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Wikipedia

National Security Agency

The National Security Agency (NSA) is a national-level intelligence agency of the United States Department of Defense, under the authority of the Director of National Intelligence (DNI). The NSA is responsible for global monitoring, collection, and processing of information and data for foreign and domestic intelligence and counterintelligence purposes, specializing in a discipline known as signals intelligence (SIGINT). The NSA is also tasked with the protection of U.S. communications networks and information systems.[8][9] The NSA relies on a variety of measures to accomplish its mission, the majority of which are clandestine.[10] The existence of the NSA was not revealed until 1975. The NSA has roughly 32,000 employees.[11]

National Security Agency
Seal of the National Security Agency
Flag of the National Security Agency

NSA headquarters, Fort Meade, Maryland, c. 1986
Agency overview
FormedNovember 4, 1952; 70 years ago (1952-11-04)[1]
Preceding agency
  • Armed Forces Security Agency
HeadquartersFort Meade, Maryland, U.S.
39°6′32″N 76°46′17″W / 39.10889°N 76.77139°W / 39.10889; -76.77139
Motto"Defending Our Nation. Securing the Future."
EmployeesClassified (est. 30,000–40,000)[2][3][4][5]
Annual budgetClassified (estimated $10.8 billion, 2013)[6][7]
Agency executives
Parent agencyDepartment of Defense
WebsiteNSA.gov

Originating as a unit to decipher coded communications in World War II, it was officially formed as the NSA by President Harry S. Truman in 1952. Between then and the end of the Cold War, it became the largest of the U.S. intelligence organizations in terms of personnel and budget, but information available as of 2013 indicates that the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) pulled ahead in this regard, with a budget of $14.7 billion.[6][12] The NSA currently conducts worldwide mass data collection and has been known to physically bug electronic systems as one method to this end.[13] The NSA is also alleged to have been behind such attack software as Stuxnet, which severely damaged Iran's nuclear program.[14][15] The NSA, alongside the CIA, maintains a physical presence in many countries across the globe; the CIA/NSA joint Special Collection Service (a highly classified intelligence team) inserts eavesdropping devices in high value targets (such as presidential palaces or embassies). SCS collection tactics allegedly encompass "close surveillance, burglary, wiretapping, [and] breaking and entering".[16]

Unlike the CIA and the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), both of which specialize primarily in foreign human espionage, the NSA does not publicly conduct human-source intelligence gathering. The NSA is entrusted with providing assistance to, and the coordination of, SIGINT elements for other government organizations – which are prevented by Executive Order from engaging in such activities on their own.[17] As part of these responsibilities, the agency has a co-located organization called the Central Security Service (CSS), which facilitates cooperation between the NSA and other U.S. defense cryptanalysis components. To further ensure streamlined communication between the signals intelligence community divisions, the NSA Director simultaneously serves as the Commander of the United States Cyber Command and as Chief of the Central Security Service.

The NSA's actions have been a matter of political controversy on several occasions, including its spying on anti–Vietnam War leaders and the agency's participation in economic espionage. In 2013, the NSA had many of its secret surveillance programs revealed to the public by Edward Snowden, a former NSA contractor. According to the leaked documents, the NSA intercepts and stores the communications of over a billion people worldwide, including United States citizens. The documents also revealed the NSA tracks hundreds of millions of people's movements using cellphones' metadata. Internationally, research has pointed to the NSA's ability to surveil the domestic Internet traffic of foreign countries through "boomerang routing".[18]

History

Formation

The origins of the National Security Agency can be traced back to April 28, 1917, three weeks after the U.S. Congress declared war on Germany in World War I. A code and cipher decryption unit was established as the Cable and Telegraph Section which was also known as the Cipher Bureau.[19] It was headquartered in Washington, D.C. and was part of the war effort under the executive branch without direct Congressional authorization. During the course of the war, it was relocated in the army's organizational chart several times. On July 5, 1917, Herbert O. Yardley was assigned to head the unit. At that point, the unit consisted of Yardley and two civilian clerks. It absorbed the Navy's cryptanalysis functions in July 1918. World War I ended on November 11, 1918, and the army cryptographic section of Military Intelligence (MI-8) moved to New York City on May 20, 1919, where it continued intelligence activities as the Code Compilation Company under the direction of Yardley.[20][21]

The Black Chamber

 
Black Chamber cryptanalytic work sheet for solving Japanese diplomatic cipher, 1919

After the disbandment of the U.S. Army cryptographic section of military intelligence known as MI-8, the U.S. government created the Cipher Bureau, also known as Black Chamber, in 1919. The Black Chamber was the United States' first peacetime cryptanalytic organization.[22] Jointly funded by the Army and the State Department, the Cipher Bureau was disguised as a New York City commercial code company; it actually produced and sold such codes for business use. Its true mission, however, was to break the communications (chiefly diplomatic) of other nations. At the Washington Naval Conference, it aided American negotiators by providing them with the decrypted traffic of many of the conference delegations, including the Japanese. The Black Chamber successfully persuaded Western Union, the largest U.S. telegram company at the time, as well as several other communications companies to illegally give the Black Chamber access to cable traffic of foreign embassies and consulates.[23] Soon, these companies publicly discontinued their collaboration.

Despite the Chamber's initial successes, it was shut down in 1929 by U.S. Secretary of State Henry L. Stimson, who defended his decision by stating, "Gentlemen do not read each other's mail."[24]

World War II and its aftermath

During World War II, the Signal Intelligence Service (SIS) was created to intercept and decipher the communications of the Axis powers.[25] When the war ended, the SIS was reorganized as the Army Security Agency (ASA), and it was placed under the leadership of the Director of Military Intelligence.[25]

On May 20, 1949, all cryptologic activities were centralized under a national organization called the Armed Forces Security Agency (AFSA).[25] This organization was originally established within the U.S. Department of Defense under the command of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.[26] The AFSA was tasked to direct Department of Defense communications and electronic intelligence activities, except those of U.S. military intelligence units.[26] However, the AFSA was unable to centralize communications intelligence and failed to coordinate with civilian agencies that shared its interests such as the Department of State, Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).[26] In December 1951, President Harry S. Truman ordered a panel to investigate how AFSA had failed to achieve its goals. The results of the investigation led to improvements and its redesignation as the National Security Agency.[27]

The National Security Council issued a memorandum of October 24, 1952, that revised National Security Council Intelligence Directive (NSCID) 9. On the same day, Truman issued a second memorandum that called for the establishment of the NSA.[28] The actual establishment of the NSA was done by a November 4 memo by Robert A. Lovett, the Secretary of Defense, changing the name of the AFSA to the NSA, and making the new agency responsible for all communications intelligence.[29] Since President Truman's memo was a classified document,[28] the existence of the NSA was not known to the public at that time. Due to its ultra-secrecy the U.S. intelligence community referred to the NSA as "No Such Agency".[30]

Vietnam War

In the 1960s, the NSA played a key role in expanding U.S. commitment to the Vietnam War by providing evidence of a North Vietnamese attack on the American destroyer USS Maddox during the Gulf of Tonkin incident.[31]

A secret operation, code-named "MINARET", was set up by the NSA to monitor the phone communications of Senators Frank Church and Howard Baker, as well as key leaders of the civil rights movement, including Martin Luther King Jr., and prominent U.S. journalists and athletes who criticized the Vietnam War.[32] However, the project turned out to be controversial, and an internal review by the NSA concluded that its Minaret program was "disreputable if not outright illegal".[32]

The NSA mounted a major effort to secure tactical communications among U.S. forces during the war with mixed success. The NESTOR family of compatible secure voice systems it developed was widely deployed during the Vietnam War, with about 30,000 NESTOR sets produced. However, a variety of technical and operational problems limited their use, allowing the North Vietnamese to exploit and intercept U.S. communications.[33]: Vol I, p.79 

Church Committee hearings

In the aftermath of the Watergate scandal, a congressional hearing in 1975 led by Senator Frank Church[34] revealed that the NSA, in collaboration with Britain's SIGINT intelligence agency Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), had routinely intercepted the international communications of prominent anti-Vietnam war leaders such as Jane Fonda and Dr. Benjamin Spock.[35] The NSA tracked these individuals in a secret filing system that was destroyed in 1974.[36] Following the resignation of President Richard Nixon, there were several investigations of suspected misuse of FBI, CIA and NSA facilities.[37] Senator Frank Church uncovered previously unknown activity,[37] such as a CIA plot (ordered by the administration of President John F. Kennedy) to assassinate Fidel Castro.[38] The investigation also uncovered NSA's wiretaps on targeted U.S. citizens.[39]

After the Church Committee hearings, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 was passed. This was designed to limit the practice of mass surveillance in the United States.[37]

From 1980s to 1990s

In 1986, the NSA intercepted the communications of the Libyan government during the immediate aftermath of the Berlin discotheque bombing. The White House asserted that the NSA interception had provided "irrefutable" evidence that Libya was behind the bombing, which U.S. President Ronald Reagan cited as a justification for the 1986 United States bombing of Libya.[40][41]

In 1999, a multi-year investigation by the European Parliament highlighted the NSA's role in economic espionage in a report entitled 'Development of Surveillance Technology and Risk of Abuse of Economic Information'.[42] That year, the NSA founded the NSA Hall of Honor, a memorial at the National Cryptologic Museum in Fort Meade, Maryland.[43] The memorial is a, "tribute to the pioneers and heroes who have made significant and long-lasting contributions to American cryptology".[43] NSA employees must be retired for more than fifteen years to qualify for the memorial.[43]

NSA's infrastructure deteriorated in the 1990s as defense budget cuts resulted in maintenance deferrals. On January 24, 2000, NSA headquarters suffered a total network outage for three days caused by an overloaded network. Incoming traffic was successfully stored on agency servers, but it could not be directed and processed. The agency carried out emergency repairs at a cost of $3 million to get the system running again. (Some incoming traffic was also directed instead to Britain's GCHQ for the time being.) Director Michael Hayden called the outage a "wake-up call" for the need to invest in the agency's infrastructure.[44]

In the 1990s the defensive arm of the NSA—the Information Assurance Directorate (IAD)—started working more openly; the first public technical talk by an NSA scientist at a major cryptography conference was J. Solinas' presentation on efficient Elliptic Curve Cryptography algorithms at Crypto 1997.[45] The IAD's cooperative approach to academia and industry culminated in its support for a transparent process for replacing the outdated Data Encryption Standard (DES) by an Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). Cybersecurity policy expert Susan Landau attributes the NSA's harmonious collaboration with industry and academia in the selection of the AES in 2000—and the Agency's support for the choice of a strong encryption algorithm designed by Europeans rather than by Americans—to Brian Snow, who was the Technical Director of IAD and represented the NSA as cochairman of the Technical Working Group for the AES competition, and Michael Jacobs, who headed IAD at the time.[46]: 75 

After the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, the NSA believed that it had public support for a dramatic expansion of its surveillance activities.[47] According to Neal Koblitz and Alfred Menezes, the period when the NSA was a trusted partner with academia and industry in the development of cryptographic standards started to come to an end when, as part of the change in the NSA in the post-September 11 era, Snow was replaced as Technical Director, Jacobs retired, and IAD could no longer effectively oppose proposed actions by the offensive arm of the NSA.[48]

War on Terror

In the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, the NSA created new IT systems to deal with the flood of information from new technologies like the Internet and cellphones. ThinThread contained advanced data mining capabilities. It also had a "privacy mechanism"; surveillance was stored encrypted; decryption required a warrant. The research done under this program may have contributed to the technology used in later systems. ThinThread was cancelled when Michael Hayden chose Trailblazer, which did not include ThinThread's privacy system.[49]

Trailblazer Project ramped up in 2002 and was worked on by Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC), Boeing, Computer Sciences Corporation, IBM, and Litton Industries. Some NSA whistleblowers complained internally about major problems surrounding Trailblazer. This led to investigations by Congress and the NSA and DoD Inspectors General. The project was cancelled in early 2004.

Turbulence started in 2005. It was developed in small, inexpensive "test" pieces, rather than one grand plan like Trailblazer. It also included offensive cyber-warfare capabilities, like injecting malware into remote computers. Congress criticized Turbulence in 2007 for having similar bureaucratic problems as Trailblazer.[50] It was to be a realization of information processing at higher speeds in cyberspace.[51]

Global surveillance disclosures

The massive extent of the NSA's spying, both foreign and domestic, was revealed to the public in a series of detailed disclosures of internal NSA documents beginning in June 2013. Most of the disclosures were leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden. On 4 September 2020, the NSA's surveillance program was ruled unlawful by the US Court of Appeals. The court also added that the US intelligence leaders, who publicly defended it, were not telling the truth.[52]

Mission

NSA's eavesdropping mission includes radio broadcasting, both from various organizations and individuals, the Internet, telephone calls, and other intercepted forms of communication. Its secure communications mission includes military, diplomatic, and all other sensitive, confidential or secret government communications.[53]

According to a 2010 article in The Washington Post, "every day, collection systems at the National Security Agency intercept and store 1.7 billion e-mails, phone calls and other types of communications. The NSA sorts a fraction of those into 70 separate databases."[54]

Because of its listening task, NSA/CSS has been heavily involved in cryptanalytic research, continuing the work of predecessor agencies which had broken many World War II codes and ciphers (see, for instance, Purple, Venona project, and JN-25).

In 2004, NSA Central Security Service and the National Cyber Security Division of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) agreed to expand the NSA Centers of Academic Excellence in Information Assurance Education Program.[55]

As part of the National Security Presidential Directive 54/Homeland Security Presidential Directive 23 (NSPD 54), signed on January 8, 2008, by President Bush, the NSA became the lead agency to monitor and protect all of the federal government's computer networks from cyber-terrorism.[9]

A part of NSA's mission is to serve as a combat support agency for the Department of Defense.[56]

Operations

Operations by the National Security Agency can be divided into three types:

  • Collection overseas, which falls under the responsibility of the Global Access Operations (GAO) division.
  • Domestic collection, which falls under the responsibility of the Special Source Operations (SSO) division.
  • Hacking operations, which fall under the responsibility of the Tailored Access Operations (TAO) division.

Collection overseas

Echelon

"Echelon" was created in the incubator of the Cold War.[57] Today it is a legacy system, and several NSA stations are closing.[58]

NSA/CSS, in combination with the equivalent agencies in the United Kingdom (Government Communications Headquarters), Canada (Communications Security Establishment), Australia (Australian Signals Directorate), and New Zealand (Government Communications Security Bureau), otherwise known as the UKUSA group,[59] was reported to be in command of the operation of the so-called ECHELON system. Its capabilities were suspected to include the ability to monitor a large proportion of the world's transmitted civilian telephone, fax and data traffic.[60]

During the early 1970s, the first of what became more than eight large satellite communications dishes were installed at Menwith Hill.[61] Investigative journalist Duncan Campbell reported in 1988 on the "ECHELON" surveillance program, an extension of the UKUSA Agreement on global signals intelligence SIGINT, and detailed how the eavesdropping operations worked.[62] On November 3, 1999, the BBC reported that they had confirmation from the Australian Government of the existence of a powerful "global spying network" code-named Echelon, that could "eavesdrop on every single phone call, fax or e-mail, anywhere on the planet" with Britain and the United States as the chief protagonists. They confirmed that Menwith Hill was "linked directly to the headquarters of the US National Security Agency (NSA) at Fort Meade in Maryland".[63]

NSA's United States Signals Intelligence Directive 18 (USSID 18) strictly prohibited the interception or collection of information about "... U.S. persons, entities, corporations or organizations...." without explicit written legal permission from the United States Attorney General when the subject is located abroad, or the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court when within U.S. borders. Alleged Echelon-related activities, including its use for motives other than national security, including political and industrial espionage, received criticism from countries outside the UKUSA alliance.[64]

 
Protesters against NSA data mining in Berlin wearing Chelsea Manning and Edward Snowden masks

Other SIGINT operations overseas

The NSA was also involved in planning to blackmail people with "SEXINT", intelligence gained about a potential target's sexual activity and preferences. Those targeted had not committed any apparent crime nor were they charged with one.[65]

In order to support its facial recognition program, the NSA is intercepting "millions of images per day".[66]

The Real Time Regional Gateway is a data collection program introduced in 2005 in Iraq by NSA during the Iraq War that consisted of gathering all electronic communication, storing it, then searching and otherwise analyzing it. It was effective in providing information about Iraqi insurgents who had eluded less comprehensive techniques.[67] This "collect it all" strategy introduced by NSA director, Keith B. Alexander, is believed by Glenn Greenwald of The Guardian to be the model for the comprehensive worldwide mass archiving of communications which NSA is engaged in as of 2013.[68]

A dedicated unit of the NSA locates targets for the CIA for extrajudicial assassination in the Middle East.[69] The NSA has also spied extensively on the European Union, the United Nations and numerous governments including allies and trading partners in Europe, South America and Asia.[70][71]

In June 2015, WikiLeaks published documents showing that NSA spied on French companies.[72]

In July 2015, WikiLeaks published documents showing that NSA spied on federal German ministries since the 1990s.[73][74] Even Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel's cellphones and phones of her predecessors had been intercepted.[75]

Boundless Informant

Edward Snowden revealed in June 2013 that between February 8 and March 8, 2013, the NSA collected about 124.8 billion telephone data items and 97.1 billion computer data items throughout the world, as was displayed in charts from an internal NSA tool codenamed Boundless Informant. Initially, it was reported that some of these data reflected eavesdropping on citizens in countries like Germany, Spain and France,[76] but later on, it became clear that those data were collected by European agencies during military missions abroad and were subsequently shared with NSA.

