From:

http://www.twics.com/~anzu/Japanwatch/Security/Echelon1.html

JAPAN AND PROJECT ECHELON

By, Jen Wilkenson


In Misawa, Aomori Prefecture, near the northern tip of Japan,
lies a sprawling US Air Force base, best known as the home to the
35th Fighter Wing and its squadron of F-16 jets. But Misawa is
actually a more grandiose facility. The huge complex includes a
host of installations in addition to the Air Force landing strip.
In particular, some six kilometers north of the airstrip, there
is a mysterious array of antennae and radar domes (or 'radomes'),
a cornucopia of sophisticated surveillance equipment.

But surveillance for what? Oficially, the large radar site is
operated jointly by various sections of United States
intelligence. On the official home page of Misawa Base, a host of
units are listed -- all military units of one sort or another.
There is an Army unit with some 700 personnel, an Air Force group
with 900, a Navy unit with 700, and even a small Marine Corps
detachment of 70.

Somehow, though, with the Soviet Union having collapsed and the
Chinese government doing all it can to ensure it can enter the
WTO smoothly, it is difficult to believe that all that hardware
is focused on the sole 'rogue nation' of the region; i.e., North
Korea.


Intriguingly, among the intelligence groups that use Misawa base,
there is at least one "unlisted" member. It is the US National
Security Agency, headquar- tered in Fort Meade, near Washington
DC. This body was relatively unknown until very recently. In
1986, however, it gained notoriety thanks to a young, soft-spoken
lieutenant colonel named Oliver North, who made daily appearances
on US national TV, explaining how he had lied to Congress, how he
had sold weapons illegally to Iran, and how he had funneled the
proceeds from these sales to the anti-government Contra
guerrillas in Nicaragua. Today, the NSA even has a home page,
though the site only confirms its existence, as well as the fact
that it is involved in "signals intelligence and communications
security."

As it turns out, the NSA presence at Misawa may be crucial. There
was a series of revelations in 1997 and 1998, primarily from
Europe, that the NSA was operating a global intelligence network,
called Project Echelon, with the goal of monitoring virtually all
electronic communications - telephone, facsimile, satellite, or
telephone - around the world.

According to the so-called STOA Report, issued by the European
Commission, the core of this network is at Fort Meade, but there
are stations peppered throughout the global U.S. alliance, with
the largest station at a place called Menwith Hill, in Yorkshire,
England.

The Echelon Project, part of a secret intelligence treaty called
UKUSA (signed by the U.S., U.K., Canada, Australia, and New
Zealand), was built up during the Cold War, primarily for the
purpose of intercepting signals from the Soviet camp. With the
end of the Cold War, however, its role has apparently changed to
surveillance of "terrorists," as well as economic intelligence.

This network also had a secondary function: to circumvent
domestic privacy laws in the different countries. Many nations
have laws protecting their own citizens from being spied on by
their own intelligence agencies (for example, the CIA is legally
prohibited from conducting domestic operations).  But here lies
the brilliance of the Echelon logic. If the US spies on Japanese
citizens, and provides this information to the Japanese
government, and the Japanese government spies on US citizens,
again sharing this intelligence, then both sides can claim they
are acting within the law.

Misawa clearly has a major role in this global intelligence
network. During the Cold War years, it was generally believed
that the huge radar site was primarily focused on the Soviet
Union and North Korea, and it had the particular task of
monitoring communications from three Soviet satellites Richelson,
p. 182).

In recent years, however, a more sinister mission has come to
light. Part of the Echelon mission has come to include the
monitoring of Japanese diplomatic cables, for example, as well as
the communications between trading companies and their branches
in other countries. The network has apparently been used to boost
the American position in trade negotiations with Japan.

Of course, this puts Japan in an awkward spot. In some cases, it
appears, the array was aimed not at the outside but rather at the
inside of Japan.  The array may, in fact, be a huge facility with
the primary goal of intercepting messages - via radio waves,
microwaves, even conventional telephone lines - inside Japan. It
is rumored that agencies such as the NSA may have powerful
software that allows them to listen in on telephone
conversations, and then record those which contain certain
keywords.

There has been virtually no debate in Japan about the existence
of Project Echelon, let alone Japan's role in it. Since the
release of the European report, there has been interest among
privacy advocates, but this debate has yet to find its way to the
floor of the National Diet. According to reports, Japan (along
with South Korea, as well as Germany and Italy) has secretly
signed the UKUSA treaty, and is now a part of the "undercover
partnership."

But this is understandable. For Japan, Project Echelon may well
be a double-edged sword. On one hand, there is the danger that it
will be used against Japanese interests, as has happened in trade
talks, as well as, very notably, the 1996 APEC conference held in
Seattle. At that time, it was reported that the US had gone
all-out to compile intelligence on the positions of other members
of the group. But on the other hand, the system clearly allows
Japan to gain information on countries around it - such as North
Korea, or even groups within Japan - information that may well be
seen as outweighing these risks.

In any case, it is a complex issue. The European Commission
report saw great peril in this system, and recommended that, "The
European Parliament should reject proposals from the United
States for making private messages via the global communications
network (Internet)  accessible to US intelligence agencies."

Perhaps there is a lesson for Japan in this.



References

Ogura Toshimaru, "Kanshi to Jiyu" (Surveillance and Freedom), in
Gendai Shinso (Contemporary Thought), October 1999.

Jeffrey T. Richelson, The U.S. Intelligence Community, 4th
Edition, Westview, 1999.

European Commission, Assessing the Technologies of Political
Control, 1997.

"Spies like US," London Telegraph, December 16, 1997.

The New Observer is a Kanto-based English language journal of
news and views not usually available in mainstream media in
Japan. It is intended to serve as a noticeboard and discussion
forum for the political, economic, and cultural concerns of
foreign residents and workers. It is published with the generous
assistance of the National Union of General Workers (NUGW),
http://www.twics.com/~maxim/nugw-top.html.



http://www.msnbc.com/news/420011.asp?0m=-258

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