Ultrasecret satellite spy shop NRO turns 50

Sep 16, 2011  7:52 AM (ET)

By KIMBERLY DOZIER
Associated Press

http://apnews.myway.com//article/20110916/D9PPJGOG0.html


WASHINGTON (AP) - As it turns 50, the ultra-secretive National 
Reconnaissance Office is putting a multibillion-dollar misstep behind it 
and casting its spy satellites on new enemies, from al-Qaida bomb 
planters to North Korean nuclear engineers, according to its chief.

The agency has launched six satellites in seven months, "the best we've 
done in about 25 years," said director Bruce Carlson, ticking off what 
he saw as milestones during rare comments Thursday to reporters.

Data gathered from the NRO's Gorgon Stare of satellites - named for the 
mythological gaze that could turn a person to stone - was hailed as key 
to helping plan the Navy SEAL raid against Osama bin Laden and to 
guiding NATO and rebel forces in Libya, Carlson said.

The NRO was founded during the Cold War on Sept. 6, 1961, to spy on the 
Soviet Union, China and other enemies in the U.S. battle against 
communism. Today it operates satellites to spot roadside bombs in 
Afghanistan, helping combat arguably the enemy's deadliest weapon in 
America's latest war. The NRO still spies on Russia and China.

Carlson, a former Air Force general, was blisteringly blunt about the 
NRO's recent mistakes; namely, how it ran up a multibillion-dollar bill 
trying to develop the failed "Future Imagery Architecture" satellite 
program. FIA, as it was known, was supposed to create a new generation 
of smaller, cheaper optical and radar satellites.

Instead, the Boeing program never took off, literally. Carlson called it 
"a colossal failure," but, without going into details, he said the 
program was now "back on track."

FIA happened before Carlson's watch, but the lesson stuck. U.S. 
intelligence officials say he is equally blunt with contractors he now 
manages. Where they used to be allowed to lag on delivering new 
technology, Carlson threatened to cancel contracts and walk away, said 
one U.S. intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity to 
discuss intelligence matters.

When Carlson first delivered some of his missives, "jaws dropped," the 
official said. And behavior changed.

Even a couple of years ago, more than 30 percent of all NRO contracts 
were performing poorly, Carlson said, but now all are "on contract and 
on price."

Carlson is already war-gaming what he'll cut if Congress slashes his 
annual budget, saying he'll sacrifice operations and maintenance to keep 
the same number of staff on board, and protect the forward-looking 
science and technology research that works on next-generation satellite 
equipment and the futuristic equipment the satellites carry.

"We were going to protect our people, the core people of our mission," 
Carlson said.

And the agency's learned to make do, he said.

"We've got satellites up there that are remarkably old, over a decade 
old, that were only supposed to live for three or four years," that were 
designed to collect Soviet communications during the Cold War, Carlson 
said. "Now they are collecting phone calls or push-to-talk radio signals 
out of the war zone."

Those signals are used to "geo-locate" the sources of threats. One key 
NRO program, called Red Dot, is focused on finding improvised bombs, 
primed to attack U.S. troops in the war zone.

Red Dot works by monitoring Afghan roadways for the electronic signals 
given off by the transmitters meant to trigger the explosives. Those 
signals are married up "within minutes" to other intelligence streams, 
from observation blimps, drones and spy planes. The same technology is 
being used to hone in on radios used by the Taliban, to narrow their 
location to an accuracy of just meters, Carlson said.

Carlson said the Red Dot program, in place for about six months, is 
"about 80 percent effective" in spotting the bombs.

"Even though we still have an unacceptable loss," due to the improvised 
explosive devices, or IEDs, "we're catching a lot of them," he said.

The NRO's core mission remains spotting long-term threats, like trying 
to figure out just how far along North Korea's nuclear program has come.

"They are very clever," Carlson said. "They work very hard to deceive us."

The Russians and Chinese present the greatest challenge to U.S. 
superiority in space, launching so many satellites that low Earth orbit 
is getting crowded, and that could lead to conflict, Carlson said.

China's "military philosophy goes back to 4,000 years ago," he said. 
"They believe in deception. My main concern is their intent."

Just in case that intent isn't friendly, Carlson said he wants to build 
new satellite systems so they can look sideways and out into space, as 
well as down onto the Earth, so they can react to any new threats in 
space, in case the game changes between the players on the ground.

---

Online: www.nro.gov

_______________________________________________
Medianews mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.etskywarn.net/mailman/listinfo/medianews

Reply via email to