From: Miroslav Antic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: Croatia Spies on Mobile Phones Throughout Balkans

HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------


Croatia Using Advanced US-Installed Intelligence Technology

3 January 2002

Belgrade Glas Javnosti (in Serbo-Croatian), p. 4

[Unattributed report: "Croatia Spies on Mobile Phones Throughout
Balkans"]

The world's most advanced Watson system for analyzing intelligence data
and advanced US equipment for listening in on digital communication have
lately been installed in Croatia. The Croatian intelligence service
received the Watson system and surveillance equipment from the United
States for use in the fight against terrorism and illegal migration. The
equipment and installations have been mounted in all major Croatian
towns.

After [Croatia's 1995] Operation Storm, dissatisfied that surveillance
equipment was being used for internal political purposes, the United
States started gradually pulling out their equipment and personnel, so
that for a time Croatia was in a total information blackout. However,
the [11 September] terrorist attacks on the United States changed all
this.

Surveillance equipment received by Croatia in the wake of the terrorist
attacks on the United States also effectively covers the territories of
the neighboring countries: tabs are being kept on telephone
conversations and other forms of communication (electronic mail, fax
messages) being conducted by way of all kinds of digital and analog
communication equipment, especially mobile phones.

The equipping of Croatia with hi-tech espionage installations shows that
the United States today regards that country as the region's foremost
partner of the antiterrorist coalition. This is also recognition of
Croatia's long years of cooperation in the exchange of intelligence data
with the US intelligence service. This is especially true in the case of
exchanging intelligence on the presence of terrorist groups and
individuals in Bosnia-Herzegovina over the past years. With the arrival
of the new equipment and technology, Croatia has become the biggest
source of intelligence in southeastern Europe for the needs of the
antiterrorist coalition. Cooperation with the US intelligence service
has intensified several-fold.

The Croatian intelligence service, in cooperation with the Americans and
the SFOR [Stabilization Force] Command in Bosnia-Herzegovina, has been
instrumental in keeping under surveillance and arresting collaborators
of
Bin Ladin's network in Bosnia-Herzegovina.   It has greatly reduced the
transfer of foreign nationals across the Croatian border, and as the
Zagreb Nacional magazine learns, claiming that discovery and arrest are
imminent for war criminals Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic, who are
already being kept under successful surveillance from Croatia by the new
espionage equipment.

The US side had noticed that, because of an inability to invest in
equipment for electronic surveillance within the NSEI [National
Electronic Surveillance Service], the Croatian intelligence service was
no longer
capable of offering quality information, as it had done last year.
This
made the installation of the new equipment and the Watson system for
automatic analysis of intelligence data in fact mutually advantageous.
Nacional's source confirms that electronic surveillance had lately been
in deep crisis, but the advent of the new surveillance equipment and new
programmatic solutions for databases as surveillance support have
changed the situation overnight.

After the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, the US
Administration declared war on terrorism using all weapons. It
designated Croatia, because of its prior positive record in intelligence
exchange, as a very important partner in this part of Europe, especially
because of the presence of mujahedin and foreign terrorists in
Bosnia-Herzegovina, and
attempts at illegal migration to the west via Croatia.    From the early
days, Croatia has been actively involved in the antiterrorist coalition,
not only declaratively, but also through specific activities in
intelligence exchange.

Over the past two months, Croatian President Stjepan Mesic met with the
greatest and most important world leaders, presenting a series of
proposals for the struggle against terrorism and trying to win
recognition for the role played by Croatia in the antiterrorist
coalition.

Mesic also recently met with US President Bush, who paid tribute to
Croatia for its struggle against terrorism. And while he has been rather
misunderstood and ignored at home, the international coalition against
terrorism has recognized the importance of Croatia in the antiterrorist
coalition, and the United States, as the leader of the coalition, has
made an effort to provide technological assistance.

The importance attached by the United States to strengthening the
Croatian surveillance system by providing the state-of-the-art Watson
program for analyzing intelligence data is best illustrated by the fact
that General Michael Hasden [name as published], director of the US
National Security Agency (NSA) -- the most powerful US intelligence
service -- has been directly involved since the very start of
negotiations between Croatia and the United States in September of this
year [as published]. The NSA is the US secret service with the highest
budget in charge of monitoring and decoding all kinds of communication
worldwide, and relies in its work on the Watson system, which has lately
been present also in Croatia.

The United States has maintained successful cooperation in the
intelligence area with the Croatian intelligence community since the
early 1990's, both in the planning of military operations in the
Balkans, and in the struggle against terrorism. This positive
experience, despite the concern of US intelligence operatives over
frequent scandals and conflicts in the state leadership on influence
over the secret services, has led to a renewed full employment of the
Croatian secret services in intelligence cooperation with their US
colleagues.

The Croatian intelligence community can now monitor all kinds of digital
and mobile communication, whose surveillance has so far been hampered
and
limited.   Previously Croatian intelligence operatives had at their
disposal
technology that could successfully monitor only the 099 analog network,
while with two German-made vans and NSEI surveillance equipment it
monitored digital mobile phones. This kind of monitoring was exhausting
for the operatives, so that their concentration would flag, while
expenses far outstripped the hoped-for results. The equipment for
monitoring digital mobile communication is very expensive and
unavailable on the free market.

Today, all intelligence data collected is incredibly swiftly analyzed
automatically by the Watson program. For example, in just a few seconds
it responds to a single question about a person or event graphically or
visually by collating and processing all available data, conversations,
financial transactions -- of which there might be thousands -- and
presents a complete picture for the user that can be displayed in the
form of a diagram, map, chain of command, or the like. What Watson can
do in a few seconds might take a team of analysts days, Nacional's
source claims.

