out in all sorts of ways, and it is a strong supporter of the regional
organisations in the UNO area. Yet secretly, all of those South Pacific countries are spied on to a devestating effect.
I have spoken to the officers who using the Echelon capabilities have monitored each of the Prime Ministers of those
countries - this is an important list, because I think it has exact parallels in Europe - they monitor the Prime
Ministers of each of those countries, our friends in the South Pacific, they monitor the rest of the ministers, they
monitor the Prime Ministers' departments and the other government departments, they monitor the leaders of the
opposition and opposition politicians and groups, they monitor the police forces, particularly in Fidji, which is the
centre of the South Pacific, they monitor the main regional organisations such as the Pacific Islands Forum, they
monitor all the UN organisations, they monitor all the politics and organisations of the South Pacific. All of this
intelligence is distributed automatically to the US spy agencies which have an interest in our regions and to the other
allies. The GCSB, our agency, even helped to spy on East Timor during a period when publically our politicians and the
vast majority of our public supported East Timor independence. At the same time privately our intelligence officers were
helping the US and Australia spy on the East Timor people at a time where that intelligence was being funneled through
to the Indonesian military. The point I am making is, because these operations are so secret and can stay secret for
decades on end, it is possible to have a completely separate private policy to the public forum policy.
The reason New Zealand conducts this comprehensive spying against its friendly neighbouring countries is not because it
needs this covert intelligence. Indeed, in my interviews with New Zealand intelligence staff and diplomats they regard
more traditional sources of diplomatic intelligence as being much more useful to them, this is intelligence like
diplomats building up friendships and contacts in key parts of governments and other organisations, it is cocktail
parties, it is the intelligent reading of newspapers and so on, at least in our country. The analysts and the
politicians find that intelligence much more useful in practice than these bits of covert eavesdropped information. So
the reason New Zealand conducts all this covert monitoring is simply because it is diligently and thoroughly performing
its duties within the UKUSA alliance. There are quite deep-seated fears held by our senior intelligence officials that
if they don't play their part fully in the alliance, New Zealand may be left out, or gradually frozen out of it. They
believe they are acting in the best long-term interest of New Zealand when they are betraying our small and distinctly
vulnerable little neighbouring countries in the short term.
I think there are obvious parallels between this New Zealand experience and Europe, the same division of responsibility
for world-wide monitoring that gave New Zealand the South Pacific, which gives Australia a part from where we are and
that ends up in south east Asia, and it give Britain the task of spying on Western Europe. As I told you, I don't know
the specific targettings in Europe, but based on my experience of what happens in Australia and New Zealand, I have no
doubt at all that the same kind of large-scale and comprehensive monitoring of European nations happens as goes on in
the South Pacific, and again I say, prime ministers and other ministers and government departments and all the rest of
it.
The spying systems that we are talking about except where there is sufficiently powerful encryption have the capability
to monitor the whole of governments, regional and international organisations, non-government organisations, companies
and individuals throughout Europe. And since secrecy and deniability keep those operations invisible, there is no reason
for the US and Britain to deprive themselves of the interesting intelligence that can be gathered that way. So, what I
am saying is, this secrecy allows Britain to maintain a public policy of loyalty to the European Union, while secretly
continuing a completely incompatible defence intelligence relationship in support of its older transatlantic
relationship. As in New Zealand, the British intelligence chiefs would be very reluctant to risk their special
relationship by refusing to cooperate and monitoring the rest of your countries. I imagine, some people might say at
this stage that the US and Britain are hardly going to spy on their NATO allies, and so I refer to the Pacific
experience on this, because I think it is again very illuminating. What I see in the Pacific is that the US in
cooperation with the rest of UKUSA have been perfectly happy to spy on close allies and trading partners. During the
1980s and 90s about half of the total workload of analysts working inside our spy agency, the GCSB, the people I was
interviewing were involved in spying on two countries, that is France and Japan within the South Pacific. In the case of
Japan, this is despite of being the key trading partner for New Zealand and of being a very close intelligence ally of
the US. The GCSB put major resources into monitoring all Japanese embassies in our region. This was not conducted
because New Zealand had a problem with Japan or a conflict or had a special need for this intelligence, it was merely
because Japanese diplomatic intelligence, code-named JAD-intelligence, was a priority for the NSA, and the NSA had asked
the other four allies around the world, Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, to take one part of the world's
Japanese embassies, in other words, five countries between them were spying on all the Japanese embassies in the world.
We were being provided with the codes to break them during the intercepting and sending the results back to Washington.
The same goes for France. Publically it is an ally of the US and Britain, but privately these two nations' SIGINT
agencies asked New Zealand, the GCSB, as a special project to monitor French nucear testing in the South Pacific. And so
from the early 80s through to 1996 when it ended, one of the three main analysis units within our GCSB was devoted to
French intelligence, spying on them in New Caledonia and in French Polynesia. The purpose, according these GCSB staff,
the reason why they had been asked to do this by Britain and the US was because those two nuclear weapon nations wanted
to keep an eye on France's nuclear weapon development. And so this is the point I am making. Public alliances between
countries don't seem to make any difference to secret intelligence operations. It would be naive to assume that friendly
NATO allies and so on aren't using the resources they have got for continuous spying.
