http://www.latimes.com/news/state/20000613/t000056002.html


Tuesday, June 13, 2000

Spy Satellites Evolve Into Private Eye in the Sky

By ROBERT LEE HOTZ, Times Science Writer

The famous Hollywood sign from a different perspective: 423 miles above
earth from the lens of the Ikonos satellite.

     Since January, John Pike has been taking his own satellite pictures of
the world's most secret military bases and then making them public on the
Internet.
     The images and the debate they have provoked are an experiment in the
high technology of democracy, for anyone now can share a view from orbit
once reserved solely for those with the highest of superpower security
clearances.
     Like the fax machine, pirate radio and encrypted e-mail, the commercial
imaging satellite is becoming a tool of grass-roots political action.
     Pike, an owlish policy wonk with a derisive drawl and a horselaugh, is
producing detailed vistas of the classified landscape: a nuclear weapons
plant in India, a plutonium production facility in Pakistan, military
airfields on the China coast, a missile base in North Korea, even the
infamous Area 51 at Groom Lake, Nev.--perhaps the most restricted military
reservation in the Americas.
     Not so many years ago, any one of those pictures might have landed him
in jail.
     Today, however, Pike makes each new image public with impunity on an
Internet site maintained by the Federation of American Scientists, where he
works.
     Indeed, the way private surveillance satellites are being linked to the
Internet is more than an electronic convenience. It is the inevitable next
step in an information revolution that with dizzying speed is transforming
what we can know about our world and who controls that knowledge.
     With as many as 11 companies in five countries planning to launch
private imaging satellites in the next few years, it is only a matter of
time and market competition before anyone can afford to see just about
anything on Earth at any time, no matter what the weather--with little more
than a home computer and a ready credit card.
     That is a radical departure from the decades of secrecy shrouding U.S.
and Russian surveillance satellites, when even the name of the office that
managed U.S. intelligence satellites was classified. The U.S. government did
not loosen its national security restrictions enough to permit the launch of
such sharp commercial eyes in space until 1994.
     Not until this year--when the first of those new privately owned,
high-resolution imaging satellites actually became operational--did such
crisp pictures from space go on sale.
     "The commercial imaging data has fundamentally changed things," said
Vipin Gupta, a senior systems analyst who specializes in satellite imaging
at Sandia National Laboratories.
     "Not only are the skies open but the data can be disseminated to anyone
at a market price. You are opening up possibilities on how these images can
be used in ways that defy imagination."
     They can make everyone an eyewitness in a world in which anyone--not
just Big Brother--can be watching.

     Seeing 3-Foot-Square Objects From 423 Miles
     Pike buys his images from a privately owned satellite called Ikonos,
launched by Space Imaging in Thornton, Colo., last September, the first
private, high-resolution imaging satellite to reach orbit safely.
     The clarity of its images rivals the best the military can command.
Anyone can buy images from its picture archive--growing by 23,000 square
miles of new territory every day--through the firm's Web site at
http://www.spaceimaging.com/.
     From 423 miles above Earth, the Kodak camera aboard Ikonos can peer
through fog and haze and into shadows to detect objects on the ground as
little as 3 feet square--twice the resolution of any other commercially
available satellite imagery.
     Indeed, Ikonos is sharper than the secret satellites used to safeguard
U.S. national security at the height of the Cold War and about one-tenth as
sharp as the most advanced government photoreconnaissance satellites today,
several arms control experts said.
     And in the next month or so, a federal advisory panel is expected to
decide whether companies should be allowed to sell satellite imagery twice
as sharp as currently allowed.

Space Imaging's Ikonos satellite shows Groom Lake or Area 51, one of the
United States' most secret military bases.