Bypassing encryption

In 2013, reporters uncovered a secret memo that claims the NSA created and pushed for the adoption of the Dual EC DRBG encryption standard that contained built-in vulnerabilities in 2006 to the United States National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), and the International Organization for Standardization (aka ISO).[77][78] This memo appears to give credence to previous speculation by cryptographers at Microsoft Research.[79] Edward Snowden claims that the NSA often bypasses encryption altogether by lifting information before it is encrypted or after it is decrypted.[78]

XKeyscore rules (as specified in a file xkeyscorerules100.txt, sourced by German TV stations NDR and WDR, who claim to have excerpts from its source code) reveal that the NSA tracks users of privacy-enhancing software tools, including Tor; an anonymous email service provided by the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) in Cambridge, Massachusetts; and readers of the Linux Journal.[80][81]

Software backdoors

Linus Torvalds, the founder of Linux kernel, joked during a LinuxCon keynote on September 18, 2013, that the NSA, who are the founder of SELinux, wanted a backdoor in the kernel.[82] However, later, Linus' father, a Member of the European Parliament (MEP), revealed that the NSA actually did this.[83]

When my oldest son was asked the same question: "Has he been approached by the NSA about backdoors?" he said "No", but at the same time he nodded. Then he was sort of in the legal free. He had given the right answer, everybody understood that the NSA had approached him.

— Nils Torvalds, LIBE Committee Inquiry on Electronic Mass Surveillance of EU Citizens – 11th Hearing, 11 November 2013[84]

IBM Notes was the first widely adopted software product to use public key cryptography for client–server and server–server authentication and for encryption of data. Until US laws regulating encryption were changed in 2000, IBM and Lotus were prohibited from exporting versions of Notes that supported symmetric encryption keys that were longer than 40 bits. In 1997, Lotus negotiated an agreement with the NSA that allowed the export of a version that supported stronger keys with 64 bits, but 24 of the bits were encrypted with a special key and included in the message to provide a "workload reduction factor" for the NSA. This strengthened the protection for users of Notes outside the US against private-sector industrial espionage, but not against spying by the US government.[85][86]

Boomerang routing

While it is assumed that foreign transmissions terminating in the U.S. (such as a non-U.S. citizen accessing a U.S. website) subject non-U.S. citizens to NSA surveillance, recent research into boomerang routing has raised new concerns about the NSA's ability to surveil the domestic Internet traffic of foreign countries.[18] Boomerang routing occurs when an Internet transmission that originates and terminates in a single country transits another. Research at the University of Toronto has suggested that approximately 25% of Canadian domestic traffic may be subject to NSA surveillance activities as a result of the boomerang routing of Canadian Internet service providers.[18]

Hardware implanting

 
Intercepted packages are opened carefully by NSA employees
 
A "load station" implanting a beacon

A document included in NSA files released with Glenn Greenwald's book No Place to Hide details how the agency's Tailored Access Operations (TAO) and other NSA units gain access to hardware. They intercept routers, servers and other network hardware being shipped to organizations targeted for surveillance and install covert implant firmware onto them before they are delivered. This was described by an NSA manager as "some of the most productive operations in TAO because they preposition access points into hard target networks around the world."[87]

Computers seized by the NSA due to interdiction are often modified with a physical device known as Cottonmouth.[88] Cottonmouth is a device that can be inserted in the USB port of a computer in order to establish remote access to the targeted machine. According to NSA's Tailored Access Operations (TAO) group implant catalog, after implanting Cottonmouth, the NSA can establish a network bridge "that allows the NSA to load exploit software onto modified computers as well as allowing the NSA to relay commands and data between hardware and software implants."[89]

Domestic collection

NSA's mission, as set forth in Executive Order 12333 in 1981, is to collect information that constitutes "foreign intelligence or counterintelligence" while not "acquiring information concerning the domestic activities of United States persons". NSA has declared that it relies on the FBI to collect information on foreign intelligence activities within the borders of the United States, while confining its own activities within the United States to the embassies and missions of foreign nations.[90]

The appearance of a 'Domestic Surveillance Directorate' of the NSA was soon exposed as a hoax in 2013.[91][92]

NSA's domestic surveillance activities are limited by the requirements imposed by the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court for example held in October 2011, citing multiple Supreme Court precedents, that the Fourth Amendment prohibitions against unreasonable searches and seizures apply to the contents of all communications, whatever the means, because "a person's private communications are akin to personal papers."[93] However, these protections do not apply to non-U.S. persons located outside of U.S. borders, so the NSA's foreign surveillance efforts are subject to far fewer limitations under U.S. law.[94] The specific requirements for domestic surveillance operations are contained in the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 (FISA), which does not extend protection to non-U.S. citizens located outside of U.S. territory.[94]

President's Surveillance Program

George W. Bush, president during the 9/11 terrorist attacks, approved the Patriot Act shortly after the attacks to take anti-terrorist security measures. Title 1, 2, and 9 specifically authorized measures that would be taken by the NSA. These titles granted enhanced domestic security against terrorism, surveillance procedures, and improved intelligence, respectively. On March 10, 2004, there was a debate between President Bush and White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales, Attorney General John Ashcroft, and Acting Attorney General James Comey. The Attorneys General were unsure if the NSA's programs could be considered constitutional. They threatened to resign over the matter, but ultimately the NSA's programs continued.[95] On March 11, 2004, President Bush signed a new authorization for mass surveillance of Internet records, in addition to the surveillance of phone records. This allowed the president to be able to override laws such as the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which protected civilians from mass surveillance. In addition to this, President Bush also signed that the measures of mass surveillance were also retroactively in place.[96][97]

One such surveillance program, authorized by the U.S. Signals Intelligence Directive 18 of President George Bush, was the Highlander Project undertaken for the National Security Agency by the U.S. Army 513th Military Intelligence Brigade. NSA relayed telephone (including cell phone) conversations obtained from ground, airborne, and satellite monitoring stations to various U.S. Army Signal Intelligence Officers, including the 201st Military Intelligence Battalion. Conversations of citizens of the U.S. were intercepted, along with those of other nations.[98]

Proponents of the surveillance program claim that the President has executive authority to order such action[citation needed], arguing that laws such as FISA are overridden by the President's Constitutional powers. In addition, some argued that FISA was implicitly overridden by a subsequent statute, the Authorization for Use of Military Force, although the Supreme Court's ruling in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld deprecates this view.[99]

The PRISM program

 
PRISM: a clandestine surveillance program under which the NSA collects user data from companies like Microsoft and Facebook.

Under the PRISM program, which started in 2007,[100][101] NSA gathers Internet communications from foreign targets from nine major U.S. Internet-based communication service providers: Microsoft,[102] Yahoo, Google, Facebook, PalTalk, AOL, Skype, YouTube and Apple. Data gathered include email, videos, photos, VoIP chats such as Skype, and file transfers.

Former NSA director General Keith Alexander claimed that in September 2009 the NSA prevented Najibullah Zazi and his friends from carrying out a terrorist attack.[103] However, this claim has been debunked and no evidence has been presented demonstrating that the NSA has ever been instrumental in preventing a terrorist attack.[104][105][106][107]

Hacking operations

Besides the more traditional ways of eavesdropping in order to collect signals intelligence, NSA is also engaged in hacking computers, smartphones and their networks. A division which conducts such operations is the Tailored Access Operations (TAO) division, which has been active since at least circa 1998.[108]

According to the Foreign Policy magazine, "... the Office of Tailored Access Operations, or TAO, has successfully penetrated Chinese computer and telecommunications systems for almost 15 years, generating some of the best and most reliable intelligence information about what is going on inside the People's Republic of China."[109][110]

In an interview with Wired magazine, Edward Snowden said the Tailored Access Operations division accidentally caused Syria's internet blackout in 2012.[111]

Organizational structure

 
Paul M. Nakasone, the director of the NSA.

The NSA is led by the Director of the National Security Agency (DIRNSA), who also serves as Chief of the Central Security Service (CHCSS) and Commander of the United States Cyber Command (USCYBERCOM) and is the highest-ranking military official of these organizations. He is assisted by a Deputy Director, who is the highest-ranking civilian within the NSA/CSS.

NSA also has an Inspector General, head of the Office of the Inspector General (OIG), a General Counsel, head of the Office of the General Counsel (OGC) and a Director of Compliance, who is head of the Office of the Director of Compliance (ODOC).[112]

Unlike other intelligence organizations such as the CIA or DIA, NSA has always been particularly reticent concerning its internal organizational structure.

As of the mid-1990s, the National Security Agency was organized into five Directorates:

  • The Operations Directorate, which was responsible for SIGINT collection and processing.
  • The Technology and Systems Directorate, which develops new technologies for SIGINT collection and processing.
  • The Information Systems Security Directorate, which was responsible for NSA's communications and information security missions.
  • The Plans, Policy and Programs Directorate, which provided staff support and general direction for the Agency.
  • The Support Services Directorate, which provided logistical and administrative support activities.[113]

Each of these directorates consisted of several groups or elements, designated by a letter. There were for example the A Group, which was responsible for all SIGINT operations against the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, and G Group, which was responsible for SIGINT related to all non-communist countries. These groups were divided into units designated by an additional number, like unit A5 for breaking Soviet codes, and G6, being the office for the Middle East, North Africa, Cuba, Central and South America.[114][115]

Directorates

As of 2013, NSA has about a dozen directorates, which are designated by a letter, although not all of them are publicly known.[116]

In the year 2000, a leadership team was formed consisting of the director, the deputy director and the directors of the Signals Intelligence (SID), the Information Assurance (IAD) and the Technical Directorate (TD). The chiefs of other main NSA divisions became associate directors of the senior leadership team.[117]

After president George W. Bush initiated the President's Surveillance Program (PSP) in 2001, the NSA created a 24-hour Metadata Analysis Center (MAC), followed in 2004 by the Advanced Analysis Division (AAD), with the mission of analyzing content, Internet metadata and telephone metadata. Both units were part of the Signals Intelligence Directorate.[118]

A 2016 proposal would combine the Signals Intelligence Directorate with Information Assurance Directorate into Directorate of Operations.[119]

NSANet

 
Behind the Green Door – Secure communications room with separate computer terminals for access to SIPRNET, GWAN, NSANET, and JWICS

NSANet stands for National Security Agency Network and is the official NSA intranet.[120] It is a classified network,[121] for information up to the level of TS/SCI[122] to support the use and sharing of intelligence data between NSA and the signals intelligence agencies of the four other nations of the Five Eyes partnership. The management of NSANet has been delegated to the Central Security Service Texas (CSSTEXAS).[123]

NSANet is a highly secured computer network consisting of fiber-optic and satellite communication channels which are almost completely separated from the public Internet. The network allows NSA personnel and civilian and military intelligence analysts anywhere in the world to have access to the agency's systems and databases. This access is tightly controlled and monitored. For example, every keystroke is logged, activities are audited at random and downloading and printing of documents from NSANet are recorded.[124]

In 1998, NSANet, along with NIPRNET and SIPRNET, had "significant problems with poor search capabilities, unorganized data and old information".[125] In 2004, the network was reported to have used over twenty commercial off-the-shelf operating systems.[126] Some universities that do highly sensitive research are allowed to connect to it.[127]

The thousands of Top Secret internal NSA documents that were taken by Edward Snowden in 2013 were stored in "a file-sharing location on the NSA's intranet site"; so, they could easily be read online by NSA personnel. Everyone with a TS/SCI-clearance had access to these documents. As a system administrator, Snowden was responsible for moving accidentally misplaced highly sensitive documents to safer storage locations.[128]

Watch centers

The NSA maintains at least two watch centers:

  • National Security Operations Center (NSOC), which is the NSA's current operations center and focal point for time-sensitive SIGINT reporting for the United States SIGINT System (USSS). This center was established in 1968 as the National SIGINT Watch Center (NSWC) and renamed into National SIGINT Operations Center (NSOC) in 1973. This "nerve center of the NSA" got its current name in 1996.[citation needed]
  • NSA/CSS Threat Operations Center (NTOC), which is the primary NSA/CSS partner for Department of Homeland Security response to cyber incidents. The NTOC establishes real-time network awareness and threat characterization capabilities to forecast, alert, and attribute malicious activity and enable the coordination of Computer Network Operations. The NTOC was established in 2004 as a joint Information Assurance and Signals Intelligence project.[129]

NSA Police

The NSA has its own police force, known as NSA Police (and formerly as NSA Security Protective Force) which provides law enforcement services, emergency response and physical security to the NSA's people and property.[130]

NSA Police are armed federal officers. NSA Police have use of a K9 division, which generally conducts explosive detection screening of mail, vehicles and cargo entering NSA grounds.[131]

NSA Police use marked vehicles to carry out patrols.[132]

Employees

The number of NSA employees is officially classified[4] but there are several sources providing estimates. In 1961, NSA had 59,000 military and civilian employees, which grew to 93,067 in 1969, of which 19,300 worked at the headquarters at Fort Meade. In the early 1980s, NSA had roughly 50,000 military and civilian personnel. By 1989 this number had grown again to 75,000, of which 25,000 worked at the NSA headquarters. Between 1990 and 1995 the NSA's budget and workforce were cut by one third, which led to a substantial loss of experience.[133]

In 2012, the NSA said more than 30,000 employees worked at Fort Meade and other facilities.[2] In 2012, John C. Inglis, the deputy director, said that the total number of NSA employees is "somewhere between 37,000 and one billion" as a joke,[4] and stated that the agency is "probably the biggest employer of introverts."[4] In 2013 Der Spiegel stated that the NSA had 40,000 employees.[5] More widely, it has been described as the world's largest single employer of mathematicians.[134] Some NSA employees form part of the workforce of the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), the agency that provides the NSA with satellite signals intelligence.

As of 2013 about 1,000 system administrators work for the NSA.[135]

Personnel security

The NSA received criticism early on in 1960 after two agents had defected to the Soviet Union. Investigations by the House Un-American Activities Committee and a special subcommittee of the United States House Committee on Armed Services revealed severe cases of ignorance in personnel security regulations, prompting the former personnel director and the director of security to step down and leading to the adoption of stricter security practices.[136] Nonetheless, security breaches reoccurred only a year later when in an issue of Izvestia of July 23, 1963, a former NSA employee published several cryptologic secrets.