In my opinion - this is none of my business -, but in my opinion there is tension in Britain, or between Britain and the
rest of the European Union. The British government will probably be able to just avoid your current inquiry just by not
participating or keeping its head down. My feeling is that there is a tension or a pressure which is going to mean that
eventually Britain, if these issues get more publicized, or as these issues get more publicized, Britain is going to
have to make a choice, and if there is one weak point in that 50-year-old UKUSA alliance, it is Britain and it's
Britain's split loyalties between its responsibilities to spy on Europe and its position within the EU. It seems to me
that that relationship, which was born in the Second World War and in the Cold War, is going to come more and more under
pressure in the years and decades ahead, and that is where we are going to see the first change in this, I think. The
only countries within the UKUSA alliance which are not spied on, are each other, there are specific regulations which
stop Canada spying on Britain or New Zealand spying on Australia. I know that the GCSB staff in New Zealand strictly
follow that regulation, they never broke it, although there is evidence that some of the larger allies are not so
scrupulous.
So, in summary for this part, what I am trying to communicate not from first hand experience but a very detailed
experience in the Pacific, is that I think your committee should be conscious of the scale and the comprehensiveness of
the spying which is likely to be occurring in Europe, and by which I am saying political, diplomatic, economic and
military surveillance. And this is a surveillance which will be affecting the rights of governments and regional and
international agencies and companies and community groups and citizens. What I am saying is that it is just not credible
to suppose that the scope in the intensity of monitoring which New Zealand does in its part of the world against its
friendly neighbours and trading partners and which Australia does in the South East Asian region against its neighbours
and its trading partners and other friendly countries is not also occurring when Britain has a traditional role of
spying in this part of the world on its friendly neighbours, EU partners and trading partners.
The next point that I would like to move on to is that I really think it would be a terrible shame if your committee was
to waste, or to focus too much of its attention on the single issue of a certain kind of economic intelligence which has
to do with competition between companies of different countries. I think part of the reason that it's here this way is
because of the way that the Echelon issue arose in Europe. It has really been a news media driven issue for a while.
Until the creation of your committee it was the news media that was pushing it, and the principle interest seemed to be
in these questions of whether this or that large contract or deal had been won by an American corporation as a result of
SIGINT. But as I am saying, while I am about to talk about the extent to which I think that is true, I think it
seriously skewed the debate. It would be a pity if your committee, which has got much wider terms of reference on that,
it is to do with spying on the whole of Europe, it would be a pity if you got sort of sucked down into that simple
question of whether or how much is that kind of competitive intelligence being collected. I think it would be a waste of
the opportunity that you have got before you.
At the risk of stating the obvious, I think it is worth referring to the function of intelligence gathering, just to
broaden and confirm what I was just talking about. A world power such as the US and a regional power like Britain have
numerous obviously diplomatic and economic and military and ideological and domestic political interests that they are
pursuing at once, a whole diversity, and often conflicting ones as well. And so, knowing how other countries'
delegations intend to act in this or that international negociation or understanding the political factions within the
government, which has policies differering from them at a particular time on a particular issue, or giving advance
warning of particular political issues or political protests, or gaining inside knowledge of other countries' economic
planning or commodity prices, all this kind of things can be of assistance to a country as it works to pursue its
national interests. These are the kinds of intelligence which are gathered through normal diplomatic reporting, and they
are also the sorts of activities which you gather with using secret intelligence assets such as the Echelon system and
its sister systems. Seen like this, and ignoring the fiction that intelligence gathering is only directed against
threats or enemies, it is entirely unexceptional to conclude that systems like Echelon will be used for a wide range of
European monitoring.
Having given this caution, I will just say a couple of words about commercially valuable intelligence, because
commercially valuable intelligence is, in my direct experience of interviewing people, at least in the South Pacific and
the Pacific part of what they monitor. According to my sources, commercial intelligence is actively sought by our GCSB,
or was being 5 years ago as exchange between the UKUSA allies. At the time of my interviews, economic intelligence in
the Pacific was not the main, but it was still a regular target. I can recall being told various economic intelligence
stories on specific subjects. One was on cope and deals to do with Japan, another was to do with collecting intelligence
on meat sales, which is very important for New Zealand, a third was a more general one on intelligence to do with oil
prices, and the fourth was a very specific issue of a particularly large Japanese development project in the South
Pacific where there was potential for New Zealand companies to win contracts. In other words, there were both
macro-level and micro-level economic intelligence being collected.
