Jangan jangan dulu pembicaraan Ghalib dengan Pak Habibie, di eavesdrop dg.
cara ini.


 HOW BRITAIN EAVESDROPPED ON DUBLIN


THE MINISTRY of Defence "Electronic Test Facility", a rather mysterious
150-ft high tower stands isolated in a British Nuclear Fuels Limited site at
Capenhurst, Cheshire.
Locals knew that the tower housed a dark secret but did not know what it
was. That secret is now out.

The tower was craftily erected between two BT microwave radio towers
carrying telephone traffic. The ETF was the ideal place to discreetly
intercept international telephone calls of the Irish government, businessmen
and those of suspected of involvement with IRA terrorism.

Channel 4 filmed extensive BT equipment inside the building, including
optical fibre cables linking the tower to the MoD's communication system.

The hi-tech white ETF tower included eight floors of advanced electronic
equipment and three floors of aerial galleries.

These were used to extract and sort the thousands of communications passing
through every hour. Fax messages, e-mails, telexes and data communications
were automatically sorted by computers scanning their contents for key words
and subjects of interest. Telephone calls could be targeted according to the
numbers dialled or by identifying the voice of the speaker.

At the time the tower first came into operation the IRA campaigns were
raging.

Relations between the British and Irish government's were not always smooth,
with the British suspecting their Irish counterparts of being sympathetic to
the IRA.

Since the early 1990s, the British electronic spy agency GCHQ and its
American counterpart NSA have developed sophisticated libraries of voice
profiles to use in scanning international telephone messages.

The ETF tower was operated by personnel from an RAF unit based in Malvern,
Worcestershire. The "special signals" section of the RAF "Radio Introduction
Unit" install and run projects for GCHQ.

According to local residents, the site was manned 24 hours a day by a team
of two to three people, until the start of 1998.

Besides the Capenhurst tower, communications to and from the Irish Republic
were also intercepted at a similar but smaller GCHQ station in County
Armagh. This intercepts microwave radio and other links between Dublin and
Belfast.

A third GCHQ station at Bude, Cornwall, intercepts western satellite
communications, including to and from Ireland.

>From 1990 until 1998 the Capenhurst ETF tower intercepted the international
communications of the Irish Republic crossing from Dublin to Anglesey on a
newly installed optical fibre submarine cable, called UK-Ireland 1.

>From Anglesey, the signals were carried across Britain on British Telecom's
network of microwave radio relay towers, centred on the BT Tower in London.

The key link, from Holyhead in Anglesey to Manchester, passes directly over
the Wirral peninsula to the south of Birkenhead. The ETF tower was built to
pop up into this beam.

When the new cable was planned in the mid 1980s, intelligence specialists at
the Defence Ministry and GCHQ Cheltenham, the electronic spying
headquarters, realised that the radio beams passed directly over the nuclear
processing plant at Capenhurst.

During 1988, a temporary interception system was built on the roof of the
BNFL factory. When tests of the Irish interception system proved successful,
intelligence chiefs decided to go ahead with a full-scale system.

Within the Defence Ministry, the project was classified "Top Secret Umbra".
The codeword Umbra is used to designate sensitive signals intelligence
operations.

Not even BNFL, on whose land the ETF tower was built, was let into the
secret.

The Ministry of Defence held a meeting with residents early in 1989 and
urged them not to talk about the site. In return, they were given free
fencing and double glazing.

The architects were told that the tower had to contain three floors of
aerial galleries, each with four special "dielectric" windows. These are
opaque to visible light, but allow radio beams to enter.

By building the tower in this way, no-one could see what aerials were
inside, or where they were pointing.

But the architects' plans, lodged at the local authority offices, revealed
the true purpose of the tower.

The plans revealed that the radio transparent windows had to be aligned on
an extremely precise compass bearing of 201.12 degrees to magnetic north.

Aerials pointing through these windows would point precisely at the British
Telecom towers at Gwaenysgor, Clwyd, and Pale Heights, near Chester. These
are the towers carrying the Ireland's international communications links
through Britain.

During installation in 1989 and 1990, defence officials were concerned to
conceal what was going into the tower. To disguise it, contractors vans were
repainted in the livery of BT and other public utilities. BT refused to say
whether this had been done with their knowledge and consent.

Since the Irish telecommunication moved onto a different system over a year
the Capenhurst tower has been made redundant. The Ministry of Defence are
trying sell it off.

It would not make a very comfortable home and it is hard to see what
legitimate business might now be interested.

The Defence Estate organisation said this week that it had extended the time
for offers to be made. It would accepts bids for the tower up to midday
today.

The Home Office said: "In accordance with standard practice, the Government
does not comment on alleged interception activity." BT said it did not wish
to comment.

The Irish government said it would comment later.

History of the Eavesdropping Agency

THE BRITISH Government's eavesdropping agency, the Government Communications
Headquarters (GCHQ), is based in Cheltenham.

It was set up 1946 after the success of the Government Code and Cipher
School in Bletchley of cracking the German Enigma codes during the Second
World War.

It is responsible for monitoring telecommunications and telephone calls in
Britain and around the world and employs some 4,000 people. It works closely
with MI6.

GCHQ uses state-of-the-art equipment for a wide range of operations to
decrypt diplomatic traffic and to identify the voices of individuals who are
of interest to the West's intelligence services.

GCHQ officers have been closely involved in the British efforts to tackle
the IRA. GCHQ also works closely with the US eavesdropping operation, the
National Security Agency. The agencies work together on a system called
"Echelon", an intergrated global surveillance network intercepting
international satellite and communications links. It is said to have
benefited the US and UK with information about arms and trade deals.

Until 1975 few people outside the intelligence community knew about the
existence of GCHQ.

In the Eighties, Margaret Thatcher took union rights away from GCHQ staff on
the basis that trade unionists were a potential threat to national security.
Those rights have now been restored. After the Cold War, GCHQ cut back on
staff numbers. The Cheltenham headquarters is being rebuilt at a cost of
pounds 300m.

----------------
Hehehe, kalau kita mau sebetulnya juga bisa dong yah ? mau nyadap
pembicaraan negara lain, kalau mau Singapore, tinggal pasang di Batam,
kalau Serawak, tinggal di Kalimantan
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AFLHI 058009990407128029/089802 


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