The very same day, an NSA clerk-messenger committed suicide as ongoing investigations disclosed that he had sold secret information to the Soviets on a regular basis. The reluctance of Congressional houses to look into these affairs had prompted a journalist to write, "If a similar series of tragic blunders occurred in any ordinary agency of Government an aroused public would insist that those responsible be officially censured, demoted, or fired." David Kahn criticized the NSA's tactics of concealing its doings as smug and the Congress' blind faith in the agency's right-doing as shortsighted, and pointed out the necessity of surveillance by the Congress to prevent abuse of power.[136]

Edward Snowden's leaking of the existence of PRISM in 2013 caused the NSA to institute a "two-man rule", where two system administrators are required to be present when one accesses certain sensitive information.[135] Snowden claims he suggested such a rule in 2009.[137]

Polygraphing

 
Defense Security Service (DSS) polygraph brochure given to NSA applicants

The NSA conducts polygraph tests of employees. For new employees, the tests are meant to discover enemy spies who are applying to the NSA and to uncover any information that could make an applicant pliant to coercion.[138] As part of the latter, historically EPQs or "embarrassing personal questions" about sexual behavior had been included in the NSA polygraph.[138] The NSA also conducts five-year periodic reinvestigation polygraphs of employees, focusing on counterintelligence programs. In addition the NSA conducts periodic polygraph investigations in order to find spies and leakers; those who refuse to take them may receive "termination of employment", according to a 1982 memorandum from the director of the NSA.[139]

NSA-produced video on the polygraph process

There are also "special access examination" polygraphs for employees who wish to work in highly sensitive areas, and those polygraphs cover counterintelligence questions and some questions about behavior.[139] NSA's brochure states that the average test length is between two and four hours.[140] A 1983 report of the Office of Technology Assessment stated that "It appears that the NSA [National Security Agency] (and possibly CIA) use the polygraph not to determine deception or truthfulness per se, but as a technique of interrogation to encourage admissions."[141] Sometimes applicants in the polygraph process confess to committing felonies such as murder, rape, and selling of illegal drugs. Between 1974 and 1979, of the 20,511 job applicants who took polygraph tests, 695 (3.4%) confessed to previous felony crimes; almost all of those crimes had been undetected.[138]

In 2010 the NSA produced a video explaining its polygraph process.[142] The video, ten minutes long, is titled "The Truth About the Polygraph" and was posted to the Web site of the Defense Security Service. Jeff Stein of The Washington Post said that the video portrays "various applicants, or actors playing them—it's not clear—describing everything bad they had heard about the test, the implication being that none of it is true."[143] AntiPolygraph.org argues that the NSA-produced video omits some information about the polygraph process; it produced a video responding to the NSA video.[142][144] George Maschke, the founder of the Web site, accused the NSA polygraph video of being "Orwellian".[143]

A 2013 article indicated that after Edward Snowden revealed his identity in 2013, the NSA began requiring polygraphing of employees once per quarter.[145]

Arbitrary firing

The number of exemptions from legal requirements has been criticized. When in 1964 Congress was hearing a bill giving the director of the NSA the power to fire at will any employee, The Washington Post wrote: "This is the very definition of arbitrariness. It means that an employee could be discharged and disgraced on the basis of anonymous allegations without the slightest opportunity to defend himself." Yet, the bill was accepted by an overwhelming majority.[136] Also, every person hired to a job in the US after 2007, at any private organization, state or federal government agency, must be reported to the New Hire Registry, ostensibly to look for child support evaders, except that employees of an intelligence agency may be excluded from reporting if the director deems it necessary for national security reasons.[146]

Facilities

Headquarters

History of headquarters

 
Headquarters at Fort Meade circa 1950s

When the agency was first established, its headquarters and cryptographic center were in the Naval Security Station in Washington, D.C. The COMINT functions were located in Arlington Hall in Northern Virginia, which served as the headquarters of the U.S. Army's cryptographic operations.[147] Because the Soviet Union had detonated a nuclear bomb and because the facilities were crowded, the federal government wanted to move several agencies, including the AFSA/NSA. A planning committee considered Fort Knox, but Fort Meade, Maryland, was ultimately chosen as NSA headquarters because it was far enough away from Washington, D.C. in case of a nuclear strike and was close enough so its employees would not have to move their families.[148]

Construction of additional buildings began after the agency occupied buildings at Fort Meade in the late 1950s, which they soon outgrew.[148] In 1963 the new headquarters building, nine stories tall, opened. NSA workers referred to the building as the "Headquarters Building" and since the NSA management occupied the top floor, workers used "Ninth Floor" to refer to their leaders.[149] COMSEC remained in Washington, D.C., until its new building was completed in 1968.[148] In September 1986, the Operations 2A and 2B buildings, both copper-shielded to prevent eavesdropping, opened with a dedication by President Ronald Reagan.[150] The four NSA buildings became known as the "Big Four."[150] The NSA director moved to 2B when it opened.[150]

 
National Security Agency headquarters in Fort Meade, 2013

Headquarters for the National Security Agency is located at 39°6′32″N 76°46′17″W / 39.10889°N 76.77139°W / 39.10889; -76.77139 in Fort George G. Meade, Maryland, although it is separate from other compounds and agencies that are based within this same military installation. Fort Meade is about 20 mi (32 km) southwest of Baltimore,[151] and 25 mi (40 km) northeast of Washington, D.C.[152] The NSA has two dedicated exits off Baltimore–Washington Parkway. The Eastbound exit from the Parkway (heading toward Baltimore) is open to the public and provides employee access to its main campus and public access to the National Cryptology Museum. The Westbound side exit, (heading toward Washington) is labeled "NSA Employees Only".[153][154] The exit may only be used by people with the proper clearances, and security vehicles parked along the road guard the entrance.[155]

NSA is the largest employer in the state of Maryland, and two-thirds of its personnel work at Fort Meade.[156] Built on 350 acres (140 ha; 0.55 sq mi)[157] of Fort Meade's 5,000 acres (2,000 ha; 7.8 sq mi),[158] the site has 1,300 buildings and an estimated 18,000 parking spaces.[152][159]

 
 
NSA headquarters building in Fort Meade (left), NSOC (right)

The main NSA headquarters and operations building is what James Bamford, author of Body of Secrets, describes as "a modern boxy structure" that appears similar to "any stylish office building."[160] The building is covered with one-way dark glass, which is lined with copper shielding in order to prevent espionage by trapping in signals and sounds.[160] It contains 3,000,000 square feet (280,000 m2), or more than 68 acres (28 ha), of floor space; Bamford said that the U.S. Capitol "could easily fit inside it four times over."[160]

The facility has over 100 watchposts,[161] one of them being the visitor control center, a two-story area that serves as the entrance.[160] At the entrance, a white pentagonal structure,[162] visitor badges are issued to visitors and security clearances of employees are checked.[163] The visitor center includes a painting of the NSA seal.[162]

The OPS2A building, the tallest building in the NSA complex and the location of much of the agency's operations directorate, is accessible from the visitor center. Bamford described it as a "dark glass Rubik's Cube".[164] The facility's "red corridor" houses non-security operations such as concessions and the drug store. The name refers to the "red badge" which is worn by someone without a security clearance. The NSA headquarters includes a cafeteria, a credit union, ticket counters for airlines and entertainment, a barbershop, and a bank.[162] NSA headquarters has its own post office, fire department, and police force.[165][166][167]

The employees at the NSA headquarters reside in various places in the Baltimore-Washington area, including Annapolis, Baltimore, and Columbia in Maryland and the District of Columbia, including the Georgetown community.[168] The NSA maintains a shuttle service from the Odenton station of MARC to its Visitor Control Center and has done so since 2005.[169]

Power consumption

 
Due to massive amounts of data processing, NSA is the largest electricity consumer in Maryland.[156]

Following a major power outage in 2000, in 2003, and in follow-ups through 2007, The Baltimore Sun reported that the NSA was at risk of electrical overload because of insufficient internal electrical infrastructure at Fort Meade to support the amount of equipment being installed. This problem was apparently recognized in the 1990s but not made a priority, and "now the agency's ability to keep its operations going is threatened."[170]

On August 6, 2006, The Baltimore Sun reported that the NSA had completely maxed out the grid, and that Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE, now Constellation Energy) was unable to sell them any more power.[171] NSA decided to move some of its operations to a new satellite facility.

BGE provided NSA with 65 to 75 megawatts at Fort Meade in 2007, and expected that an increase of 10 to 15 megawatts would be needed later that year.[172] In 2011, the NSA was Maryland's largest consumer of power.[156] In 2007, as BGE's largest customer, NSA bought as much electricity as Annapolis, the capital city of Maryland.[170]

One estimate put the potential for power consumption by the new Utah Data Center at US$40 million per year.[173]

Computing assets

In 1995, The Baltimore Sun reported that the NSA is the owner of the single largest group of supercomputers.[174]

NSA held a groundbreaking ceremony at Fort Meade in May 2013 for its High Performance Computing Center 2, expected to open in 2016.[175] Called Site M, the center has a 150 megawatt power substation, 14 administrative buildings and 10 parking garages.[165] It cost $3.2 billion and covers 227 acres (92 ha; 0.355 sq mi).[165] The center is 1,800,000 square feet (17 ha; 0.065 sq mi)[165] and initially uses 60 megawatts of electricity.[176]

Increments II and III are expected to be completed by 2030, and would quadruple the space, covering 5,800,000 square feet (54 ha; 0.21 sq mi) with 60 buildings and 40 parking garages.[165] Defense contractors are also establishing or expanding cybersecurity facilities near the NSA and around the Washington metropolitan area.[165]

National Computer Security Center

The DoD Computer Security Center was founded in 1981 and renamed the National Computer Security Center (NCSC) in 1985. NCSC was responsible for computer security throughout the federal government.[177] NCSC was part of NSA,[178] and during the late 1980s and the 1990s, NSA and NCSC published Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria in a six-foot high Rainbow Series of books that detailed trusted computing and network platform specifications.[179] The Rainbow books were replaced by the Common Criteria, however, in the early 2000s.[179]

Other U.S. facilities

As of 2012, NSA collected intelligence from four geostationary satellites.[173] Satellite receivers were at Roaring Creek Station in Catawissa, Pennsylvania and Salt Creek Station in Arbuckle, California.[173] It operated ten to twenty taps on U.S. telecom switches. NSA had installations in several U.S. states and from them observed intercepts from Europe, the Middle East, North Africa, Latin America, and Asia.[173]

NSA had facilities at Friendship Annex (FANX) in Linthicum, Maryland, which is a 20 to 25-minute drive from Fort Meade;[180] the Aerospace Data Facility at Buckley Space Force Base in Aurora, Colorado; NSA Texas in the Texas Cryptology Center at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas; NSA Georgia, Georgia Cryptologic Center, Fort Gordon, Augusta, Georgia; NSA Hawaii, Hawaii Cryptologic Center in Honolulu; the Multiprogram Research Facility in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, and elsewhere.[168][173]

On January 6, 2011, a groundbreaking ceremony was held to begin construction on NSA's first Comprehensive National Cyber-security Initiative (CNCI) Data Center, known as the "Utah Data Center" for short. The $1.5B data center is being built at Camp Williams, Utah, located 25 miles (40 km) south of Salt Lake City, and will help support the agency's National Cyber-security Initiative.[181] It is expected to be operational by September 2013.[173] Construction of Utah Data Center finished in May 2019.[182]

In 2009, to protect its assets and access more electricity, NSA sought to decentralize and expand its existing facilities in Fort Meade and Menwith Hill,[183] the latter expansion expected to be completed by 2015.[184]

The Yakima Herald-Republic cited Bamford, saying that many of NSA's bases for its Echelon program were a legacy system, using outdated, 1990s technology.[58] In 2004, NSA closed its operations at Bad Aibling Station (Field Station 81) in Bad Aibling, Germany.[185] In 2012, NSA began to move some of its operations at Yakima Research Station, Yakima Training Center, in Washington state to Colorado, planning to leave Yakima closed.[186] As of 2013, NSA also intended to close operations at Sugar Grove, West Virginia.[58]

International stations

 
RAF Menwith Hill has the largest NSA presence in the United Kingdom.[184]

Following the signing in 1946–1956[187] of the UKUSA Agreement between the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, who then cooperated on signals intelligence and ECHELON,[188] NSA stations were built at GCHQ Bude in Morwenstow, United Kingdom; Geraldton, Pine Gap and Shoal Bay, Australia; Leitrim and Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; Misawa, Japan; and Waihopai and Tangimoana,[189] New Zealand.[190]

NSA operates RAF Menwith Hill in North Yorkshire, United Kingdom, which was, according to BBC News in 2007, the largest electronic monitoring station in the world.[191] Planned in 1954, and opened in 1960, the base covered 562 acres (227 ha; 0.878 sq mi) in 1999.[192]

The agency's European Cryptologic Center (ECC), with 240 employees in 2011, is headquartered at a US military compound in Griesheim, near Frankfurt in Germany. A 2011 NSA report indicates that the ECC is responsible for the "largest analysis and productivity in Europe" and focuses on various priorities, including Africa, Europe, the Middle East and counterterrorism operations.[193]

In 2013, a new Consolidated Intelligence Center, also to be used by NSA, is being built at the headquarters of the United States Army Europe in Wiesbaden, Germany.[194] NSA's partnership with Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND), the German foreign intelligence service, was confirmed by BND president Gerhard Schindler.[194]

Thailand

Thailand is a "3rd party partner" of the NSA along with nine other nations.[195] These are non-English-speaking countries that have made security agreements for the exchange of SIGINT raw material and end product reports.

Thailand is the site of at least two US SIGINT collection stations. One is at the US Embassy in Bangkok, a joint NSA-CIA Special Collection Service (SCS) unit. It presumably eavesdrops on foreign embassies, governmental communications, and other targets of opportunity.[196]

The second installation is a FORNSAT (foreign satellite interception) station in the Thai city of Khon Kaen. It is codenamed INDRA, but has also been referred to as LEMONWOOD.[196] The station is approximately 40 hectares (99 acres) in size and consists of a large 3,700–4,600 m2 (40,000–50,000 ft2) operations building on the west side of the ops compound and four radome-enclosed parabolic antennas. Possibly two of the radome-enclosed antennas are used for SATCOM intercept and two antennas used for relaying the intercepted material back to NSA. There is also a PUSHER-type circularly-disposed antenna array (CDAA) just north of the ops compound.[197][198]

NSA activated Khon Kaen in October 1979. Its mission was to eavesdrop on the radio traffic of Chinese army and air force units in southern China, especially in and around the city of Kunming in Yunnan Province. In the late 1970s, the base consisted only of a small CDAA antenna array that was remote-controlled via satellite from the NSA listening post at Kunia, Hawaii, and a small force of civilian contractors from Bendix Field Engineering Corp. whose job it was to keep the antenna array and satellite relay facilities up and running 24/7.[197]

According to the papers of the late General William Odom, the INDRA facility was upgraded in 1986 with a new British-made PUSHER CDAA antenna as part of an overall upgrade of NSA and Thai SIGINT facilities whose objective was to spy on the neighboring communist nations of Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia.[197]

The base apparently fell into disrepair in the 1990s as China and Vietnam became more friendly towards the US, and by 2002 archived satellite imagery showed that the PUSHER CDAA antenna had been torn down, perhaps indicating that the base had been closed. At some point in the period since 9/11, the Khon Kaen base was reactivated and expanded to include a sizeable SATCOM intercept mission. It is likely that the NSA presence at Khon Kaen is relatively small, and that most of the work is done by civilian contractors.[197]

Research and development

NSA has been involved in debates about public policy, both indirectly as a behind-the-scenes adviser to other departments, and directly during and after Vice Admiral Bobby Ray Inman's directorship. NSA was a major player in the debates of the 1990s regarding the export of cryptography in the United States. Restrictions on export were reduced but not eliminated in 1996.