Apart from listening in on digital communication and mobile phones, the
US intelligence gathering system in Croatia also traces the movements of
a person under surveillance if the battery is in the mobile phone.

Every town in Croatia where part of the surveillance equipment has been
installed covering the territory within a certain radius follows a
traveler with a mobile phone and, the moment the traveler moves out of
range of one surveillance station, he is picked up by another in the
next town thanks to the identification code of each phone under
surveillance. Surveillance equipment in Croatia operates in the same way
as in foreign countries.

Surveillance by way of mobile phones even when the instrument is turned
off is carried out by the relevant services dialing the number of the
mobile phone and then, before dialing the last digit, running a
particular code that turns on the microphone. The telephone thus becomes
a "bug" which conveys all sounds up to 15 meters in diameter. This kind
of surveillance can be disabled only by removing the battery from the
mobile phone.

Each use of such sensitive surveillance equipment necessarily raises the
question of abuse of the system. It is easily possible that, by using
this technology, individual politicians in power may consult about their
political rivals and then obliterate all trace of this, and without
those who requested the surveillance being held to account for the
abuse, because no evidence is forthcoming. The situation on the Croatian
political scene and in the structures of the intelligence community is
far from stable, and the use of a system such as Watson requires the
preconditions of a democratic organization and a stable state in order
to avoid the possibility of political abuse.

It is no secret that the EU members have similar systems, which they use
for discovering terrorist and criminal activities in the Union
member-states. However, they are all countries with long democratic
traditions, political stability, and precisely defined mechanisms for
the control and supervision of secret surveillance and tapping, unlike
Croatia, Nacional's source claims.

Leading men in the intelligence community do not meet and coordinate
their activities -- each is accountable only to their immediate
political controller; the law on national security that is still in
force is not being implemented, while no new law is forthcoming; and
abuses are easiest now, because nobody knows who controls whom and who
is accountable to whom.

Some intelligence community leaders would neither confirm nor deny
Nacional's claims. The SZUP [Constitutional Order Protection Service --
Croatia's intelligence service] explicitly claims that, if such a system
does in fact exist, it is not under their control, and a senior
intelligence community official confirms Nacional's discovery and opines
that the system operates as part of the NSEI, in view of the fact that
the NSEI already has sufficiently skilled personnel and equipment
capable of being easily enhanced. Nacional's sources agree on one point,
however -- to wit, that Croatia and its national security needed such a
system after the intelligence blackout of the National Electronic
Surveillance Service [NSEI].

Because of technological insufficiencies and an inadequate technological
superstructure on the one hand, and because of the modernization and
introduction of digital equipment and telecommunications by the
neighboring countries on the other, the NSEI was no longer capable of
effectively eavesdropping on outside lines. The introduction of the US
Watson analytical system will totally do away with the insufficiency of
intelligence data in Croatia and outside its borders.

Although Croatia has acquired substantial technological advantage over
the neighbors in intelligence data gathering, it is still regional in
character. The biggest states, which have spy satellites, can record all
telephonic communication (conversations, fax messages, e-mail messages,
communication via the Internet) anywhere in the world.

An instrument radiates enough for the conversation to be picked up by
satellite. Such conversations are then classified by computer and
analyzed on the basis of the numbers of the transmitting and receiving
phones, the location of the transmitting and receiving phones, time of
the conversation, language, key words, and voice typing. Once classified
and analyzed, the conversations are sent to analysts for checking.

Protection against this kind of surveillance is possible only if both
the transmitting and receiving instruments are in rooms built on the
lines of the Faraday Cage, and if all electrical cables and connections
that transmit the signal are buried deep under the ground. If an
intelligence service has "friendly ties" with the local telephone
company, not even this kind of protection is safe.

Protection against attack by the new digital communication surveillance
system, and especially mobile phones, boils down to only one option: the
battery and any other power source should be completely removed.    That
is
to say, there is no efficacious protection. It is possible -- the source
claims -- to choose a somewhat less secure option of frequently changing
the type of mobile phone and numbers by way of SIM cards and coupons,
but this is totally uneconomical, while the least secure option is to
become a subscriber to a mobile telephony network.

[Box] Against Corruption and Pedophilia
The Watson system was used to smash an Internet pedophile chain in 1996
and expose corruption in Italy in 1997. The Watson program software is
the product of a US company for information management based in the US
state of Massachusetts. Watson has lately been present in the Croatian
intelligence community as well, being used for analyzing thousands of
intelligence and other data that pours daily into its database by way of
surveillance stations in Croatia.

[Box] For Combating Terrorism
By the end of the year [as published], the Republic of Croatia will have
submitted a report to the [UN] Security Council on measures taken to
combat
terrorism.    By embracing the Security Council's Resolution 1373 on
suppressing international terrorism, Croatia has undertaken to keep the
Security Council informed about the results of the campaign. First,
Croatia must submit its report to the East River by the end of the year
and, for the purposes of efficacious control, the government has set up
an interdepartmental task force directly accountable to the UN Security
Council. The task force comprises members of all governmental
departments, headed by Josko Klisovic, head of the Foreign Ministry's
Department for the United Nations. Resolution 1373 of the UN Security
Council obligates all states efficaciously to combat terrorism, money
laundering, international and financial crime, and to cooperate towards
opening air space, freezing suspect bank accounts.... Each state must
collect and share information on criminal activities and pass laws to
combat these activities. The new Watson system will be of great help to
Croatia in this respect.

[Description of Source:
Belgrade Glas Javnosti in Serbo-Croatian
-- independent, widely read daily]


_________________________________________________
 
KOMINFORM
P.O. Box 66
00841 Helsinki
Phone +358-40-7177941
Fax +358-9-7591081
http://www.kominf.pp.fi
 
General class struggle news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe mails to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Geopolitical news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
__________________________________________________


Reply via email to