In the case of New Zealand, the intelligence staff told me that the commercial, that the micro-level intelligence
collecting was becoming less and less, and there was a reason for that. In New Zealand, the intelligence has never been
shared with large companies like private forestry companies or something. But is was regularly shared with large state
commercial trade organisations. But New Zealand has been through the same process of privatisation and foreign
investment that other countries have had. And so, the intelligence liaison staff found harder and harder to decide who
they should give intelligence to. Basically, they did not know whether they should be providing intelligence to, it
might be a Japanese-owned company working in New Zealand or a New Zealand-owned country producing its goods in China,
and so more and more they stopped doing it. However, prior to that stage - this is in contradiction to something that
Jim Bamford said yesterday, he said, you have to have these people with above top secret clearances to get the
intelligence, and that is exactly what is happening in New Zealand, in key areas, like, one was our dairy board, I
remember, which is our largest exporting organisation in New Zealand, another was Telecom, before it was privatised in
New Zealand, they were specially indoctrinated, as I call it, special above top secret cleared offices within all those
organisations, who had the job of receiving SIGINT. That was routine and unexceptional, and New Zealand being furthest
away from the commercial business of the world, if it was happening there, I would find it inconceivable if it wasn't
happening elsewhere. In addition, and I would suggest more important, other staff described the intelligence that they
were getting from the NSA, and they told about the fantastic amount of intelligence that was arriving for example
monitoring international trade meetings. And I would suggest that rather than getting caught up in whether this or that
private company has been disadvantaged in terms of one country gaining advantage over another, monitoring of delegations
in international trade meetings is a far more important topic. From my sources, they said that whenever there was a GATT
meeting or another major international meeting, there were hundreds of reports of the monitoring of the different
delegations which were arriving in New Zealand and being shared between the UKUSA partners, and I have absolutely no
doubt about that, because I have talked to people who saw it coming from the NSA.
Moving along, I would like to talk a bit about the issue of proof, which I think is obviously bearing hard on your
committee. I have cautioned you about accepting denials by intelligence agencies and their governments. I am saying, you
can't trust them if it suits their interest not to tell you the truth. And someone could reasonably reply, why should
you accept information from people like me, so I would like to answer that question now. I faced the problem with proof
continuously right through the process of researching and writing the book. The problem is that it is completely
unreasonable to expect individual intelligence officers to go on the record, to put their names to information when they
would suffer such retaliation they probably would be unemployed for the rest of their lifes. It is just too hard to
expect someone to do that. The problem with that is that without those people, information can be dismissed as hearsay.
How do you know, that it's right? My solution to that problem was to collect so much detail about the secret operations,
that was not just to say, who you were spying on, but where does the spying occur, in which room do they do it, which
parts of it, and what's the name of the manual that you work from, how do the particular systems work, who do you
distribute which kind of intelligence to, and what does the manual look like that tells you who to distribute what
intelligence to whom, what are the code names, even what is the internal layout of your secret facilities. In other
words, the reason why I gathered that huge pile of specific detail is that I hoped that by doing that it would mean that
somebody who looked at the general findings of the book could feel credibility that it had not come from my imagination,
because I believed in flying saucers, but because it had actually originated in the sources who were talking to me.
At the end of the process, I believe that any reasonable person who looks at my book and looks at the detail, just like
Jim Bamford was saying, with his hundred pages of references in the back of his, I think that anyone who looks through
the book and sees the specific parts of it will feel confident that the information could have only come from a wide
range of inside sources. I have brought several copies of the book with me, and if any of you here would like to take a
copy away, I will happily give you one, not because I expect you to read it word for word at this stage, but because I
really hope that you can feel reassured that it is not a work of fiction.
Also I should mention David Lange, the former New Zealand Prime Minister who I allowed to look at the book, who when he
wrote a foreword to it, after overseeing this organisation as Prime Minister for 5 years, wrote, "an astonishing number
of people have told him things that I as Prime Minister in charge of the intelligence services was never told". The
information about Echelon which is in my book, which I was told about in New Zealand, is reinforced by various other
credible sources, you got Jim Bamford yesterday, and his books on this tell the same story from different sources, you
got Duncan Campbell's sources, particularly Margaret Newsham, the woman who worked at Menwith Hill who provided the
early 1980s details of the expansion of Echelon at that stage, the technical details, and of course there is the US
government documents which Jeffrey Richelson has uncovered in the US. What I am saying is that I hope that this
information put together will allow your committee to decisively move beyond the question of whether Echelon exists. It
will be a great shame if there is still an "if" hanging over this at the end of your enquiry, and I believe you will be
making a contribution to your national parliaments and to the public, not just in Europe but the rest of the world, if
as a parliamentary committee you can take us beyond the whether stage of the discussion of Echelon into acknowledging
its existence and allowing the next stage of the debate to happen, which is what we do about it.
Now we'll talk about some of the technical details of Echelon before I finish, and as I said I am not going to take you
right through the whole story of how it all works, because you have covered that over many months, but I am happy for
you to question me on details at the end if you want. But I'll say a view things. As other people have said to the
committee, Echelon does not somehow magically allow spying on all of the communications of the world, that's the kind of
fairy tale end of the story about this. It is a real system, it's designed and upgraded by real people, and therefore
it's fallible, and it's limited. These people are continuously working to increase its reach and efficiency and keep up
with new developments in communications technology, for instance in our GCSB in the early 90s, there was a lot of work
to automate the interception of e-mail, because they had trouble at first before they got it right.