Its secure government communications work has involved the NSA in numerous technology areas, including the design of specialized communications hardware and software, production of dedicated semiconductors (at the Ft. Meade chip fabrication plant), and advanced cryptography research. For 50 years, NSA designed and built most of its computer equipment in-house, but from the 1990s until about 2003 (when the U.S. Congress curtailed the practice), the agency contracted with the private sector in the fields of research and equipment.[199]

Data Encryption Standard

 
FROSTBURG was the NSA's first supercomputer, used from 1991 to 1997

NSA was embroiled in some controversy concerning its involvement in the creation of the Data Encryption Standard (DES), a standard and public block cipher algorithm used by the U.S. government and banking community.[200] During the development of DES by IBM in the 1970s, NSA recommended changes to some details of the design. There was suspicion that these changes had weakened the algorithm sufficiently to enable the agency to eavesdrop if required, including speculation that a critical component—the so-called S-boxes—had been altered to insert a "backdoor" and that the reduction in key length might have made it feasible for NSA to discover DES keys using massive computing power. It has since been observed that the S-boxes in DES are particularly resilient against differential cryptanalysis, a technique which was not publicly discovered until the late 1980s but known to the IBM DES team.

Advanced Encryption Standard

The involvement of NSA in selecting a successor to Data Encryption Standard (DES), the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES), was limited to hardware performance testing (see AES competition).[201] NSA has subsequently certified AES for protection of classified information when used in NSA-approved systems.[202]

NSA encryption systems

 
STU-III secure telephones on display at the National Cryptologic Museum

The NSA is responsible for the encryption-related components in these legacy systems:

The NSA oversees encryption in the following systems that are in use today:

The NSA has specified Suite A and Suite B cryptographic algorithm suites to be used in U.S. government systems; the Suite B algorithms are a subset of those previously specified by NIST and are expected to serve for most information protection purposes, while the Suite A algorithms are secret and are intended for especially high levels of protection.[202]

SHA

The widely used SHA-1 and SHA-2 hash functions were designed by NSA. SHA-1 is a slight modification of the weaker SHA-0 algorithm, also designed by NSA in 1993. This small modification was suggested by NSA two years later, with no justification other than the fact that it provides additional security. An attack for SHA-0 that does not apply to the revised algorithm was indeed found between 1998 and 2005 by academic cryptographers. Because of weaknesses and key length restrictions in SHA-1, NIST deprecates its use for digital signatures, and approves only the newer SHA-2 algorithms for such applications from 2013 on.[212]

A new hash standard, SHA-3, has recently been selected through the competition concluded October 2, 2012 with the selection of Keccak as the algorithm. The process to select SHA-3 was similar to the one held in choosing the AES, but some doubts have been cast over it,[213][214] since fundamental modifications have been made to Keccak in order to turn it into a standard.[215] These changes potentially undermine the cryptanalysis performed during the competition and reduce the security levels of the algorithm.[213]

Clipper chip

Because of concerns that widespread use of strong cryptography would hamper government use of wiretaps, NSA proposed the concept of key escrow in 1993 and introduced the Clipper chip that would offer stronger protection than DES but would allow access to encrypted data by authorized law enforcement officials.[216] The proposal was strongly opposed and key escrow requirements ultimately went nowhere.[217] However, NSA's Fortezza hardware-based encryption cards, created for the Clipper project, are still used within government, and NSA ultimately declassified and published the design of the Skipjack cipher used on the cards.[218][219]

Dual EC DRBG random number generator cryptotrojan

NSA promoted the inclusion of a random number generator called Dual EC DRBG in the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology's 2007 guidelines. This led to speculation of a backdoor which would allow NSA access to data encrypted by systems using that pseudorandom number generator (PRNG).[220]

This is now deemed to be plausible based on the fact that output of next iterations of PRNG can provably be determined if relation between two internal Elliptic Curve points is known.[221][222] Both NIST and RSA are now officially recommending against the use of this PRNG.[223][224]

Perfect Citizen

Perfect Citizen is a program to perform vulnerability assessment by the NSA on U.S. critical infrastructure.[225][226] It was originally reported to be a program to develop a system of sensors to detect cyber attacks on critical infrastructure computer networks in both the private and public sector through a network monitoring system named Einstein.[227][228] It is funded by the Comprehensive National Cybersecurity Initiative and thus far Raytheon has received a contract for up to $100 million for the initial stage.

Academic research

NSA has invested many millions of dollars in academic research under grant code prefix MDA904, resulting in over 3,000 papers as of October 11, 2007. NSA/CSS has, at times, attempted to restrict the publication of academic research into cryptography; for example, the Khufu and Khafre block ciphers were voluntarily withheld in response to an NSA request to do so. In response to a FOIA lawsuit, in 2013 the NSA released the 643-page research paper titled, "Untangling the Web: A Guide to Internet Research,"[229] written and compiled by NSA employees to assist other NSA workers in searching for information of interest to the agency on the public Internet.[230]

Patents

NSA has the ability to file for a patent from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office under gag order. Unlike normal patents, these are not revealed to the public and do not expire. However, if the Patent Office receives an application for an identical patent from a third party, they will reveal NSA's patent and officially grant it to NSA for the full term on that date.[231]

One of NSA's published patents describes a method of geographically locating an individual computer site in an Internet-like network, based on the latency of multiple network connections.[232] Although no public patent exists, NSA is reported to have used a similar locating technology called trilateralization that allows real-time tracking of an individual's location, including altitude from ground level, using data obtained from cellphone towers.[233]

Insignia and memorials

 

The heraldic insignia of NSA consists of an eagle inside a circle, grasping a key in its talons.[234] The eagle represents the agency's national mission.[234] Its breast features a shield with bands of red and white, taken from the Great Seal of the United States and representing Congress.[234] The key is taken from the emblem of Saint Peter and represents security.[234]

When the NSA was created, the agency had no emblem and used that of the Department of Defense.[235] The agency adopted its first of two emblems in 1963.[235] The current NSA insignia has been in use since 1965, when then-Director, LTG Marshall S. Carter (USA) ordered the creation of a device to represent the agency.[236]

The NSA's flag consists of the agency's seal on a light blue background.

 
National Cryptologic Memorial

Crews associated with NSA missions have been involved in a number of dangerous and deadly situations.[237] The USS Liberty incident in 1967 and USS Pueblo incident in 1968 are examples of the losses endured during the Cold War.[237]

The National Security Agency/Central Security Service Cryptologic Memorial honors and remembers the fallen personnel, both military and civilian, of these intelligence missions.[238] It is made of black granite, and has 171 names carved into it, as of 2013.[238] It is located at NSA headquarters. A tradition of declassifying the stories of the fallen was begun in 2001.[238]

Constitutionality, legality and privacy questions regarding operations

In the United States, at least since 2001,[239] there has been legal controversy over what signal intelligence can be used for and how much freedom the National Security Agency has to use signal intelligence.[240] In 2015, the government made slight changes in how it uses and collects certain types of data,[241] specifically phone records. The government was not analyzing the phone records as of early 2019.[242] The surveillance programs were deemed unlawful in September 2020 in a court of appeals case.[52]

Warrantless wiretaps

On December 16, 2005, The New York Times reported that, under White House pressure and with an executive order from President George W. Bush, the National Security Agency, in an attempt to thwart terrorism, had been tapping phone calls made to persons outside the country, without obtaining warrants from the United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, a secret court created for that purpose under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA).[97]

Edward Snowden

Edward Snowden is a former American intelligence contractor who revealed in 2013 the existence of secret wide-ranging information-gathering programs conducted by the National Security Agency (NSA).[243] More specifically, Snowden released information that demonstrated how the United States government was gathering immense amounts of personal communications, emails, phone locations, web histories and more of American citizens without their knowledge.[244] One of Snowden's primary motivators for releasing this information was fear of a surveillance state developing as a result of the infrastructure being created by the NSA. As Snowden recounts, "I believe that, at this point in history, the greatest danger to our freedom and way of life comes from the reasonable fear of omniscient State powers kept in check by nothing more than policy documents... It is not that I do not value intelligence, but that I oppose . . . omniscient, automatic, mass surveillance. . . . That seems to me a greater threat to the institutions of free society than missed intelligence reports, and unworthy of the costs."[245]

In March 2014, Army General Martin Dempsey, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told the House Armed Services Committee, "The vast majority of the documents that Snowden ... exfiltrated from our highest levels of security ... had nothing to do with exposing government oversight of domestic activities. The vast majority of those were related to our military capabilities, operations, tactics, techniques, and procedures."[246] When asked in a May 2014 interview to quantify the number of documents Snowden stole, retired NSA director Keith Alexander said there was no accurate way of counting what he took, but Snowden may have downloaded more than a million documents.[247]

Other surveillance

On January 17, 2006, the Center for Constitutional Rights filed a lawsuit, CCR v. Bush, against the George W. Bush Presidency. The lawsuit challenged the National Security Agency's (NSA's) surveillance of people within the U.S., including the interception of CCR emails without securing a warrant first.[248][249]

In the August 2006 case ACLU v. NSA, U.S. District Court Judge Anna Diggs Taylor concluded that NSA's warrantless surveillance program was both illegal and unconstitutional. On July 6, 2007, the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the decision on the grounds that the ACLU lacked standing to bring the suit.[250]

In September 2008, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) filed a class action lawsuit against the NSA and several high-ranking officials of the Bush administration,[251] charging an "illegal and unconstitutional program of dragnet communications surveillance,"[252] based on documentation provided by former AT&T technician Mark Klein.[253]

As a result of the USA Freedom Act passed by Congress in June 2015, the NSA had to shut down its bulk phone surveillance program on November 29 of the same year. The USA Freedom Act forbids the NSA to collect metadata and content of phone calls unless it has a warrant for terrorism investigation. In that case, the agency must ask the telecom companies for the record, which will only be kept for six months. The NSA's use of large telecom companies to assist it with its surveillance efforts has caused several privacy concerns.[254]: 1568–69 

AT&T Internet monitoring

In May 2008, Mark Klein, a former AT&T employee, alleged that his company had cooperated with NSA in installing Narus hardware to replace the FBI Carnivore program, to monitor network communications including traffic between U.S. citizens.[255]

Data mining

NSA was reported in 2008 to use its computing capability to analyze "transactional" data that it regularly acquires from other government agencies, which gather it under their own jurisdictional authorities. As part of this effort, NSA now monitors huge volumes of records of domestic email data, web addresses from Internet searches, bank transfers, credit-card transactions, travel records, and telephone data, according to current and former intelligence officials interviewed by The Wall Street Journal. The sender, recipient, and subject line of emails can be included, but the content of the messages or of phone calls are not.[256]

A 2013 advisory group for the Obama administration, seeking to reform NSA spying programs following the revelations of documents released by Edward J. Snowden,[257] mentioned in 'Recommendation 30' on page 37, "...that the National Security Council staff should manage an interagency process to review on a regular basis the activities of the US Government regarding attacks that exploit a previously unknown vulnerability in a computer application." Retired cybersecurity expert Richard A. Clarke was a group member and stated on April 11, 2014, that NSA had no advance knowledge of Heartbleed.[258]

Illegally obtained evidence

In August 2013 it was revealed that a 2005 IRS training document showed that NSA intelligence intercepts and wiretaps, both foreign and domestic, were being supplied to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and were illegally used to launch criminal investigations of US citizens. Law enforcement agents were directed to conceal how the investigations began and recreate an apparently legal investigative trail by re-obtaining the same evidence by other means.[259][260]

Barack Obama administration

In the months leading to April 2009, the NSA intercepted the communications of U.S. citizens, including a Congressman, although the Justice Department believed that the interception was unintentional. The Justice Department then took action to correct the issues and bring the program into compliance with existing laws.[261] United States Attorney General Eric Holder resumed the program according to his understanding of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act amendment of 2008, without explaining what had occurred.[262]

Polls conducted in June 2013 found divided results among Americans regarding NSA's secret data collection.[263] Rasmussen Reports found that 59% of Americans disapprove,[264] Gallup found that 53% disapprove,[265] and Pew found that 56% are in favor of NSA data collection.[266]

Section 215 metadata collection

On April 25, 2013, the NSA obtained a court order requiring Verizon's Business Network Services to provide metadata on all calls in its system to the NSA "on an ongoing daily basis" for a three-month period, as reported by The Guardian on June 6, 2013. This information includes "the numbers of both parties on a call ... location data, call duration, unique identifiers, and the time and duration of all calls" but not "[t]he contents of the conversation itself". The order relies on the so-called "business records" provision of the Patriot Act.[267][268]

In August 2013, following the Snowden leaks, new details about the NSA's data mining activity were revealed. Reportedly, the majority of emails into or out of the United States are captured at "selected communications links" and automatically analyzed for keywords or other "selectors". Emails that do not match are deleted.[269]

The utility of such a massive metadata collection in preventing terrorist attacks is disputed. Many studies reveal the dragnet like system to be ineffective. One such report, released by the New America Foundation concluded that after an analysis of 225 terrorism cases, the NSA "had no discernible impact on preventing acts of terrorism."[270]

Defenders of the program said that while metadata alone cannot provide all the information necessary to prevent an attack, it assures the ability to "connect the dots"[271] between suspect foreign numbers and domestic numbers with a speed only the NSA's software is capable of. One benefit of this is quickly being able to determine the difference between suspicious activity and real threats.[272] As an example, NSA director General Keith B. Alexander mentioned at the annual Cybersecurity Summit in 2013, that metadata analysis of domestic phone call records after the Boston Marathon bombing helped determine that rumors of a follow-up attack in New York were baseless.[271]

In addition to doubts about its effectiveness, many people argue that the collection of metadata is an unconstitutional invasion of privacy. As of 2015, the collection process remained legal and grounded in the ruling from Smith v. Maryland (1979). A prominent opponent of the data collection and its legality is U.S. District Judge Richard J. Leon, who issued a report in 2013[273] in which he stated: "I cannot imagine a more 'indiscriminate' and 'arbitrary invasion' than this systematic and high tech collection and retention of personal data on virtually every single citizen for purposes of querying and analyzing it without prior judicial approval...Surely, such a program infringes on 'that degree of privacy' that the founders enshrined in the Fourth Amendment".