     "By 2003 all the countries and companies involved are claiming they
will have a system equivalent to ours on orbit," said John R. Copple, Space
Imaging's chief executive.
     By that time, Copple plans to be launching an imaging satellite able to
produce color images with a resolution of about 19 inches--twice that of the
Ikonos in orbit today. Doubling the resolution means that the resulting
pictures will be four times easier to interpret, Pike said.
     Already, the new generation of commercial imaging satellites is eroding
every nation's sense of privacy.
     The satellite images offer ways to second-guess governments, blur
national borders and rearrange a host of relationships that until now
depended on the ability to hide things--even entire cities--from the
public's prying eyes.
     Even from orbit, a photograph of an unguarded moment can speak volumes.
     For example, U.S. government satellite images of newly dug mass graves
in Kosovo and Bosnia have been used to call attention to possible war
crimes, showing that human rights abuses can be detected from orbit.
     "It is sort of like visual truth serum," said Space Imaging Vice
President Marc Bender.
     Commercial satellite imaging eventually promises to transform
everything from arms control and human rights investigations to
environmental monitoring and pollution control, several satellite experts
said.
     "There are a whole bunch of non-government groups who are trying to do
this," said Ann M. Florini, an expert at the Carnegie Endowment for Peace on
commercial satellite policy. "There are enormous potential applications in
environmental issues and in humanitarian relief."
     Eco-activists could use the satellites to monitor destructive logging
practices, mining operations and remote construction projects as easily and
inexpensively as emergency planners can use them to map storm damage and
flood debris.
     In California, some environmentalists already have started ordering
Ikonos images.
     The Center for Natural Lands Management is using the satellite to
monitor the habitat of an endangered lizard that lives among the sand dunes
of the 20,000-acre Coachella Valley Preserve north of Palm Springs. An
environmental consulting firm is using the satellite to gauge the impact of
land development between Sacramento and Lake Tahoe.
     It is only a matter of time, Gupta said, before networks of amateur
Earth watchers spring up and use the new satellites to systematically
monitor the planet from orbit, routinely posting their discoveries on the
Web, just as thousands of amateur astronomers today systematically scan the
heavens for new comets.

     A Way to Verify Government Claims
     When Space Imaging announced it was ready to start selling Ikonos
images in January, John Pike was among the first in line.
     As a matter of business planning, company executives expected their
$750-million corporate gamble on orbital imaging would be repaid by
customers in agriculture, urban planning, insurance and a range of other
areas that depend on detailed mapping. They expected their best customer to
be the federal government and foreign governments that could not afford to
launch their own satellites.
     The company began the year with a backlog of orders for Ikonos images
totaling about $15 million, mostly from commercial customers and NASA.
Unwilling to disclose more specific sales figures, company officials said
that new orders for images so far were strong--at up to $5,000 apiece to
commission each new view. Customers have been divided equally between
companies and foreign governments.

This photo of the Bhabha atomic research site in India was taken by the
Ikonos satellite.


     Sales to the U.S. government so far have been slow, Copple said.
Earlier this year, the Defense Department vowed to increase government
spending on commercial space images by 800% over the next five years, but
that promise has yet to make its way into a federal budget appropriation.
     But the most public application of the Ikonos images so far has been to
serve as a check on government pronouncements in the global game of nuclear
bluff and bluster.
     It is a topic of special interest to the Federation of American
Scientists, a policy think tank that was founded by members of the Manhattan
Project who produced the first atomic bomb.
     Over the decades, it has tried to act as a knowledgeable, independent
voice in debates over the science and technology of global security. Like so
many groups that challenge government policies, it frequently is handicapped
by official secrecy.
     So, Pike and his colleagues at the federation's Public Eye Project
regarded the ability to commission their own spy satellite images of secret
bases with something resembling glee.
     Funded by the Rockefeller Foundation and the John D. and Catherine T.
MacArthur Foundation, they have spent $50,000 since the beginning of the
year on orbital images depicting secret sites in China, South Africa,
Pakistan, India, Iraq, the United States and North Korea.
     "Each image was a revelation," Pike said.
     What Pike and his colleagues could see from orbit--for as little as
$500 an image--sometimes confirmed, sometimes confounded the official
pronouncements about international military threats and potential arms
control violations.
     While many experts disagreed on what the facilities in the pictures
mean, anyone in the world now can look at them via the Internet at
http://www.fas.org/ and join the argument.
     "It makes all the debates on these issues two-sided," said USC
international law expert Edwin M. Smith, who until recently was a consultant
to the U.S. undersecretary for arms control and international security
affairs.