Secondly, the computers and the other electronic equipment in Echelon is not omnipotently powerful, they cannot do
everything everywhere all the time. It is part of the job of the analysts who work on this system to manage the Echelon
capabilities to the greatest efficiency, this means that there are people whose job it is to analyze for instance all
the different channels going up and down to a satellite, which ones are just cable TV, which ones are between countries
where it is not very interesting, which ones are most rich in intelligence, and then they focus the Echelon capabilities
against those which will yield the most intelligence. This is purely for not to overload the system with junk and to get
the greatest efficiency out of it. But that means that they are not spying on everyone, they are focussing the resources
on the places where they will get the most of the desired intelligence. Also, it is worth repeating that Echelon is
mainly concerned with communications between countries. In some parts of the world they are also able to monitor
communications within countries, but the NSA, the GCHQ in Britain, our agency, they are foreign intelligence
organisations, and so by definition and in fact, most of their work is international communications. Having said this,
the aim of the Echelon system, the purpose of it and the parallel systems it works with is to be able to monitor any
international communications of interest anywhere in the world, that is its purpose, it's a global system, and it's very
powerful. It lives up to many, if not all of the fears that the public has about its reach. Unlike traditional notions
of spying, where we imaging one person's telephone being tapped or whatever, Echelon operates by targetting whole
components of the world's telecommunications networks. It doesn't intercept one phone, it intercepts all the
communications through one satellite or huge quantities of information being moved by microwave between countries. They
are processing them by searching them by keywords and through the dictionary computers, it is industrial scale spying.
And it has been made possible by developments in computer processing, which nowadays provide spying capabilities which
are thousands or millions of times bigger than the capabilities of spying which most imagine is tapping telephones and
things.
I learned about Echelon, of course, from New Zealand's contribution to it. The Waihopai station, which was opened in
1989, intercepted first one, now both of the main INTELSAT, the main civilian telecommunications satellites above the
Pacific, which have tens of thousands of simultaneous faxes and e-mails and phone calls going through them. It is
capturing millions of individual communications a week, and it's a small station in the network. The Australian station,
which in your papers has been said is not called an Echelon station, but in my understanding is just as much an Echelon
station als the New Zealand one, was built at the same stage, it was planned in the same international intelligence
working groups in the early 80s, and whereas New Zealand spies on the two Pacific INTELSAT satellites, it spies on the
Indian Ocean and some Asian satellites, in other words, covering two different parts of the world-wide communication
system. Our intelligence staff have also described the close collaboration, like sharing information and joint projects
with the Yakama satellite interception station in the North West United States, which has the colourful code name of
"Cowboy", it sits in the deserts out there, and they also worked closely and some of them in the since dismantled
British satellite interception station in Hong Kong, which had the equally colourful code name of "Geranium". And
further afield, as I said, they talked about their more distant contacts with sister agencies like the one at
Morwenstow. Thus, according to my knowledge, and this is from my sources, Echelon is a network of interception stations
monitoring civilian telecommunications satellites. As far as I know from the people who described it to me, Echelon is
about the satellite part of this world-wide interception.
There are other components of the UKUSA alliance's surveillance network which cover rather large parts of the world's
telecommunications except for microwave networks. They operate in exactly the same way as the Echelon stations I am
talking about. They capture millions of messages, might be microwave or undersea cable, they use dictionary type
computers to search for keywords, but I'm not sure whether they are actually covered by the code name Echelon, because
that work isn't done in New Zealand. However, I see that this is a completely minor point, it is a semantic point, as
these various components of the global network of Echelon or Echelon-like interception stations work together to try to
provide the global capability for which those systems were designed.
Yesterday in the discussion I thought there were a few technical things which weren't quite correct, so I'll just cover
them. The first one is to say that the UKUSA countries cooperate in Echelon, but they don't cooperate in Echelon because
of the needs of Echelon, that the US needed Australia or New Zealand. The UKUSA relationships go right back, according
to my sources, to 1948 and they were forged in the Second World War. The reason why that particular group of countries
work together on Echelon is because they have been cooperating in that intelligence alliance right through the Cold War
since the 40s and even before in WW II.
Yesterday there was some confusion, I thought, about in a station like the British station at Morwenstow, what
proportion of that work is British, what proportion is American and so on. So, I'll explain this very carefully, this is
something which I understand very well from New Zealand. In the New Zealand station, the Waihopai station, there were
lots of different subjects which the computers were searching for at once, one obviously would have been Japanese
diplomatic intelligence for example, and that had its particular code numbers, the four number code that Jim Banford
talked about as 1234. There is certain search groups like that, and because New Zealand has the job within the alliance
of spying on the South Pacific area, most of the code words in the Echelon system for spying on the South Pacific have
been entered by New Zealand, and the messages which are captured by those keywords are sent to Wellington, not to
Washington, because it's a New Zealand list of keywords. And then in Wellington the analysts look through the thousands
of messages which have been selected by the computers. As Jim Bamford was saying, they pick out the ones which seem to
be most interesting intelligence-wise, they translate them, they write them into the standard UKUSA intelligence
reports, and then they send those off, not the raw intelligence, but they send those off to the CIA and NSA and Britain
and so on around the world. But also in the Waihopai station or the other stations, it is not only the home countries'
lists, but there are quite separate lists of American, Australian and Canadian and British targets as well. In other
words, one country's facility can be used to gather intelligence, which is then be distributed to the other agencies
which have responsibility for those other subjects. And in the case of the New Zealand station and the Australian one,
in both cases most of the keywords are not New Zealand ones or Australian ones, they are American lists. If there is a
subject which is captured by an American list, those ones are never seen by New Zealanders or Australians, they go
straight to NSA in Washington, and it is up to them whether they choose to share their intelligence later with New
Zealand. Jim Bamford was sligthly wrong on this yesterday, it is not like all the intelligence goes into one big data
base and everybody can look around it and find what they want to. It is very structured and hierarchical the way that
the Americans set this up, and basically the idea was that there was a world-wide network which the US had access to the
capabilities of all of, and if they wanted to share that intelligence back with the individual countries, that was their
choice.