As of May 7, 2015, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled that the interpretation of Section 215 of the Patriot Act was wrong and that the NSA program that has been collecting Americans' phone records in bulk is illegal.[274] It stated that Section 215 cannot be clearly interpreted to allow government to collect national phone data and, as a result, expired on June 1, 2015. This ruling "is the first time a higher-level court in the regular judicial system has reviewed the NSA phone records program."[275] The replacement law known as the USA Freedom Act, which will enable the NSA to continue to have bulk access to citizens' metadata but with the stipulation that the data will now be stored by the companies themselves.[275] This change will not have any effect on other Agency procedures – outside of metadata collection – which have purportedly challenged Americans' Fourth Amendment rights,[276] including Upstream collection, a mass of techniques used by the Agency to collect and store American's data/communications directly from the Internet backbone.[277]

Under the Upstream collection program, the NSA paid telecommunications companies hundreds of millions of dollars in order to collect data from them.[278] While companies such as Google and Yahoo! claim that they do not provide "direct access" from their servers to the NSA unless under a court order,[279] the NSA had access to emails, phone calls, and cellular data users.[280] Under this new ruling, telecommunications companies maintain bulk user metadata on their servers for at least 18 months, to be provided upon request to the NSA.[275] This ruling made the mass storage of specific phone records at NSA datacenters illegal, but it did not rule on Section 215's constitutionality.[275]

Fourth Amendment encroachment

In a declassified document it was revealed that 17,835 phone lines were on an improperly permitted "alert list" from 2006 to 2009 in breach of compliance, which tagged these phone lines for daily monitoring.[281][282][283] Eleven percent of these monitored phone lines met the agency's legal standard for "reasonably articulable suspicion" (RAS).[281][284]

The NSA tracks the locations of hundreds of millions of cellphones per day, allowing it to map people's movements and relationships in detail.[285] The NSA has been reported to have access to all communications made via Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Yahoo, YouTube, AOL, Skype, Apple and Paltalk,[286] and collects hundreds of millions of contact lists from personal email and instant messaging accounts each year.[287] It has also managed to weaken much of the encryption used on the Internet (by collaborating with, coercing or otherwise infiltrating numerous technology companies to leave "backdoors" into their systems), so that the majority of encryption is inadvertently vulnerable to different forms of attack.[288][289]

Domestically, the NSA has been proven to collect and store metadata records of phone calls,[290] including over 120 million US Verizon subscribers,[291] as well as intercept vast amounts of communications via the internet (Upstream).[286] The government's legal standing had been to rely on a secret interpretation of the Patriot Act whereby the entirety of US communications may be considered "relevant" to a terrorism investigation if it is expected that even a tiny minority may relate to terrorism.[292] The NSA also supplies foreign intercepts to the DEA, IRS and other law enforcement agencies, who use these to initiate criminal investigations. Federal agents are then instructed to "recreate" the investigative trail via parallel construction.[293]

The NSA also spies on influential Muslims to obtain information that could be used to discredit them, such as their use of pornography. The targets, both domestic and abroad, are not suspected of any crime but hold religious or political views deemed "radical" by the NSA.[294]

According to a report in The Washington Post in July 2014, relying on information provided by Snowden, 90% of those placed under surveillance in the U.S. are ordinary Americans and are not the intended targets. The newspaper said it had examined documents including emails, text messages, and online accounts that support the claim.[295]

Congressional oversight

Excerpt of James Clapper's testimony before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence

The Intelligence Committees of US House and Senate exercise primary oversight over the NSA; other members of congress have been denied access to materials and information regarding the agency and its activities.[296] The United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, the secret court charged with regulating the NSA's activities is, according to its chief judge, incapable of investigating or verifying how often the NSA breaks even its own secret rules.[297] It has since been reported that the NSA violated its own rules on data access thousands of times a year, many of these violations involving large-scale data interceptions.[298] NSA officers have even used data intercepts to spy on love interests;[299] "most of the NSA violations were self-reported, and each instance resulted in administrative action of termination."[300][attribution needed]

The NSA has "generally disregarded the special rules for disseminating United States person information" by illegally sharing its intercepts with other law enforcement agencies.[301] A March 2009 FISA Court opinion, which the court released, states that protocols restricting data queries had been "so frequently and systemically violated that it can be fairly said that this critical element of the overall ... regime has never functioned effectively."[302][303] In 2011 the same court noted that the "volume and nature" of the NSA's bulk foreign Internet intercepts was "fundamentally different from what the court had been led to believe".[301] Email contact lists (including those of US citizens) are collected at numerous foreign locations to work around the illegality of doing so on US soil.[287]

Legal opinions on the NSA's bulk collection program have differed. In mid-December 2013, U.S. District Judge Richard Leon ruled that the "almost-Orwellian" program likely violates the Constitution, and wrote, "I cannot imagine a more 'indiscriminate' and 'arbitrary invasion' than this systematic and high-tech collection and retention of personal data on virtually every single citizen for purposes of querying and analyzing it without prior judicial approval. Surely, such a program infringes on 'that degree of privacy' that the Founders enshrined in the Fourth Amendment. Indeed, I have little doubt that the author of our Constitution, James Madison, who cautioned us to beware 'the abridgement of freedom of the people by gradual and silent encroachments by those in power,' would be aghast."[304]

Later that month, U.S. District Judge William Pauley ruled that the NSA's collection of telephone records is legal and valuable in the fight against terrorism. In his opinion, he wrote, "a bulk telephony metadata collection program [is] a wide net that could find and isolate gossamer contacts among suspected terrorists in an ocean of seemingly disconnected data" and noted that a similar collection of data prior to 9/11 might have prevented the attack.[305]

Official responses

At a March 2013 Senate Intelligence Committee hearing, Senator Ron Wyden asked Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, "does the NSA collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans?" Clapper replied "No, sir. ... Not wittingly. There are cases where they could inadvertently perhaps collect, but not wittingly."[306] This statement came under scrutiny months later, in June 2013, when details of the PRISM surveillance program were published, showing that "the NSA apparently can gain access to the servers of nine Internet companies for a wide range of digital data."[306] Wyden said that Clapper had failed to give a "straight answer" in his testimony. Clapper, in response to criticism, said, "I responded in what I thought was the most truthful, or least untruthful manner." Clapper added, "There are honest differences on the semantics of what – when someone says 'collection' to me, that has a specific meaning, which may have a different meaning to him."[306]

NSA whistle-blower Edward Snowden additionally revealed the existence of XKeyscore, a top secret NSA program that allows the agency to search vast databases of "the metadata as well as the content of emails and other internet activity, such as browser history," with capability to search by "name, telephone number, IP address, keywords, the language in which the internet activity was conducted or the type of browser used."[307] XKeyscore "provides the technological capability, if not the legal authority, to target even US persons for extensive electronic surveillance without a warrant provided that some identifying information, such as their email or IP address, is known to the analyst."[307]

Regarding the necessity of these NSA programs, Alexander stated on June 27, 2013, that the NSA's bulk phone and Internet intercepts had been instrumental in preventing 54 terrorist "events", including 13 in the US, and in all but one of these cases had provided the initial tip to "unravel the threat stream".[308] On July 31 NSA Deputy Director John Inglis conceded to the Senate that these intercepts had not been vital in stopping any terrorist attacks, but were "close" to vital in identifying and convicting four San Diego men for sending US$8,930 to Al-Shabaab, a militia that conducts terrorism in Somalia.[309][310][311]

The U.S. government has aggressively sought to dismiss and challenge Fourth Amendment cases raised against it, and has granted retroactive immunity to ISPs and telecoms participating in domestic surveillance.[312][313]

The U.S. military has acknowledged blocking access to parts of The Guardian website for thousands of defense personnel across the country,[314][315] and blocking the entire Guardian website for personnel stationed throughout Afghanistan, the Middle East, and South Asia.[316]

An October 2014 United Nations report condemned mass surveillance by the United States and other countries as violating multiple international treaties and conventions that guarantee core privacy rights.[317]

Responsibility for international ransomware attack

An exploit dubbed EternalBlue, created by the NSA, was used in the unprecedented worldwide WannaCry ransomware attack in May 2017.[318] The exploit had been leaked online by a hacking group, The Shadow Brokers, nearly a month prior to the attack. A number of experts have pointed the finger at the NSA's non-disclosure of the underlying vulnerability, and their loss of control over the EternalBlue attack tool that exploited it. Edward Snowden said that if the NSA had "privately disclosed the flaw used to attack hospitals when they found it, not when they lost it, [the attack] might not have happened".[319] Wikipedia co-founder, Jimmy Wales, stated that he joined "with Microsoft and the other leaders of the industry in saying this is a huge screw-up by the government ... the moment the NSA found it, they should have notified Microsoft so they could quietly issue a patch and really chivvy people along, long before it became a huge problem."[320]

Activities of previous employees

Former employee David Evenden, who had left the NSA to work for US defense contractor Cyperpoint at a position in the United Arab Emirates, was tasked with hacking UAE neighbor Qatar in 2015 to determine if they were funding terrorist group Muslim Brotherhood. He quit the company after learning his team had hacked Qatari Sheikha Moza bint Nasser's email exchanges with Michelle Obama, just prior to her visit to Doha.[321] Upon Evenden's return to the US, he reported his experiences to the FBI. The incident highlights a growing trend of former NSA employees and contractors leaving the agency to start up their own firms, and then hiring out to countries like Turkey, Sudan and even Russia, a country involved in numerous cyberattacks against the US.[321]

2021 Denmark-NSA collaborative surveillance

In May 2021, it was reported that Danish Defence Intelligence Service collaborated with NSA to wiretap on fellow EU members and leaders,[322][323] leading to wide backlash among EU countries and demands for explanation from Danish and American governments.[324]

