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kaggle-ho-020308House Oversight

Historical overview of NSA surveillance expansion and Five Eyes cooperation

Historical overview of NSA surveillance expansion and Five Eyes cooperation The passage recaps well‑documented NSA activities, executive orders, and Five Eyes partnerships that are already public knowledge. It provides no new specifics, names, dates, or transactions that would generate actionable leads, though it does reference known programs and historical events. Key insights: Executive Order 12333 (1980) gave the NSA broad authority to intercept foreign communications.; NSA conducted covert operations such as tapping a Russian cable in the Sea of Okhotsk in 1971.; Five Eyes alliance (US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand) enables extensive monitoring of global communications.

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House Oversight
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kaggle-ho-020308
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Summary

Historical overview of NSA surveillance expansion and Five Eyes cooperation The passage recaps well‑documented NSA activities, executive orders, and Five Eyes partnerships that are already public knowledge. It provides no new specifics, names, dates, or transactions that would generate actionable leads, though it does reference known programs and historical events. Key insights: Executive Order 12333 (1980) gave the NSA broad authority to intercept foreign communications.; NSA conducted covert operations such as tapping a Russian cable in the Sea of Okhotsk in 1971.; Five Eyes alliance (US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand) enables extensive monitoring of global communications.

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kagglehouse-oversightnsasurveillancefive-eyesexecutive-orderintelligence-history

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156 remotely intercepting even the faintest traces of electromagnetic signals, hacking into computers, and eavesdropping on distant conversations, but using special units, called “tailored access operations,” to plant listening devices in embassies and diplomatic pouches. It also organized elaborate expeditions to penetrate cables in enemy territory. In 1971, for example, the NSA had sent a specially-equipped submarine into Russia’s Sea of Okhotsk in Asia to tap through Arctic ice. The target was a Russian cable 400 feet below the surface that connected the Russian naval headquarters in Vladivostok with a missile testing range. In 1980, President Ronald Reagan, gave the NSA a clear mandate to expand its interception of foreign communications. In Executive Order 12333, he told the NSA to use “all means, consistent with applicable Federal law and (this Executive) order, and with full consideration of the rights of United States persons, shall be used to obtain reliable intelligence information to protect the United States and its interests.” It did restrict any foreign country, either an adversary or an ally, from its surveillance. The NSA’s target soon became nothing short of the entire electromagnetic spectrum. “We are approaching a time when we will be able to survey almost any point on the earth’s surface with some sensor,” Admiral Stansfield Turner, the former Director of Central Intelligence wrote in 1985. “We should soon be able to keep track of most of the activities on the surface of the earth.” Bobby Ray Inman, a former director of the NSA and deputy director of the CIA, argued that the “vastness of the [American] intelligence ‘take’ from the Soviet Union, and the pattern of continuity going back years, even decades,” greatly diminished the possibility of Soviet deception so long as the NSA kept secret its sources. The NSA did not rely entirely on its own sensors for this global surveillance. It also formed intelligence-sharing alliances with key allies the most important was with the British code- breaking service, called the Government Communications Headquarters, or GCHQ, which in World War II had achieved enormous success in using computers to crack the German Enigma cipher. This alliance expanded to include Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, in the so-called Five Eyes Alliance. Since over 80 percent of international phone calls and Internet traffic passed through fiber-optic cables in these five countries, the alliance had the capability of monitoring almost all phone and internet communications. .The NSA also established fruitful liaisons with the cyber-services of Germany, France, Spain, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, Israel, Japan, and South Korea, who often were willing to provide the NSA with access to telecommunications links in their countries. These long-term allies greatly strengthened the NSA’s hand in other ways in the intelligence war. For example, the so called “James Bond” provision of the British Intelligence Services Act 1994 allowed officers of the GCHQ to commit illegal acts outside of Brittan including planting devices to intercept data from computer servers, cell phones, and other electronic targets. And, as Snowden’s release of documents revealed in 2013 and 2014, these foreign allies fully shared their information with the NSA.

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