So, based on that and coming back to you part of the world, if you look at Britain, there are three distinct roles that
British-based facilities have for spying on Europe. The first one, and the most important of these, is the British
station - not the most important, but a major one - is Morwenstow in Cornwall. I hope you have seen photos of it, if you
go there, you can see the satellite dishes, some of them face out to the Atlantic, but most of them are directed up
towards satellites which are sitting above Europe or above the Middle East or the Indian Ocean INTEL satellites. When
you are used to these things, you can read it very clearly. And what happens at that station then is, at that satellite
interception station there are some lists of targets which are British ones, and there are some lists of targets which
are US ones. Britain has got not control at all and does not even see the intelligence which is collected at Morwenstow,
which is according to US keywords, because that goes direct to Washington.
So, this is the first two types of spying, one is the spying that Britain does itself as the country in the alliance
which has been delegated spying on Western Europe, there are British keywords in these systems, there is also the
British facilities for spying on microwave netwoks and undersea networks, and likewise, they will have lists of British
keywords for gathering intelligence on European topics, it's its delegated role.
And the second kind of spying is within those British-run, British-staffed facilities, there is also the list of US
keywords, and that is a completely separate area of spying which Britain has no control of, they handed the sovereignty
of that to the US, and their intelligence goes straight to Washington.
And the third area, which I know much less about, is completely US-run facilities like the one at Menwith Hill, which
Jim Bamford said yesterday was directed primarily at the Soviet Union and Russia now. I would personally think it is
most unlikely it doesn't do European spying as well, but I have no evidence for that.
Now I want to move to my final area, and that has to do with what you as a committee can do about this. This is what
said this morning, because it seems to me it would be a great waste to have the investigation and not look in great
detail what can be done about it. It is easy with something as big as a subject like intelligence and signals
intelligence and Echelon, for people to conclude that there is nothing that can be done about it, that it's too big,
that the spying occurs from other countries, it is not covered by national laws, and it's kind of like you have to
accept it as a way of life. What I would like to urge is that we all see this discussion of Echelon and intelligence as
being at the very beginnings of the discussion. I mean, we are living in an electronic age, most people in our countries
have only been using the Internet for a handfull of years, if they are at all. The people who use these new types of
electronic communications for all of their daily lives now more and more have only had a year or two, if ever, that they
have heard about how vulnerable these systems are to interception. In other words, we can't expect that, when the
communications technology is so new and the spying capabilities have been so secret, that the publics and the
governments and the parliaments of the world will already have come to grips with these issues. In fact, we are only at
the very start of the process of countries coming to grips with these issues. It is very important to see it that way, I
think, because otherwise it looks discouragingly large. I think we should realize the stage that we are at with this.
And so the things that I want to suggest to you are to do with the way that your committee can play a role in seriously
advancing the public and the nations of the world towards where we can control these systems and regain privacy in the
electronic age, which is the basic issues underlying us here. In other words, we have entered the electronic age, but
every new kind of technology takes human beings' and public's time to learn about them, understand their implications
and learn to control them. People are still learning to control the different kinds of weapons that are being built up,
we are learning to control the environmental effects of technology. Likewise, these systems are so new that, of course,
we are just at the beginning of figuring out how we deal with them.
Probably one of the main things I want to say to you today is about the importance of the role that your committee will
play here. And I have specific recommendations that I would like to propose to you. In the case of New Zealand, I told
you, the dominant attitude within our intelligence services and our foreign affairs establishment to do with
intelligence and subjects like Echelon is one of deference to the US, but also a great insecurity. The point I am making
here is that countries like New Zealand believe they are in no position to challenge something like Echelon. My book has
been completely ignored by the New Zealand government and subsequent governments, not because there aren't politicians
who are interested in it, but because their officials advised them strongly not to challenge their relationship with the
US. And this inequality of power, I suspect, exists throughout the world, which means that most countries, however they
feel privately, do not feel in a position to question or challenge the US and its allies or Russia or India, or whatever
the country may be which has systems like this, because many of the large systems do, when those countries trespass on
their governments and on their national interests with these things. This is what puts your committee in such a unique
position compared to countries like mine, because the EU is uniquely powerful and independent enough to actually be able
to have a committee like this. There will never be a temporary committee on Echelon in New Zealand, I am certain of
that, and there won't be a committee like this in the British or Australian parliaments either. And so, what I believe
is that your deliberations and the conclusions that you will reach here are going to play a role, and they are going to
help people in coming to terms with these issues right around the world.
The other thing I will just mention on this is, putting your work into a historic context, your one-year committee with
its limitations and so on is still the first time in 25 years since the US Church Committee had its hearings in the wake
of the Watergate scandal and those other things Jim Bamford talked about yesterday. There has been a series of
investigations of the activities of the US intelligence services and their allies. It is worth taking note of how rare
these opportunities are in history. The extreme circumstances which lead to the Church Committee investigating the CIA
and NSA are unlikely to occur again in our lifetimes. Likewise, the major leaks which I have got in New Zealand and
which Jim Bamford has gathered and which Duncan Campbell has gathered and so on are very rare in the intelligence world.