See also

Notes

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For other uses see National Security Agency disambiguation NSA redirects here Not to be confused with NSC or NASA For other uses see NSA disambiguation The National Security Agency NSA is a national level intelligence agency of the United States Department of Defense under the authority of the Director of National Intelligence DNI The NSA is responsible for global monitoring collection and processing of information and data for foreign and domestic intelligence and counterintelligence purposes specializing in a discipline known as signals intelligence SIGINT The NSA is also tasked with the protection of U S communications networks and information systems 8 9 The NSA relies on a variety of measures to accomplish its mission the majority of which are clandestine 10 The existence of the NSA was not revealed until 1975 The NSA has roughly 32 000 employees 11 National Security AgencySeal of the National Security AgencyFlag of the National Security AgencyNSA headquarters Fort Meade Maryland c 1986Agency overviewFormedNovember 4 1952 70 years ago 1952 11 04 1 Preceding agencyArmed Forces Security AgencyHeadquartersFort Meade Maryland U S 39 6 32 N 76 46 17 W 39 10889 N 76 77139 W 39 10889 76 77139Motto Defending Our Nation Securing the Future EmployeesClassified est 30 000 40 000 2 3 4 5 Annual budgetClassified estimated 10 8 billion 2013 6 7 Agency executivesGeneral Paul M Nakasone U S Army DirectorGeorge C Barnes Deputy DirectorParent agencyDepartment of DefenseWebsiteNSA govOriginating as a unit to decipher coded communications in World War II it was officially formed as the NSA by President Harry S Truman in 1952 Between then and the end of the Cold War it became the largest of the U S intelligence organizations in terms of personnel and budget but information available as of 2013 indicates that the Central Intelligence Agency CIA pulled ahead in this regard with a budget of 14 7 billion 6 12 The NSA currently conducts worldwide mass data collection and has been known to physically bug electronic systems as one method to this end 13 The NSA is also alleged to have been behind such attack software as Stuxnet which severely damaged Iran s nuclear program 14 15 The NSA alongside the CIA maintains a physical presence in many countries across the globe the CIA NSA joint Special Collection Service a highly classified intelligence team inserts eavesdropping devices in high value targets such as presidential palaces or embassies SCS collection tactics allegedly encompass close surveillance burglary wiretapping and breaking and entering 16 Unlike the CIA and the Defense Intelligence Agency DIA both of which specialize primarily in foreign human espionage the NSA does not publicly conduct human source intelligence gathering The NSA is entrusted with providing assistance to and the coordination of SIGINT elements for other government organizations which are prevented by Executive Order from engaging in such activities on their own 17 As part of these responsibilities the agency has a co located organization called the Central Security Service CSS which facilitates cooperation between the NSA and other U S defense cryptanalysis components To further ensure streamlined communication between the signals intelligence community divisions the NSA Director simultaneously serves as the Commander of the United States Cyber Command and as Chief of the Central Security Service The NSA s actions have been a matter of political controversy on several occasions including its spying on anti Vietnam War leaders and the agency s participation in economic espionage In 2013 the NSA had many of its secret surveillance programs revealed to the public by Edward Snowden a former NSA contractor According to the leaked documents the NSA intercepts and stores the communications of over a billion people worldwide including United States citizens The documents also revealed the NSA tracks hundreds of millions of people s movements using cellphones metadata Internationally research has pointed to the NSA s ability to surveil the domestic Internet traffic of foreign countries through boomerang routing 18 Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1 2 The Black Chamber 1 3 World War II and its aftermath 1 4 Vietnam War 1 5 Church Committee hearings 1 6 From 1980s to 1990s 1 7 War on Terror 1 8 Global surveillance disclosures 2 Mission 3 Operations 3 1 Collection overseas 3 1 1 Echelon 3 1 2 Other SIGINT operations overseas 3 1 3 Boundless Informant 3 1 4 Bypassing encryption 3 1 5 Software backdoors 3 1 6 Boomerang routing 3 1 7 Hardware implanting 3 2 Domestic collection 3 2 1 President s Surveillance Program 3 2 2 The PRISM program 3 3 Hacking operations 4 Organizational structure 4 1 Directorates 4 2 NSANet 4 3 Watch centers 4 4 NSA Police 5 Employees 5 1 Personnel security 5 1 1 Polygraphing 5 2 Arbitrary firing 6 Facilities 6 1 Headquarters 6 1 1 History of headquarters 6 1 2 Power consumption 6 1 3 Computing assets 6 2 National Computer Security Center 6 3 Other U S facilities 6 4 International stations 6 4 1 Thailand 7 Research and development 7 1 Data Encryption Standard 7 2 Advanced Encryption Standard 7 3 NSA encryption systems 7 4 SHA 7 5 Clipper chip 7 6 Dual EC DRBG random number generator cryptotrojan 7 7 Perfect Citizen 7 8 Academic research 7 9 Patents 8 Insignia and memorials 9 Constitutionality legality and privacy questions regarding operations 9 1 Warrantless wiretaps 9 2 Edward Snowden 9 3 Other surveillance 9 4 AT amp T Internet monitoring 9 5 Data mining 9 6 Illegally obtained evidence 9 7 Barack Obama administration 9 8 Section 215 metadata collection 9 9 Fourth Amendment encroachment 9 10 Congressional oversight 9 11 Official responses 9 12 Responsibility for international ransomware attack 9 13 Activities of previous employees 9 14 2021 Denmark NSA collaborative surveillance 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory EditFormation Edit The origins of the National Security Agency can be traced back to April 28 1917 three weeks after the U S Congress declared war on Germany in World War I A code and cipher decryption unit was established as the Cable and Telegraph Section which was also known as the Cipher Bureau 19 It was headquartered in Washington D C and was part of the war effort under the executive branch without direct Congressional authorization During the course of the war it was relocated in the army s organizational chart several times On July 5 1917 Herbert O Yardley was assigned to head the unit At that point the unit consisted of Yardley and two civilian clerks It absorbed the Navy s cryptanalysis functions in July 1918 World War I ended on November 11 1918 and the army cryptographic section of Military Intelligence MI 8 moved to New York City on May 20 1919 where it continued intelligence activities as the Code Compilation Company under the direction of Yardley 20 21 The Black Chamber Edit Main article Black Chamber Black Chamber cryptanalytic work sheet for solving Japanese diplomatic cipher 1919 After the disbandment of the U S Army cryptographic section of military intelligence known as MI 8 the U S government created the Cipher Bureau also known as Black Chamber in 1919 The Black Chamber was the United States first peacetime cryptanalytic organization 22 Jointly funded by the Army and the State Department the Cipher Bureau was disguised as a New York City commercial code company it actually produced and sold such codes for business use Its true mission however was to break the communications chiefly diplomatic of other nations At the Washington Naval Conference it aided American negotiators by providing them with the decrypted traffic of many of the conference delegations including the Japanese The Black Chamber successfully persuaded Western Union the largest U S telegram company at the time as well as several other communications companies to illegally give the Black Chamber access to cable traffic of foreign embassies and consulates 23 Soon these companies publicly discontinued their collaboration Despite the Chamber s initial successes it was shut down in 1929 by U S Secretary of State Henry L Stimson who defended his decision by stating Gentlemen do not read each other s mail 24 World War II and its aftermath Edit During World War II the Signal Intelligence Service SIS was created to intercept and decipher the communications of the Axis powers 25 When the war ended the SIS was reorganized as the Army Security Agency ASA and it was placed under the leadership of the Director of Military Intelligence 25 On May 20 1949 all cryptologic activities were centralized under a national organization called the Armed Forces Security Agency AFSA 25 This organization was originally established within the U S Department of Defense under the command of the Joint Chiefs of Staff 26 The AFSA was tasked to direct Department of Defense communications and electronic intelligence activities except those of U S military intelligence units 26 However the AFSA was unable to centralize communications intelligence and failed to coordinate with civilian agencies that shared its interests such as the Department of State Central Intelligence Agency CIA and the Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI 26 In December 1951 President Harry S Truman ordered a panel to investigate how AFSA had failed to achieve its goals The results of the investigation led to improvements and its redesignation as the National Security Agency 27 The National Security Council issued a memorandum of October 24 1952 that revised National Security Council Intelligence Directive NSCID 9 On the same day Truman issued a second memorandum that called for the establishment of the NSA 28 The actual establishment of the NSA was done by a November 4 memo by Robert A Lovett the Secretary of Defense changing the name of the AFSA to the NSA and making the new agency responsible for all communications intelligence 29 Since President Truman s memo was a classified document 28 the existence of the NSA was not known to the public at that time Due to its ultra secrecy the U S intelligence community referred to the NSA as No Such Agency 30 Vietnam War Edit Main articles Project MINARET and NESTOR encryption In the 1960s the NSA played a key role in expanding U S commitment to the Vietnam War by providing evidence of a North Vietnamese attack on the American destroyer USS Maddox during the Gulf of Tonkin incident 31 A secret operation code named MINARET was set up by the NSA to monitor the phone communications of Senators Frank Church and Howard Baker as well as key leaders of the civil rights movement including Martin Luther King Jr and prominent U S journalists and athletes who criticized the Vietnam War 32 However the project turned out to be controversial and an internal review by the NSA concluded that its Minaret program was disreputable if not outright illegal 32 The NSA mounted a major effort to secure tactical communications among U S forces during the war with mixed success The NESTOR family of compatible secure voice systems it developed was widely deployed during the Vietnam War with about 30 000 NESTOR sets produced However a variety of technical and operational problems limited their use allowing the North Vietnamese to exploit and intercept U S communications 33 Vol I p 79 Church Committee hearings Edit Further information Watergate scandal and Church Committee In the aftermath of the Watergate scandal a congressional hearing in 1975 led by Senator Frank Church 34 revealed that the NSA in collaboration with Britain s SIGINT intelligence agency Government Communications Headquarters GCHQ had routinely intercepted the international communications of prominent anti Vietnam war leaders such as Jane Fonda and Dr Benjamin Spock 35 The NSA tracked these individuals in a secret filing system that was destroyed in 1974 36 Following the resignation of President Richard Nixon there were several investigations of suspected misuse of FBI CIA and NSA facilities 37 Senator Frank Church uncovered previously unknown activity 37 such as a CIA plot ordered by the administration of President John F Kennedy to assassinate Fidel Castro 38 The investigation also uncovered NSA s wiretaps on targeted U S citizens 39 After the Church Committee hearings the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 was passed This was designed to limit the practice of mass surveillance in the United States 37 From 1980s to 1990s Edit In 1986 the NSA intercepted the communications of the Libyan government during the immediate aftermath of the Berlin discotheque bombing The White House asserted that the NSA interception had provided irrefutable evidence that Libya was behind the bombing which U S President Ronald Reagan cited as a justification for the 1986 United States bombing of Libya 40 41 In 1999 a multi year investigation by the European Parliament highlighted the NSA s role in economic espionage in a report entitled Development of Surveillance Technology and Risk of Abuse of Economic Information 42 That year the NSA founded the NSA Hall of Honor a memorial at the National Cryptologic Museum in Fort Meade Maryland 43 The memorial is a tribute to the pioneers and heroes who have made significant and long lasting contributions to American cryptology 43 NSA employees must be retired for more than fifteen years to qualify for the memorial 43 NSA s infrastructure deteriorated in the 1990s as defense budget cuts resulted in maintenance deferrals On January 24 2000 NSA headquarters suffered a total network outage for three days caused by an overloaded network Incoming traffic was successfully stored on agency servers but it could not be directed and processed The agency carried out emergency repairs at a cost of 3 million to get the system running again Some incoming traffic was also directed instead to Britain s GCHQ for the time being Director Michael Hayden called the outage a wake up call for the need to invest in the agency s infrastructure 44 In the 1990s the defensive arm of the NSA the Information Assurance Directorate IAD started working more openly the first public technical talk by an NSA scientist at a major cryptography conference was J Solinas presentation on efficient Elliptic Curve Cryptography algorithms at Crypto 1997 45 The IAD s cooperative approach to academia and industry culminated in its support for a transparent process for replacing the outdated Data Encryption Standard DES by an Advanced Encryption Standard AES Cybersecurity policy expert Susan Landau attributes the NSA s harmonious collaboration with industry and academia in the selection of the AES in 2000 and the Agency s support for the choice of a strong encryption algorithm designed by Europeans rather than by Americans to Brian Snow who was the Technical Director of IAD and represented the NSA as cochairman of the Technical Working Group for the AES competition and Michael Jacobs who headed IAD at the time 46 75 After the terrorist attacks of September 11 2001 the NSA believed that it had public support for a dramatic expansion of its surveillance activities 47 According to Neal Koblitz and Alfred Menezes the period when the NSA was a trusted partner with academia and industry in the development of cryptographic standards started to come to an end when as part of the change in the NSA in the post September 11 era Snow was replaced as Technical Director Jacobs retired and IAD could no longer effectively oppose proposed actions by the offensive arm of the NSA 48 War on Terror Edit In the aftermath of the September 11 attacks the NSA created new IT systems to deal with the flood of information from new technologies like the Internet and cellphones ThinThread contained advanced data mining capabilities It also had a privacy mechanism surveillance was stored encrypted decryption required a warrant The research done under this program may have contributed to the technology used in later systems ThinThread was cancelled when Michael Hayden chose Trailblazer which did not include ThinThread s privacy system 49 Trailblazer Project ramped up in 2002 and was worked on by Science Applications International Corporation SAIC Boeing Computer Sciences Corporation IBM and Litton Industries Some NSA whistleblowers complained internally about major problems surrounding Trailblazer This led to investigations by Congress and the NSA and DoD Inspectors General The project was cancelled in early 2004 Turbulence started in 2005 It was developed in small inexpensive test pieces rather than one grand plan like Trailblazer It also included offensive cyber warfare capabilities like injecting malware into remote computers Congress criticized Turbulence in 2007 for having similar bureaucratic problems as Trailblazer 50 It was to be a realization of information processing at higher speeds in cyberspace 51 Global surveillance disclosures Edit Main article Global surveillance disclosures 2013 present The massive extent of the NSA s spying both foreign and domestic was revealed to the public in a series of detailed disclosures of internal NSA documents beginning in June 2013 Most of the disclosures were leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden On 4 September 2020 the NSA s surveillance program was ruled unlawful by the US Court of Appeals The court also added that the US intelligence leaders who publicly defended it were not telling the truth 52 Mission EditNSA s eavesdropping mission includes radio broadcasting both from various organizations and individuals the Internet telephone calls and other intercepted forms of communication Its secure communications mission includes military diplomatic and all other sensitive confidential or secret government communications 53 According to a 2010 article in The Washington Post every day collection systems at the National Security Agency intercept and store 1 7 billion e mails phone calls and other types of communications The NSA sorts a fraction of those into 70 separate databases 54 Because of its listening task NSA CSS has been heavily involved in cryptanalytic research continuing the work of predecessor agencies which had broken many World War II codes and ciphers see for instance Purple Venona project and JN 25 In 2004 NSA Central Security Service and the National Cyber Security Division of the Department of Homeland Security DHS agreed to expand the NSA Centers of Academic Excellence in Information Assurance Education Program 55 As part of the National Security Presidential Directive 54 Homeland Security Presidential Directive 23 NSPD 54 signed on January 8 2008 by President Bush the NSA became the lead agency to monitor and protect all of the federal government s computer networks from cyber terrorism 9 A part of NSA s mission is to serve as a combat support agency for the Department of Defense 56 Operations EditOperations by the National Security Agency can be divided into three types Collection overseas which falls under the responsibility of the Global Access Operations GAO division Domestic collection which falls under the responsibility of the Special Source Operations SSO division Hacking operations which fall under the responsibility of the Tailored Access Operations TAO division Collection overseas Edit Echelon Edit Main article ECHELON Echelon was created in the incubator of the Cold War 57 Today it is a legacy system and several NSA stations are closing 58 NSA CSS in combination with the equivalent agencies in the United Kingdom Government Communications Headquarters Canada Communications Security Establishment Australia Australian Signals Directorate and New Zealand Government Communications Security Bureau otherwise known as the UKUSA group 59 was reported to be in command of the operation of the so called ECHELON system Its capabilities were suspected to include the ability to monitor a large proportion of the world s transmitted civilian telephone fax and data traffic 60 During the early 1970s the first of what became more than eight large satellite communications dishes were installed at Menwith Hill 61 Investigative journalist Duncan Campbell reported in 1988 on the ECHELON surveillance program an extension of the UKUSA Agreement on global signals intelligence SIGINT and detailed how the eavesdropping operations worked 62 On November 3 1999 the BBC reported that they had confirmation from the Australian Government of the existence of a powerful global spying network code named Echelon that could eavesdrop on every single phone call fax or e mail anywhere on the planet with Britain and the United States as the chief protagonists They confirmed that Menwith Hill was linked directly to the headquarters of the US National Security Agency NSA at Fort Meade in Maryland 63 NSA s United States Signals Intelligence Directive 18 USSID 18 strictly prohibited the interception or collection of information about U S persons entities corporations or organizations without explicit written legal permission from the United States Attorney General when the subject is located abroad or the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court when within U S borders Alleged Echelon related activities including its use for motives other than national security including political and industrial espionage received criticism from countries outside the UKUSA alliance 64 Protesters against NSA data mining in Berlin wearing Chelsea Manning and Edward Snowden masks Other SIGINT operations overseas Edit The NSA was also involved in planning to blackmail people with SEXINT intelligence gained about a potential target s sexual activity and preferences Those targeted had not committed any apparent crime nor were they charged with one 65 In order to support its facial recognition program the NSA is intercepting millions of images per day 66 The Real Time Regional Gateway is a data collection program introduced in 2005 in Iraq by NSA during the Iraq War that consisted of gathering all electronic communication storing it then searching and otherwise analyzing it It was effective in providing information about Iraqi insurgents who had eluded less comprehensive techniques 67 This collect it all strategy introduced by NSA director Keith B Alexander is believed by Glenn Greenwald of The Guardian to be the model for the comprehensive worldwide mass archiving of communications which NSA is engaged in as of 2013 68 A dedicated unit of the NSA locates targets for the CIA for extrajudicial assassination in the Middle East 69 The NSA has also spied extensively on the European Union the United Nations and numerous governments including allies and trading partners in Europe South America and Asia 70 71 In June 2015 WikiLeaks published documents showing that NSA spied on French companies 72 In July 2015 WikiLeaks published documents showing that NSA spied on federal German ministries since the 1990s 73 74 Even Germany s Chancellor Angela Merkel s cellphones and phones of her predecessors had been intercepted 75 Boundless Informant Edit