     Interpreting the Photos Takes Some Expertise
     The governments whose secrets Pike has put on public display by and
large have kept their own counsel. But some arms control analysts dismiss
his efforts as the work of an ill-informed amateur who does not know enough
to properly interpret what the satellite is showing him.
     "They don't know what they are doing," said Jeffrey Richelson, a
satellite expert at the private National Security Archive, which monitors
intelligence issues.
     "A lot of their analysis is just half-baked."
     When it comes to satellite images, it is hard to know just when to
believe the evidence of your eyes, several experts acknowledged. There is a
history of mistakes.
     In 1998, for example, Newsweek magazine published a satellite image
that purported to be an Indian nuclear test site. But what Newsweek
identified as the hole left by a nuclear blast actually was an animal pen,
said Florini of the Carnegie Endowment for Peace.
     But for those who do know what to look for, the Ikonos photos are easy
enough to interpret, said nuclear weapons expert Frank von Hippel at
Princeton University, a former national security advisor in the Clinton
administration.
     He just paid $500 for his first Ikonos image--a close-up of the two
plutonium production reactors at the Indian nuclear weapons complex.
     "I was interested to see that cooling water was flowing from the
reactors, indicating they were operating," von Hippel said.
     The biggest stir, by all accounts, is among those least likely to make
their complaints public--the operators of the U.S. intelligence satellites,
for whom such telling views from orbit have until now been their own
exclusive specialty.
     They are most upset that such images--although perfectly legal under
U.S. and international law--are public at all.
     "John Pike has stirred a hornet's nest," said Florini. "There is an
awful lot of complaining going on in the defense and the intelligence
communities. They think they can still control the imagery somehow."
     To be sure, in some key ways they still do.
     By law, the U.S. secretary of state and the secretary of commerce
retain the right to exercise "shutter control." They can temporarily shut
down any U.S. commercial imaging satellites in the name of national
security, to shield military maneuvers or at the request of an ally.
     And by order of Congress, Ikonos and all other American commercial
satellites must deliberately coarsen any images taken over Israel to blur
the details of military facilities there. That restriction will remain until
a foreign satellite company offers sharper images on the open market.
     Imagery from French and Indian imaging satellites is commercially
available. So are pictures from Russian intelligence satellites.
     But none of those satellites so far offers images as crisp as the
Ikonos pictures.
     The Russian government, however, is expected to offer satellite
photographs as sharp as the Ikonos images beginning next month, several U.S.
experts said.
     Russian satellite images are marketed by the Soyuzkarta company. They
are available internationally through several firms, including the
Terraserver Web site at http://www.terraserver.com/, which claims the
largest online atlas of high-resolution satellite imagery and aerial
photography.
     This month, Pike is seeking satellite photographs of secret nuclear
bases in Israel and Iran, to help settle the question of whether the nations
are building nuclear weapons.
     If the congressional restriction prevents Space Imaging from selling
high-resolution Ikonos pictures of Israel, Pike hopes the Russians will
offer them.
     When Space Imaging was unusually slow to sell Ikonos images of Area 51
earlier this year, detailed Russian images of the U.S. base quickly appeared
on the market.
     In the meantime, Pike is feeling a backlash.
     Last week, Space Imaging hiked the cost of publication rights for its
satellite pictures for smaller academic journals and nontraditional media
groups like Pike's.
     To reprint the Ikonos images that accompany this article, The Los
Angeles Times was charged $500 for each of them.
     Public policy groups like the Federation of American Scientists and
academic researchers had been charged the same rate. Now they will have to
pay $1,000 to reprint any Ikonos image of U.S. territory and $2,000 for each
image of foreign terrain.
     Pike believes the price hike, which will force him to cancel orders for
images of Chinese and Indian missile facilities as well as an Iranian
nuclear complex, is in response to the publicity generated by his online,
political use of the satellite pictures.
     The high prices can silence a critic as effectively as more traditional
government censorship, Pike said.
     But executives at Space Imaging said they are not trying to muzzle
anyone, nor has the U.S. government pressured them to do so. They are only
tightening existing pricing restrictions to maintain their profit margin.
     "We didn't launch this satellite for public policy," said Copple at
Space Imaging. "We did this because there was a market and a benefit to our
investors. You don't see a lot of emerging companies give away things for
free in their start-up phase."
     Certainly, commercial imaging companies have no obligation to ensure
that images serving humanitarian aims or broadening a political debate are
easily available, experts said.
     "Who is going to see to it that this kind of imagery gets used for the
public good?" Florini said. "That is not the responsibility of the private
companies."



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