The usual state of affairs with intelligence discussions is that there is no solid information and there is no serious
debate. And so, you have got an opportunity now which I plead with you not to be deflected from, because it will not
come again for a long time.
What do I think can be done? Putting the view that we are at the first stages of countries in the world coming to terms
with privacy in the electronic age or national sovereignty in this electronic age, the first stage, I believe, and I
think this should be reflected in your recommendations, is a stage of public education and awareness. With any new
technology and developments, you can't get specialists and the public starting this dabate and working out options to
deal with this and learning how to cope with them and live with those developments until people at least know about
them. And of course, these systems have been completely secret for decades, in the case of Echelon for two or three
decades. And so I would urge you to have specific recommendations about resources and activities to help inform the
publics of your member states and your parliaments. I don't think that's a soft thing or a small thing to come out of
this committee, it is exactly what is needed at the moment in my opinion.
We next move on to what can be done about it. As I said, it is easy to think that because the spying goes on from
countries which are not on the territory where the spying is going, that they can't be controlled by law. Of course,
there are all sorts of opportunities, my apologies to the British people here, but there are all sorts of opportunities
for pressure on Britain as a kind of leverage to move this issue. But that is not what I want to talk about now. I want
to put out a model to you of how I think that this issue can be advanced over the next 10-20 years, which I see you at
the beginning of the process of. And I want to put an analogy to you of a similar situation from a completely different
sphere, and that is the sphere of control of the oceans and the law of the sea. There was a time when it was impossible
for a single country, and especially not powerful country, to control its sea resources, countries that had to go out
and start shooting at other countries' fishing boats and blow them up, and so the oceans were sort of uncontrollable
outside the territorial waters of different nations. And if one country on its own or a small number of countries on
their own had wanted to deal with that, they could not have got away with it, the more powerful countries would have
simply asserted their rights, asserted their presence, and continued to use whatever seas they wanted. And yet, over a
period of about a decade, the law of the sea was evolved, which has completely changed the way that it operates, and it
wasn't promoted by the most powerful countries in the world, rather the initiative came from very small countries, but
at the end of the process, their countries controlled huge resources in their exclusive economic zones, there are very
strict rules, and of course, there are also exceptions to those rules where they are required, for example, innocent
passage and ships into straits and so on. And what I'd like you to do is to suggest that you see, if you agree with me,
and promote the idea that there is possibility for international cooperation in developing laws and conventions like the
law of the sea as a way of developing, a way of controlling surveillance in the electronic age, in other words, of
countries being able to pursue, being able to protect their sovereignty, their privacy in the electronic age, just as
coastal nations would try to protect their sea resources in an age where there was no control over that. I can foresee a
day when there is regional and international collaboration between countries, for example to develop secure
communications networks, whole networks, that means not just you or I having an encryption system in our computer, this
is the earliest, most fumbling days of trying to have secure communications at the moment. But it is taken for granted,
people would not pay their phone bills unless they were assured by the state regulatory organisation that their phone
company was abiding by the regulations and standards which should be set for secured communications. One country can't
do it on its own, you can't have France decide that it wants to have secure communications with other countries unless
the other countries communicate as well, which is why I see it as being a matter of regional cooperation and
international cooperation. And there is stings in this, and again there is potential recommencations in this for you.
The first is that there is ongoing education about the routine use of encryption and how individuals and companies,
organisations, governments and regional organisations of different sorts can use encryption. That educational net is
just the same as education, for example, on not leaving suitcases unattended at airports or whatever, that you just
teach this as part of the routine way that the world is run.
The next stage after that is that government organisations work together to promote standards for communications
protection. At the moment, exactly the opposite is happening. The United States and Australia are working in places like
the International Telecommunications Union to get standards put in the very way that the telecommunications systems are
designed, the particular hardware and software, which makes it easier to intercept, but there is no reason why a
coalition of countries can't be working over the years towards laws and regulations which provide secure communications
across different countries, and that there are standards for that. Obviously, just as the law of the sea has to set
limits on the state sovereignty it provides. Just in the same way, although I am proposing and envisaging international
agreements on communications protection, you would still have to have some exceptions for them, and that would be, for
example, monitoring serious terrorism or something if that was genuinely a problem.
So, in terms of specific recommendations, just to finish off here, I would like to propose to you that this committee
state or propose or will present a vision or goals about how there could be a future regime of communications protection
and privacy. It won't happen next year, it won't happen in 5 years, but that that is the objective towards which we are
working, and which I think is completely realistic once these issues have been known. I would also like to, as a
specific suggestion, say that this committee could recommend that the European Parliament and the member states put
serious resources to the preparation of research papers on how exactly you would develop new system for protecting
privacy and communications across Europe and the rest of the world, covering such things as the technical issues and the
laws and regulations required in the systems of cooperation that would be needed between nations. In other words, what I
am saying to you is, I think that far from it being a position of powerlessness because these intelligence operations
occur from other countries, it is just a matter of us being at the beginning of the process, and it's quite possible for
people and their institutions like their parliaments to move towards thoroughly controlling this new technology.
Thank you.
