Lawfare

Ben Buchanan
Thursday, September 7, 2017

"Traditionally, signals intelligence is neatly bifurcated into offense
and defense: intercept adversaries’ communication technology and protect
one’s own. In the modern era, however, there is great convergence in the
technologies used by friendly nations and by hostile ones. I’ve tried to
tackle some of this in a new paper, “Nobody But Us: The Rise and Fall of
the Golden Age of Signals Intelligence.” It’s published as part of the
Hoover Institution's Aegis Paper Series.

My animating idea is that signals intelligence agencies find themselves
in a dilemma: they must penetrate the very same technologies that they
also at times must protect. The United States perhaps feels this tension
most acutely, for a variety of reasons. To resolve it, the United States
and its partners have relied on an approach sometimes called Nobody But
Us, or NOBUS: target communications mechanisms using unique methods
accessible only to the United States. This approach, which calls for
advanced methods, aims to protect communications from American
adversaries, yet also ensure American access when needed.

But the NOBUS approach depends as well on a number of American
advantages that are under serious threat. These advantages for a time
enabled what many have called “the golden age of signals intelligence.”
The decline of these advantages renews the tension between offense and
defense once more. My paper examines how the NOBUS approach works, its
limits, and the challenging matter of what comes next."


32 pg PDF:

Hoover:
http://www.hoover.org/sites/default/files/research/docs/buchanan_webreadypdf.pdf

Scribd:
https://www.scribd.com/document/357640922/Nobody-But-Us-The-Rise-and-Fall-of-the-Golden-Age-of-Signals-Intelligence#from_embed

Or embedded on Lawfare's page:
https://lawfareblog.com/nobody-us-rise-and-fall-golden-age-signals-intelligence-0

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