Edward Snowden revealed in June 2013 that between February 8 and March 8 2013 the NSA collected about 124 8 billion telephone data items and 97 1 billion computer data items throughout the world as was displayed in charts from an internal NSA tool codenamed Boundless Informant Initially it was reported that some of these data reflected eavesdropping on citizens in countries like Germany Spain and France 76 but later on it became clear that those data were collected by European agencies during military missions abroad and were subsequently shared with NSA Bypassing encryption Edit In 2013 reporters uncovered a secret memo that claims the NSA created and pushed for the adoption of the Dual EC DRBG encryption standard that contained built in vulnerabilities in 2006 to the United States National Institute of Standards and Technology NIST and the International Organization for Standardization aka ISO 77 78 This memo appears to give credence to previous speculation by cryptographers at Microsoft Research 79 Edward Snowden claims that the NSA often bypasses encryption altogether by lifting information before it is encrypted or after it is decrypted 78 XKeyscore rules as specified in a file xkeyscorerules100 txt sourced by German TV stations NDR and WDR who claim to have excerpts from its source code reveal that the NSA tracks users of privacy enhancing software tools including Tor an anonymous email service provided by the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory CSAIL in Cambridge Massachusetts and readers of the Linux Journal 80 81 Software backdoors Edit Linus Torvalds the founder of Linux kernel joked during a LinuxCon keynote on September 18 2013 that the NSA who are the founder of SELinux wanted a backdoor in the kernel 82 However later Linus father a Member of the European Parliament MEP revealed that the NSA actually did this 83 When my oldest son was asked the same question Has he been approached by the NSA about backdoors he said No but at the same time he nodded Then he was sort of in the legal free He had given the right answer everybody understood that the NSA had approached him Nils Torvalds LIBE Committee Inquiry on Electronic Mass Surveillance of EU Citizens 11th Hearing 11 November 2013 84 IBM Notes was the first widely adopted software product to use public key cryptography for client server and server server authentication and for encryption of data Until US laws regulating encryption were changed in 2000 IBM and Lotus were prohibited from exporting versions of Notes that supported symmetric encryption keys that were longer than 40 bits In 1997 Lotus negotiated an agreement with the NSA that allowed the export of a version that supported stronger keys with 64 bits but 24 of the bits were encrypted with a special key and included in the message to provide a workload reduction factor for the NSA This strengthened the protection for users of Notes outside the US against private sector industrial espionage but not against spying by the US government 85 86 Boomerang routing Edit While it is assumed that foreign transmissions terminating in the U S such as a non U S citizen accessing a U S website subject non U S citizens to NSA surveillance recent research into boomerang routing has raised new concerns about the NSA s ability to surveil the domestic Internet traffic of foreign countries 18 Boomerang routing occurs when an Internet transmission that originates and terminates in a single country transits another Research at the University of Toronto has suggested that approximately 25 of Canadian domestic traffic may be subject to NSA surveillance activities as a result of the boomerang routing of Canadian Internet service providers 18 Hardware implanting Edit Intercepted packages are opened carefully by NSA employees A load station implanting a beacon A document included in NSA files released with Glenn Greenwald s book No Place to Hide details how the agency s Tailored Access Operations TAO and other NSA units gain access to hardware They intercept routers servers and other network hardware being shipped to organizations targeted for surveillance and install covert implant firmware onto them before they are delivered This was described by an NSA manager as some of the most productive operations in TAO because they preposition access points into hard target networks around the world 87 Computers seized by the NSA due to interdiction are often modified with a physical device known as Cottonmouth 88 Cottonmouth is a device that can be inserted in the USB port of a computer in order to establish remote access to the targeted machine According to NSA s Tailored Access Operations TAO group implant catalog after implanting Cottonmouth the NSA can establish a network bridge that allows the NSA to load exploit software onto modified computers as well as allowing the NSA to relay commands and data between hardware and software implants 89 Domestic collection Edit Further information Mass surveillance in the United States NSA s mission as set forth in Executive Order 12333 in 1981 is to collect information that constitutes foreign intelligence or counterintelligence while not acquiring information concerning the domestic activities of United States persons NSA has declared that it relies on the FBI to collect information on foreign intelligence activities within the borders of the United States while confining its own activities within the United States to the embassies and missions of foreign nations 90 The appearance of a Domestic Surveillance Directorate of the NSA was soon exposed as a hoax in 2013 91 92 NSA s domestic surveillance activities are limited by the requirements imposed by the Fourth Amendment to the U S Constitution The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court for example held in October 2011 citing multiple Supreme Court precedents that the Fourth Amendment prohibitions against unreasonable searches and seizures apply to the contents of all communications whatever the means because a person s private communications are akin to personal papers 93 However these protections do not apply to non U S persons located outside of U S borders so the NSA s foreign surveillance efforts are subject to far fewer limitations under U S law 94 The specific requirements for domestic surveillance operations are contained in the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 FISA which does not extend protection to non U S citizens located outside of U S territory 94 President s Surveillance Program Edit See also NSA warrantless surveillance 2001 07 George W Bush president during the 9 11 terrorist attacks approved the Patriot Act shortly after the attacks to take anti terrorist security measures Title 1 2 and 9 specifically authorized measures that would be taken by the NSA These titles granted enhanced domestic security against terrorism surveillance procedures and improved intelligence respectively On March 10 2004 there was a debate between President Bush and White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales Attorney General John Ashcroft and Acting Attorney General James Comey The Attorneys General were unsure if the NSA s programs could be considered constitutional They threatened to resign over the matter but ultimately the NSA s programs continued 95 On March 11 2004 President Bush signed a new authorization for mass surveillance of Internet records in addition to the surveillance of phone records This allowed the president to be able to override laws such as the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act which protected civilians from mass surveillance In addition to this President Bush also signed that the measures of mass surveillance were also retroactively in place 96 97 One such surveillance program authorized by the U S Signals Intelligence Directive 18 of President George Bush was the Highlander Project undertaken for the National Security Agency by the U S Army 513th Military Intelligence Brigade NSA relayed telephone including cell phone conversations obtained from ground airborne and satellite monitoring stations to various U S Army Signal Intelligence Officers including the 201st Military Intelligence Battalion Conversations of citizens of the U S were intercepted along with those of other nations 98 Proponents of the surveillance program claim that the President has executive authority to order such action citation needed arguing that laws such as FISA are overridden by the President s Constitutional powers In addition some argued that FISA was implicitly overridden by a subsequent statute the Authorization for Use of Military Force although the Supreme Court s ruling in Hamdan v Rumsfeld deprecates this view 99 The PRISM program Edit PRISM a clandestine surveillance program under which the NSA collects user data from companies like Microsoft and Facebook Under the PRISM program which started in 2007 100 101 NSA gathers Internet communications from foreign targets from nine major U S Internet based communication service providers Microsoft 102 Yahoo Google Facebook PalTalk AOL Skype YouTube and Apple Data gathered include email videos photos VoIP chats such as Skype and file transfers Former NSA director General Keith Alexander claimed that in September 2009 the NSA prevented Najibullah Zazi and his friends from carrying out a terrorist attack 103 However this claim has been debunked and no evidence has been presented demonstrating that the NSA has ever been instrumental in preventing a terrorist attack 104 105 106 107 Hacking operations Edit Besides the more traditional ways of eavesdropping in order to collect signals intelligence NSA is also engaged in hacking computers smartphones and their networks A division which conducts such operations is the Tailored Access Operations TAO division which has been active since at least circa 1998 108 According to the Foreign Policy magazine the Office of Tailored Access Operations or TAO has successfully penetrated Chinese computer and telecommunications systems for almost 15 years generating some of the best and most reliable intelligence information about what is going on inside the People s Republic of China 109 110 In an interview with Wired magazine Edward Snowden said the Tailored Access Operations division accidentally caused Syria s internet blackout in 2012 111 Organizational structure Edit Paul M Nakasone the director of the NSA The NSA is led by the Director of the National Security Agency DIRNSA who also serves as Chief of the Central Security Service CHCSS and Commander of the United States Cyber Command USCYBERCOM and is the highest ranking military official of these organizations He is assisted by a Deputy Director who is the highest ranking civilian within the NSA CSS NSA also has an Inspector General head of the Office of the Inspector General OIG a General Counsel head of the Office of the General Counsel OGC and a Director of Compliance who is head of the Office of the Director of Compliance ODOC 112 Unlike other intelligence organizations such as the CIA or DIA NSA has always been particularly reticent concerning its internal organizational structure As of the mid 1990s the National Security Agency was organized into five Directorates The Operations Directorate which was responsible for SIGINT collection and processing The Technology and Systems Directorate which develops new technologies for SIGINT collection and processing The Information Systems Security Directorate which was responsible for NSA s communications and information security missions The Plans Policy and Programs Directorate which provided staff support and general direction for the Agency The Support Services Directorate which provided logistical and administrative support activities 113 Each of these directorates consisted of several groups or elements designated by a letter There were for example the A Group which was responsible for all SIGINT operations against the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe and G Group which was responsible for SIGINT related to all non communist countries These groups were divided into units designated by an additional number like unit A5 for breaking Soviet codes and G6 being the office for the Middle East North Africa Cuba Central and South America 114 115 Directorates Edit As of 2013 update NSA has about a dozen directorates which are designated by a letter although not all of them are publicly known 116 In the year 2000 a leadership team was formed consisting of the director the deputy director and the directors of the Signals Intelligence SID the Information Assurance IAD and the Technical Directorate TD The chiefs of other main NSA divisions became associate directors of the senior leadership team 117 After president George W Bush initiated the President s Surveillance Program PSP in 2001 the NSA created a 24 hour Metadata Analysis Center MAC followed in 2004 by the Advanced Analysis Division AAD with the mission of analyzing content Internet metadata and telephone metadata Both units were part of the Signals Intelligence Directorate 118 A 2016 proposal would combine the Signals Intelligence Directorate with Information Assurance Directorate into Directorate of Operations 119 NSANet Edit Behind the Green Door Secure communications room with separate computer terminals for access to SIPRNET GWAN NSANET and JWICS NSANet stands for National Security Agency Network and is the official NSA intranet 120 It is a classified network 121 for information up to the level of TS SCI 122 to support the use and sharing of intelligence data between NSA and the signals intelligence agencies of the four other nations of the Five Eyes partnership The management of NSANet has been delegated to the Central Security Service Texas CSSTEXAS 123 NSANet is a highly secured computer network consisting of fiber optic and satellite communication channels which are almost completely separated from the public Internet The network allows NSA personnel and civilian and military intelligence analysts anywhere in the world to have access to the agency s systems and databases This access is tightly controlled and monitored For example every keystroke is logged activities are audited at random and downloading and printing of documents from NSANet are recorded 124 In 1998 NSANet along with NIPRNET and SIPRNET had significant problems with poor search capabilities unorganized data and old information 125 In 2004 the network was reported to have used over twenty commercial off the shelf operating systems 126 Some universities that do highly sensitive research are allowed to connect to it 127 The thousands of Top Secret internal NSA documents that were taken by Edward Snowden in 2013 were stored in a file sharing location on the NSA s intranet site so they could easily be read online by NSA personnel Everyone with a TS SCI clearance had access to these documents As a system administrator Snowden was responsible for moving accidentally misplaced highly sensitive documents to safer storage locations 128 Watch centers Edit The NSA maintains at least two watch centers National Security Operations Center NSOC which is the NSA s current operations center and focal point for time sensitive SIGINT reporting for the United States SIGINT System USSS This center was established in 1968 as the National SIGINT Watch Center NSWC and renamed into National SIGINT Operations Center NSOC in 1973 This nerve center of the NSA got its current name in 1996 citation needed NSA CSS Threat Operations Center NTOC which is the primary NSA CSS partner for Department of Homeland Security response to cyber incidents The NTOC establishes real time network awareness and threat characterization capabilities to forecast alert and attribute malicious activity and enable the coordination of Computer Network Operations The NTOC was established in 2004 as a joint Information Assurance and Signals Intelligence project 129 NSA Police Edit The NSA has its own police force known as NSA Police and formerly as NSA Security Protective Force which provides law enforcement services emergency response and physical security to the NSA s people and property 130 NSA Police are armed federal officers NSA Police have use of a K9 division which generally conducts explosive detection screening of mail vehicles and cargo entering NSA grounds 131 NSA Police use marked vehicles to carry out patrols 132 Employees EditThe number of NSA employees is officially classified 4 but there are several sources providing estimates In 1961 NSA had 59 000 military and civilian employees which grew to 93 067 in 1969 of which 19 300 worked at the headquarters at Fort Meade In the early 1980s NSA had roughly 50 000 military and civilian personnel By 1989 this number had grown again to 75 000 of which 25 000 worked at the NSA headquarters Between 1990 and 1995 the NSA s budget and workforce were cut by one third which led to a substantial loss of experience 133 In 2012 the NSA said more than 30 000 employees worked at Fort Meade and other facilities 2 In 2012 John C Inglis the deputy director said that the total number of NSA employees is somewhere between 37 000 and one billion as a joke 4 and stated that the agency is probably the biggest employer of introverts 4 In 2013 Der Spiegel stated that the NSA had 40 000 employees 5 More widely it has been described as the world s largest single employer of mathematicians 134 Some NSA employees form part of the workforce of the National Reconnaissance Office NRO the agency that provides the NSA with satellite signals intelligence As of 2013 about 1 000 system administrators work for the NSA 135 Personnel security Edit The NSA received criticism early on in 1960 after two agents had defected to the Soviet Union Investigations by the House Un American Activities Committee and a special subcommittee of the United States House Committee on Armed Services revealed severe cases of ignorance in personnel security regulations prompting the former personnel director and the director of security to step down and leading to the adoption of stricter security practices 136 Nonetheless security breaches reoccurred only a year later when in an issue of Izvestia of July 23 1963 a former NSA employee published several cryptologic secrets The very same day an NSA clerk messenger committed suicide as ongoing investigations disclosed that he had sold secret information to the Soviets on a regular basis The reluctance of Congressional houses to look into these affairs had prompted a journalist to write If a similar series of tragic blunders occurred in any ordinary agency of Government an aroused public would insist that those responsible be officially censured demoted or fired David Kahn criticized the NSA s tactics of concealing its doings as smug and the Congress blind faith in the agency s right doing as shortsighted and pointed out the necessity of surveillance by the Congress to prevent abuse of power 136 Edward Snowden s leaking of the existence of PRISM in 2013 caused the NSA to institute a two man rule where two system administrators are required to be present when one accesses certain sensitive information 135 Snowden claims he suggested such a rule in 2009 137 Polygraphing Edit Defense Security Service DSS polygraph brochure given to NSA applicants The NSA conducts polygraph tests of employees For new employees the tests are meant to discover enemy spies who are applying to the NSA and to uncover any information that could make an applicant pliant to coercion 138 As part of the latter historically EPQs or embarrassing personal questions about sexual behavior had been included in the NSA polygraph 138 The NSA also conducts five year periodic reinvestigation polygraphs of employees focusing on counterintelligence programs In addition the NSA conducts periodic polygraph investigations in order to find spies and leakers those who refuse to take them may receive termination of employment according to a 1982 memorandum from the director of the NSA 139 source source source source source source source source source track NSA produced video on the polygraph process There are also special access examination polygraphs for employees who wish to work in highly sensitive areas and those polygraphs cover counterintelligence questions and some questions about behavior 139 NSA s brochure states that the average test length is between two and four hours 140 A 1983 report of the Office of Technology Assessment stated that It appears that the NSA National Security Agency and possibly CIA use the polygraph not to determine deception or truthfulness per se but as a technique of interrogation to encourage admissions 141 Sometimes applicants in the polygraph process confess to committing felonies such as murder rape and selling of illegal drugs Between 1974 and 1979 of the 20 511 job applicants who took polygraph tests 695 3 4 confessed to previous felony crimes almost all of those crimes had been undetected 138 In 2010 the NSA produced a video explaining its polygraph process 142 The video ten minutes long is titled The Truth About the Polygraph and was posted to the Web site of the Defense Security Service Jeff Stein of The Washington Post said that the video portrays various applicants or actors playing them it s not clear describing everything bad they had heard about the test the implication being that none of it is true 143 AntiPolygraph org argues that the NSA produced video omits some information about the polygraph process it produced a video responding to the NSA video 142 144 George Maschke the founder of the Web site accused the NSA polygraph video of being Orwellian 143 A 2013 article indicated that after Edward Snowden revealed his identity in 2013 the NSA began requiring polygraphing of employees once per quarter 145 Arbitrary firing Edit The number of exemptions from legal requirements has been criticized When in 1964 Congress was hearing a bill giving the director of the NSA the power to fire at will any employee The Washington Post wrote This is the very definition of arbitrariness It means that an employee could be discharged and disgraced on the basis of anonymous allegations without the slightest opportunity to defend himself Yet the bill was accepted by an overwhelming majority 136 Also every person hired to a job in the US after 2007 at any private organization state or federal government agency must be reported to the New Hire Registry ostensibly to look for child support evaders except that employees of an intelligence agency may be excluded from reporting if the director deems it necessary for national security reasons 146 Facilities EditHeadquarters Edit History of headquarters Edit Headquarters at Fort Meade circa 1950s When the agency was first established its headquarters and cryptographic center were in the Naval Security Station in Washington D C The COMINT functions were located in Arlington Hall in Northern Virginia which served as the headquarters of the U S Army s cryptographic operations 147 Because the Soviet Union had detonated a nuclear bomb and