Chairman
(opens the debate)
Question from Rapporteur
Nicky Hager
I'll answer the questions backwards and come to the one of proof last. On the footprints of the satellites, there is no
need at all for New Zealand in the network. All of this monitoring which happens in New Zealand could happen in
Australia as well, and the reason that it happens in New Zealand is - and I am more speculating here than knowing - is
the same reason as it happens always, they are just sharing between the 5 allies, it is a sharing of the workload. The
reason why the analysis of the South Pacific happens in New Zealand is more rational in that New Zealand analysts will
understand the South Pacific situation, the names of the politicians, the issues and so on better than some pasty-faced
analyst sitting in Washington D.C.. So there is a practical purpose for that, but you are quite right, there was no
technical need for there to be a station in New Zealand, it was burden-sharing rather than the technical necessity.
As for the number of communications captured in New Zealand and how many analysts there are, these systems are not very
labour-intensive. The number of analysts involved in Wellington is about a dozen looking at all this intelligence, or
less than 20, the reason being that most of the sorting is done electronically, it is done by computers, and there is
somebody writing up reports on what is gathered at the end of that process.
What does New Zealand know of other countries' dictionaries, that means the lists put into a New Zealand station? That
is a good and a crucial question, I had an argument about this not long ago with a senior GCSB person. In practice, New
Zealand officers receive the lists from the foreign agencies, and a person called the dictionary manager has the job of
inputting the foreign key words and directions into the New Zealand systems. And so at least at their junior level,
someone has seen all the directions which are arriving. However, the more important points here is - two points - the
first one is that New Zealand has never refused a request to put keywords in there for the simple reason of that
inequality of size within the alliance, they wouldn't be prepared to do that, because they would get trouble. And I
would assume that the same applies in Britain in most cases, that if they received a request - except they would not put
it in if it said, spy on the Queen, but they wouldn't be asked to do that, but, otherwise, I think they would.
But more important to this is, there is another level, they see the keywords that go in there - they couldn't have the
name of our Prime Minister or something in it - but we don't see the intelligence which comes out of the system. In
other words, we have no control over that. The most which happens - this is a debate I had with one of the senior
intelligence people - I said, you don't do any monitoring of what goes out, and he said, yes, we do, people look at it
once a month. And what he was actually talking about was that they do quality control, they check that the messages
aren't jumbled together, that there isn't too muck background noise and things, but they don't actually have a political
oversight of it. They don't say, this particular fishing agreement information from this particular country might really
hurt them if we gave it to the US, we won't do it, there is no direct oversight like that at all, everything goes, and
we don't even see what goes.
On the subject of proof - which, as I said, is one of the key things that your report hinges on, I know - I haven't
worked in these facilities, I can't bring someone before you here who has worked in these facilities, and even if I did,
how would you know they are telling the truth? The great thing about secret operations is that they are deniable. Even
where it is completely non-credible, where something is proven to a high degree, it can still denied, because it is so
secret, and I can't bring you the filing cabinet here to show you the planning documents and so on. Which brings me back
to the point which I have already made, you have to judge for yourselves how credible you think the sources are. But to
be completely deterred by the inherent nature of intelligence means, you may as well not have a committee, if you are
going to be deterred by the lack of solid proof and people on the record who are sworn on bibles and things. I believe
that someone who looks through my book will feel comfortable with the depth of the knowledge in there, and as I have
said, it has been collaborated, it has been confirmed by quite independent sources of other people's work at other
times. And so even if there were some details, I imagine, where people have got things wrong, which undoubtedly happens
in any research specifics, I think you can be absolutely, one hundred percent sure and completely behind doubt as to
where these systems exist, which countries are involved and what the general targettings are and code names and things.
That much at least you should take as solid.
Questions from VP Di Lello, Krivine, Newton-Dunn, Vattimo, von Bötticher, Dybkjaer
Nicky Hager
The first question was about what private individuals can do, and I actually think, this is a much less discouraging
subject than the questioner did, but the first thing, I think, we should say about private individuals is that it is
important that people are educated about systems like Echelon and what they can do, so that they can start to take
preparation. But it is also important that we educate our publics, people in our countries about what the system can't
do, because one of the main effects of a discussion of something like Echelon on ordinary people and publics in
different countries is that people have huge and unrealistic and unnecessary fears about them. And one of the tasks of
an investigation like this should be to reassure people that for example what they saw in that film "Enemies of the
State" is not something that they should worry about, because it is not our job to create paranoid and unhappy people.
Most people have very little to fear from these systems, and educating about their true nature is as much about
reassuring and reducing fear as it is about creating protection. I think, it's a really serious side of this.
As to what people can do, though, the first stage is that people understand how vulnerable their communications are
nowadays. When you send an e-mail now, or use a cell phone, it's like sending postcard with your private messages
written on the back, or it's a little like writing a message on a piece of paper and pinning it on the outside of your
house, it is very vulnerable to people. And so, ordinary people need to become aware of what they just naturally should
do to protect their communications, and just like somebody seals the back of an envelope before they post it, in the
same way they use encryption.
