NSA
controls global Internet traffic via private fiber-optic cables
Deals
brokered between federal agents and foreign corporations have allowed
the United States government to easily intercept and interpret a vast
swath of communication data sent around the world, new documents
reveal.
RT,
8
July, 2013
In
a National Security Agency slideshow obtained by The Washington Post
and attributed to NSA leaker Edward Snowden, the US government
encouraged analysts to tap into an array of underwater, fiber-optic
cables that serve as conduits for around 99 percent of the world’s
Internet and phone traffic.
The
report, published by the Post’s Craig Timberg and Ellen Nakashima,
explains how NSA slides leaked by Snowden reveal yet another
surveillance program undertaken as an alleged counterterrorism
measure but at the cost of putting the privacy of millions, if not
billions, of people at risk.
According
to that report, the US government sent a team of attorneys from a
number of alphabet soup agencies — including the Federal Bureau of
Investigation and the Departments of Defense, Justice and Homeland
Security — to oversee post-9/11 efforts that would ensure most
intelligence sent throughout the world could be collected by American
agents.
“Among
their jobs, documents show, was ensuring that surveillance requests
got fulfilled quickly and confidentially,” the journalists wrote.
That
much, the Post alleges, was accomplished by maintaining “an
internal corporate cell of American citizens with government
clearances” within the ranks of the foreign companies that control
the fiber-optic cables carrying most telecommunications data around
the world. One of those entities was Asia’s Global Crossing, and
the US moved quickly to infiltrate its roster of employees shortly
after 9/11.
The
post writes that the “Network Security Agreement” signed between
Global Crossing and the US in 2003 was one of the first major
contractors giving the US the power to tap into these major telecom
pipes, and in the decade since countless others have been authorized.
In that instance and others, federal attorneys cooperating under the
name “Team Telecom” compelled foreign owners of these cables to
comply with American requests for information.
In
the case of the Global Crossing contract, the US had the firm sign
off on a deal that assured American intelligence agents could call up
the company and be at a US-based “Network Operations Center” in
only 30 minutes time to monitor and collect data. And while laws
exist in order to allegedly provide safeguards to protect the privacy
of Americans, the Post says that doesn’t stop American agencies
from being able to collect that data nonetheless.
“As
people worldwide chat, browse and post images through online
services, much of the information flows within the technological
reach of US surveillance. Though laws, procedural rules and internal
policies limit how that information can be collected and used, the
data from billions of devices worldwide flow through Internet choke
points that the United States and its allies are capable of
monitoring,” the Post writes. Along with the PRISM program
disclosed by Snowden last month, tapping into these cables gives the
US the ability to monitor essentially any communication that passes
near the US.
The
Post notes that both PRISM and the “Upstream” program that pulls
from underwater cables intend to only target communications in which
one part is believed to be outside of the US, but government agencies
are unwilling to say how many Americans have incidentally or
inadvertently entered the radar of the NSA. Previously, though,
members of the United States Senate have used phrases like
“profoundly appalled” to predict how Americans would likely react
if they knew the full extent and scope of their country’s
surveillance programs.
In
the wake of Mr. Snowden’s disclosures that first began surfacing
last month, the NSA, President Barack Obama and his administration
have all celebrated the surveillance programs as necessary implements
in the war against terror. The White House maintains that the
practices are legally authorized through both the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act and the post-9/11 PATRIOT Act, but
continue to draw criticism from the public and politicians alike.
Snowden, 30, is seeking asylum to avoid prosecution in the US where
he is accused under the Espionage Act.
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