To lots of people at the moment, encryption sound like something technical, something that they could never do, and that
it's for people who understand computers. One day, I assure you, I guarantee this, good, strong encryption will be as
automatic as sealing an envelope. It is just that it's new and people are not used to it at the moment. And as for cost,
in terms of what can specifically be said to people, anybody can download programmes from the Internet for free, for
their internet, for their e-mail at the moment, and before long for their telephone calls, which organisations like the
NSA cannot break. Technology doesn't always solve the problems of technology, but in this case, it really does seem that
encryption can provide a huge amount of privacy in the electronic age once people learn about it and understand it. A
practical thing that can be done for ordinary people or groups who feel subject to surveillance, is that they learn to
routinely use encryption for their electronic communications. And once you have done it for a little while it's just the
same as being able to type a letter on the computer rather than writing on a page, you just get used to it.
Next question, why have there been no individual complaints, why have no organisations taken this up? My opinion on that
is, because it's all so new that people haven't caught up with it. The reason why individuals and specific companies
haven't, is because it is also secret and that you could never ever prove it. Your committee is only one step, but it's
really a very important step in moving along public understanding. There will be more complaints, they will be
challenged more.
The other question was, do I have proof that the NSA and the other UKUSA allies pass on intelligence to other countries
to buy their silence, for example maybe in that case of Spain. I do have proof in the case of New Zealand that in
particular conflicts or particular international issues, the US has made a big deal of whether or not it supplies
specific intelligence to the New Zealand agencies. I'll give you an old example, I talked to someone who was very senior
in our intelligence services during the Vietnam war, and he said that, the providing and the withholding of information
was an important part in the way that the US managed New Zealand and tried to keep its support for the war. I don't know
for Europe, but there is a very credible suggestion that the slective and occasional provision of intelligence on Kosovo
or something within a coutry is used to buy cooperation from other countries for these systems. But remember, that's not
the end of the subject, because all countries do gather something from intelligence collection. But if you are only
getting the benefits but none of the costs, of course you'll do it. The cost for a country, say European country, for
cooperating in these systems, is the dissatisfaction of its own citizens at their being intercepted, that this is out of
control. And so once that is publicized, it becomes much harder to quietly accept the advantages and collaborate in it.
That more practical question whether there was a British station in Hong Kong, of course I was talking about a station
that was there before the change, and it was removed before the date. There was some publicity that the operation has
been moved to Australia, my personal feeling is that most of it is happening from the American base in Japan now.
How can Brits exercise leverage on this? I was actually, I must admit, talking about other European countries putting
pressure on Britain, but my personal opinion is that today it is only secrecy which allows the British government to
maintain two such incompatible positions at once. And that the more publicity there is, outside or within the British
parliament and elsewhere of this, that sooner or later something will have to change, because they are such incompatible
positions.
Does interception happen in terms of the contents or the sender where it has been coming from? When they intercept a
message from a particular organisation, is it because that there is a subject word in there, or was it because of the
name of the person? The answer is, both. There are people whose jobs it is to get the directions from the government or
from the foreign affairs ministry or from defence of what they are interested in collecting intelligence on at the time,
and a person's whole job is to think up the words, it's like an internet search, you are trying to find out information
on policing in Peru, and you put Peru and policing in as your first search, and you get 20 million things and then you
narrow it down a bit and so on. It is precisely the same activity, there is analysts whose job it is to look at the
request which has come, look at the newspapers or reports on that country and get the names of individuals that might be
put in. As Jim Bamford was saying, we might look up the phone number of the individual you're after and use a fragment
of their phone number or their e-mail address. So, it could be the person's address or phone number or the content of
what they might be talking about, and in fact both of those are used. And over time, the same analysts get one copy of
all the intelligence which is coming in or the thing they work on, and they see how well their selection of key words is
going, and if they get a word in which is getting too much junk, intelligence they don't want, they might take that word
out or stick in an extra qualification to get a richer supply of intelligence. So, that is basically what they do.
Could I be more precise about legislative proposals? It is quite within the powers of this parliament, but in particular
the national, the member parliaments, to introduce laws which required telecommunications companies, the providers -
this might be internet service providers or in particular the telecommunications companies - legislation which required
by law that the telephone company guarantee the privacy of someone's communications while they pass through their
networks. It's legally possible, and it's technically possible. If one country were to do that, say within the European
Union, if one or two countries did that first and there was specific legislation, eventually there would be more
countries, it would start to open a crack which would allow other countries to do the same.
Who in the New Zealand government is authorized to propose keywords? At the level of politicians, there are no countries
that are ever allowed to know in detail what happens in the intelligence agencies. There would be no politician in the
world who'd have any idea what those specific keywords are. That happens within very secret high-security indoctrinated
staff who make those decisions, while the politicians can say, we want more intelligence about this crisis, that
meeting, that issue. They will never get down to the level of keywords, that is done by the intelligence staff.
As for who my sources are, I have a wide range of sources, but the main people who are relied on were people who had
worked for a long time in specific parts of our equivalent of the NSA, and what I would do with them as I had an initial
interview where I won their confidence, I would let them say everything they could think of and I'd go and read their
notes and come back for maybe four or five other interviews and just pursue with them all the various details, who they
worked with and what the manuals were that they worked from and where they got trained and all the different parts of
the story. And then, as sort of a discipline, I would offer them at the beginning that I did a draft of their
information and took it back to check with them, which gave them confidence over what I was using, but also allowed them
to find mistakes for me. In all I interviewed about 50 people, but some of them were in the military organisations,
because our military does signals intelligence missions, and some of them were politicians or former Prime Ministers and
various things like that. But the majority of those were people who had actually worked in the signals intelligence
organisation.