because the facilities were crowded the federal government wanted to move several agencies including the AFSA NSA A planning committee considered Fort Knox but Fort Meade Maryland was ultimately chosen as NSA headquarters because it was far enough away from Washington D C in case of a nuclear strike and was close enough so its employees would not have to move their families 148 Construction of additional buildings began after the agency occupied buildings at Fort Meade in the late 1950s which they soon outgrew 148 In 1963 the new headquarters building nine stories tall opened NSA workers referred to the building as the Headquarters Building and since the NSA management occupied the top floor workers used Ninth Floor to refer to their leaders 149 COMSEC remained in Washington D C until its new building was completed in 1968 148 In September 1986 the Operations 2A and 2B buildings both copper shielded to prevent eavesdropping opened with a dedication by President Ronald Reagan 150 The four NSA buildings became known as the Big Four 150 The NSA director moved to 2B when it opened 150 National Security Agency headquarters in Fort Meade 2013 Headquarters for the National Security Agency is located at 39 6 32 N 76 46 17 W 39 10889 N 76 77139 W 39 10889 76 77139 in Fort George G Meade Maryland although it is separate from other compounds and agencies that are based within this same military installation Fort Meade is about 20 mi 32 km southwest of Baltimore 151 and 25 mi 40 km northeast of Washington D C 152 The NSA has two dedicated exits off Baltimore Washington Parkway The Eastbound exit from the Parkway heading toward Baltimore is open to the public and provides employee access to its main campus and public access to the National Cryptology Museum The Westbound side exit heading toward Washington is labeled NSA Employees Only 153 154 The exit may only be used by people with the proper clearances and security vehicles parked along the road guard the entrance 155 NSA is the largest employer in the state of Maryland and two thirds of its personnel work at Fort Meade 156 Built on 350 acres 140 ha 0 55 sq mi 157 of Fort Meade s 5 000 acres 2 000 ha 7 8 sq mi 158 the site has 1 300 buildings and an estimated 18 000 parking spaces 152 159 NSA headquarters building in Fort Meade left NSOC right The main NSA headquarters and operations building is what James Bamford author of Body of Secrets describes as a modern boxy structure that appears similar to any stylish office building 160 The building is covered with one way dark glass which is lined with copper shielding in order to prevent espionage by trapping in signals and sounds 160 It contains 3 000 000 square feet 280 000 m2 or more than 68 acres 28 ha of floor space Bamford said that the U S Capitol could easily fit inside it four times over 160 The facility has over 100 watchposts 161 one of them being the visitor control center a two story area that serves as the entrance 160 At the entrance a white pentagonal structure 162 visitor badges are issued to visitors and security clearances of employees are checked 163 The visitor center includes a painting of the NSA seal 162 The OPS2A building the tallest building in the NSA complex and the location of much of the agency s operations directorate is accessible from the visitor center Bamford described it as a dark glass Rubik s Cube 164 The facility s red corridor houses non security operations such as concessions and the drug store The name refers to the red badge which is worn by someone without a security clearance The NSA headquarters includes a cafeteria a credit union ticket counters for airlines and entertainment a barbershop and a bank 162 NSA headquarters has its own post office fire department and police force 165 166 167 The employees at the NSA headquarters reside in various places in the Baltimore Washington area including Annapolis Baltimore and Columbia in Maryland and the District of Columbia including the Georgetown community 168 The NSA maintains a shuttle service from the Odenton station of MARC to its Visitor Control Center and has done so since 2005 169 Power consumption Edit Due to massive amounts of data processing NSA is the largest electricity consumer in Maryland 156 Following a major power outage in 2000 in 2003 and in follow ups through 2007 The Baltimore Sun reported that the NSA was at risk of electrical overload because of insufficient internal electrical infrastructure at Fort Meade to support the amount of equipment being installed This problem was apparently recognized in the 1990s but not made a priority and now the agency s ability to keep its operations going is threatened 170 On August 6 2006 The Baltimore Sun reported that the NSA had completely maxed out the grid and that Baltimore Gas amp Electric BGE now Constellation Energy was unable to sell them any more power 171 NSA decided to move some of its operations to a new satellite facility BGE provided NSA with 65 to 75 megawatts at Fort Meade in 2007 and expected that an increase of 10 to 15 megawatts would be needed later that year 172 In 2011 the NSA was Maryland s largest consumer of power 156 In 2007 as BGE s largest customer NSA bought as much electricity as Annapolis the capital city of Maryland 170 One estimate put the potential for power consumption by the new Utah Data Center at US 40 million per year 173 Computing assets Edit In 1995 The Baltimore Sun reported that the NSA is the owner of the single largest group of supercomputers 174 NSA held a groundbreaking ceremony at Fort Meade in May 2013 for its High Performance Computing Center 2 expected to open in 2016 175 Called Site M the center has a 150 megawatt power substation 14 administrative buildings and 10 parking garages 165 It cost 3 2 billion and covers 227 acres 92 ha 0 355 sq mi 165 The center is 1 800 000 square feet 17 ha 0 065 sq mi 165 and initially uses 60 megawatts of electricity 176 Increments II and III are expected to be completed by 2030 and would quadruple the space covering 5 800 000 square feet 54 ha 0 21 sq mi with 60 buildings and 40 parking garages 165 Defense contractors are also establishing or expanding cybersecurity facilities near the NSA and around the Washington metropolitan area 165 National Computer Security Center Edit The DoD Computer Security Center was founded in 1981 and renamed the National Computer Security Center NCSC in 1985 NCSC was responsible for computer security throughout the federal government 177 NCSC was part of NSA 178 and during the late 1980s and the 1990s NSA and NCSC published Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria in a six foot high Rainbow Series of books that detailed trusted computing and network platform specifications 179 The Rainbow books were replaced by the Common Criteria however in the early 2000s 179 Other U S facilities Edit Buckley Space Force Base in Colorado Utah Data Center As of 2012 NSA collected intelligence from four geostationary satellites 173 Satellite receivers were at Roaring Creek Station in Catawissa Pennsylvania and Salt Creek Station in Arbuckle California 173 It operated ten to twenty taps on U S telecom switches NSA had installations in several U S states and from them observed intercepts from Europe the Middle East North Africa Latin America and Asia 173 NSA had facilities at Friendship Annex FANX in Linthicum Maryland which is a 20 to 25 minute drive from Fort Meade 180 the Aerospace Data Facility at Buckley Space Force Base in Aurora Colorado NSA Texas in the Texas Cryptology Center at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio Texas NSA Georgia Georgia Cryptologic Center Fort Gordon Augusta Georgia NSA Hawaii Hawaii Cryptologic Center in Honolulu the Multiprogram Research Facility in Oak Ridge Tennessee and elsewhere 168 173 On January 6 2011 a groundbreaking ceremony was held to begin construction on NSA s first Comprehensive National Cyber security Initiative CNCI Data Center known as the Utah Data Center for short The 1 5B data center is being built at Camp Williams Utah located 25 miles 40 km south of Salt Lake City and will help support the agency s National Cyber security Initiative 181 It is expected to be operational by September 2013 173 Construction of Utah Data Center finished in May 2019 182 In 2009 to protect its assets and access more electricity NSA sought to decentralize and expand its existing facilities in Fort Meade and Menwith Hill 183 the latter expansion expected to be completed by 2015 184 The Yakima Herald Republic cited Bamford saying that many of NSA s bases for its Echelon program were a legacy system using outdated 1990s technology 58 In 2004 NSA closed its operations at Bad Aibling Station Field Station 81 in Bad Aibling Germany 185 In 2012 NSA began to move some of its operations at Yakima Research Station Yakima Training Center in Washington state to Colorado planning to leave Yakima closed 186 As of 2013 NSA also intended to close operations at Sugar Grove West Virginia 58 International stations Edit RAF Menwith Hill has the largest NSA presence in the United Kingdom 184 Following the signing in 1946 1956 187 of the UKUSA Agreement between the United States United Kingdom Canada Australia and New Zealand who then cooperated on signals intelligence and ECHELON 188 NSA stations were built at GCHQ Bude in Morwenstow United Kingdom Geraldton Pine Gap and Shoal Bay Australia Leitrim and Ottawa Ontario Canada Misawa Japan and Waihopai and Tangimoana 189 New Zealand 190 NSA operates RAF Menwith Hill in North Yorkshire United Kingdom which was according to BBC News in 2007 the largest electronic monitoring station in the world 191 Planned in 1954 and opened in 1960 the base covered 562 acres 227 ha 0 878 sq mi in 1999 192 The agency s European Cryptologic Center ECC with 240 employees in 2011 is headquartered at a US military compound in Griesheim near Frankfurt in Germany A 2011 NSA report indicates that the ECC is responsible for the largest analysis and productivity in Europe and focuses on various priorities including Africa Europe the Middle East and counterterrorism operations 193 In 2013 a new Consolidated Intelligence Center also to be used by NSA is being built at the headquarters of the United States Army Europe in Wiesbaden Germany 194 NSA s partnership with Bundesnachrichtendienst BND the German foreign intelligence service was confirmed by BND president Gerhard Schindler 194 Thailand Edit Thailand is a 3rd party partner of the NSA along with nine other nations 195 These are non English speaking countries that have made security agreements for the exchange of SIGINT raw material and end product reports Thailand is the site of at least two US SIGINT collection stations One is at the US Embassy in Bangkok a joint NSA CIA Special Collection Service SCS unit It presumably eavesdrops on foreign embassies governmental communications and other targets of opportunity 196 The second installation is a FORNSAT foreign satellite interception station in the Thai city of Khon Kaen It is codenamed INDRA but has also been referred to as LEMONWOOD 196 The station is approximately 40 hectares 99 acres in size and consists of a large 3 700 4 600 m2 40 000 50 000 ft2 operations building on the west side of the ops compound and four radome enclosed parabolic antennas Possibly two of the radome enclosed antennas are used for SATCOM intercept and two antennas used for relaying the intercepted material back to NSA There is also a PUSHER type circularly disposed antenna array CDAA just north of the ops compound 197 198 NSA activated Khon Kaen in October 1979 Its mission was to eavesdrop on the radio traffic of Chinese army and air force units in southern China especially in and around the city of Kunming in Yunnan Province In the late 1970s the base consisted only of a small CDAA antenna array that was remote controlled via satellite from the NSA listening post at Kunia Hawaii and a small force of civilian contractors from Bendix Field Engineering Corp whose job it was to keep the antenna array and satellite relay facilities up and running 24 7 197 According to the papers of the late General William Odom the INDRA facility was upgraded in 1986 with a new British made PUSHER CDAA antenna as part of an overall upgrade of NSA and Thai SIGINT facilities whose objective was to spy on the neighboring communist nations of Vietnam Laos and Cambodia 197 The base apparently fell into disrepair in the 1990s as China and Vietnam became more friendly towards the US and by 2002 archived satellite imagery showed that the PUSHER CDAA antenna had been torn down perhaps indicating that the base had been closed At some point in the period since 9 11 the Khon Kaen base was reactivated and expanded to include a sizeable SATCOM intercept mission It is likely that the NSA presence at Khon Kaen is relatively small and that most of the work is done by civilian contractors 197 Research and development EditNSA has been involved in debates about public policy both indirectly as a behind the scenes adviser to other departments and directly during and after Vice Admiral Bobby Ray Inman s directorship NSA was a major player in the debates of the 1990s regarding the export of cryptography in the United States Restrictions on export were reduced but not eliminated in 1996 Its secure government communications work has involved the NSA in numerous technology areas including the design of specialized communications hardware and software production of dedicated semiconductors at the Ft Meade chip fabrication plant and advanced cryptography research For 50 years NSA designed and built most of its computer equipment in house but from the 1990s until about 2003 when the U S Congress curtailed the practice the agency contracted with the private sector in the fields of research and equipment 199 Data Encryption Standard Edit Main article Data Encryption Standard FROSTBURG was the NSA s first supercomputer used from 1991 to 1997 NSA was embroiled in some controversy concerning its involvement in the creation of the Data Encryption Standard DES a standard and public block cipher algorithm used by the U S government and banking community 200 During the development of DES by IBM in the 1970s NSA recommended changes to some details of the design There was suspicion that these changes had weakened the algorithm sufficiently to enable the agency to eavesdrop if required including speculation that a critical component the so called S boxes had been altered to insert a backdoor and that the reduction in key length might have made it feasible for NSA to discover DES keys using massive computing power It has since been observed that the S boxes in DES are particularly resilient against differential cryptanalysis a technique which was not publicly discovered until the late 1980s but known to the IBM DES team Advanced Encryption Standard Edit Main article Advanced Encryption Standard The involvement of NSA in selecting a successor to Data Encryption Standard DES the Advanced Encryption Standard AES was limited to hardware performance testing see AES competition 201 NSA has subsequently certified AES for protection of classified information when used in NSA approved systems 202 NSA encryption systems Edit STU III secure telephones on display at the National Cryptologic Museum Main article NSA encryption systems The NSA is responsible for the encryption related components in these legacy systems FNBDT Future Narrow Band Digital Terminal 203 KL 7 ADONIS off line rotor encryption machine post WWII 1980s 204 205 KW 26 ROMULUS electronic in line teletypewriter encryptor 1960s 1980s 206 KW 37 JASON fleet broadcast encryptor 1960s 1990s 205 KY 57 VINSON tactical radio voice encryptor 206 KG 84 Dedicated Data Encryption Decryption 206 STU III secure telephone unit 206 phased out by the STE 207 The NSA oversees encryption in the following systems that are in use today EKMS Electronic Key Management System 208 Fortezza encryption based on portable crypto token in PC Card format 209 SINCGARS tactical radio with cryptographically controlled frequency hopping 210 STE secure terminal equipment 207 TACLANE product line by General Dynamics C4 Systems 211 The NSA has specified Suite A and Suite B cryptographic algorithm suites to be used in U S government systems the Suite B algorithms are a subset of those previously specified by NIST and are expected to serve for most information protection purposes while the Suite A algorithms are secret and are intended for especially high levels of protection 202 SHA Edit The widely used SHA 1 and SHA 2 hash functions were designed by NSA SHA 1 is a slight modification of the weaker SHA 0 algorithm also designed by NSA in 1993 This small modification was suggested by NSA two years later with no justification other than the fact that it provides additional security An attack for SHA 0 that does not apply to the revised algorithm was indeed found between 1998 and 2005 by academic cryptographers Because of weaknesses and key length restrictions in SHA 1 NIST deprecates its use for digital signatures and approves only the newer SHA 2 algorithms for such applications from 2013 on 212 A new hash standard SHA 3 has recently been selected through the competition concluded October 2 2012 with the selection of Keccak as the algorithm The process to select SHA 3 was similar to the one held in choosing the AES but some doubts have been cast over it 213 214 since fundamental modifications have been made to Keccak in order to turn it into a standard 215 These changes potentially undermine the cryptanalysis performed during the competition and reduce the security levels of the algorithm 213 Clipper chip Edit Main article Clipper chip Because of concerns that widespread use of strong cryptography would hamper government use of wiretaps NSA proposed the concept of key escrow in 1993 and introduced the Clipper chip that would offer stronger protection than DES but would allow access to encrypted data by authorized law enforcement officials 216 The proposal was strongly opposed and key escrow requirements ultimately went nowhere 217 However NSA s Fortezza hardware based encryption cards created for the Clipper project are still used within government and NSA ultimately declassified and published the design of the Skipjack cipher used on the cards 218 219 Dual EC DRBG random number generator cryptotrojan Edit Main article Dual EC DRBG NSA promoted the inclusion of a random number generator called Dual EC DRBG in the U S National Institute of Standards and Technology s 2007 guidelines This led to speculation of a backdoor which would allow NSA access to data encrypted by systems using that pseudorandom number generator PRNG 220 This is now deemed to be plausible based on the fact that output of next iterations of PRNG can provably be determined if relation between two internal Elliptic Curve points is known 221 222 Both NIST and RSA are now officially recommending against the use of this PRNG 223 224 Perfect Citizen Edit Main article Perfect Citizen Perfect Citizen is a program to perform vulnerability assessment by the NSA on U S critical infrastructure 225 226 It was originally reported to be a program to develop a system of sensors to detect cyber attacks on critical infrastructure computer networks in both the private and public sector through a network monitoring system named Einstein 227 228 It is funded by the Comprehensive National Cybersecurity Initiative and thus far Raytheon has received a contract for up to 100 million for the initial stage Academic research Edit NSA has invested many millions of dollars in academic research under grant code prefix MDA904 resulting in over 3 000 papers as of October 11 2007 update NSA CSS has at times attempted to restrict the publication of academic research into cryptography for example the Khufu and Khafre block ciphers were voluntarily withheld in response to an NSA request to do so In response to a FOIA lawsuit in 2013 the NSA released the 643 page research paper titled Untangling the Web A Guide to Internet Research 229 written and compiled by NSA employees to assist other NSA workers in searching for information of interest to the agency on the public Internet 230 Patents Edit NSA has the ability to file for a patent from the U S Patent and Trademark Office under gag order Unlike normal patents these are not revealed to the public and do not expire However if the Patent Office receives an application for an identical patent from a third party they will reveal NSA s patent and officially grant it to NSA for the full term on that date 231 One of NSA s published patents describes a method of geographically locating an individual computer site in an Internet like network based on the latency of multiple network connections 232 Although no public patent exists NSA is reported to have used a similar locating technology called trilateralization that allows real time tracking of an individual s location including altitude from ground level using data obtained from cellphone towers 233 Insignia and memorials Edit The heraldic insignia of NSA consists of an eagle inside a circle grasping a key in its talons 234 The eagle represents the agency s national mission 234 Its breast features a shield with bands of red and white taken from the Great Seal of the United States and representing Congress 234 The key is taken from the emblem of Saint Peter and represents security 234 When the NSA was created the agency had no emblem and used that of the Department of Defense 235 The agency adopted its first of two emblems in 1963 235 The current NSA insignia has been in use since 1965 when then Director LTG Marshall S Carter USA ordered the creation of a device to represent the agency 236 The NSA s flag consists of the agency s seal on a light blue background National Cryptologic Memorial Crews associated with NSA missions have been involved in a number of dangerous and deadly situations 237 The USS Liberty incident in 1967 and USS Pueblo incident in 1968 are examples of the losses endured during the Cold War 237 The National Security Agency Central Security Service Cryptologic Memorial honors and remembers the fallen personnel both military and civilian of these intelligence missions 238 It is made of black granite and has 171 names carved into it as of 2013 update 238 It is located at NSA headquarters A tradition of declassifying the stories of the fallen was begun in 2001 238 Constitutionality legality and privacy questions regarding operations EditSee also Mass surveillance in the United States In the United States at least since 2001 239 there has been legal controversy over what signal intelligence can be used for and how much freedom the National Security Agency has to use signal intelligence 240 In 2015 the government made slight changes in how it uses and collects certain types of data 241 specifically phone records The government was not analyzing the phone records as of early 2019 242 The surveillance programs were deemed unlawful in September 2020 in a court of appeals case 52 Warrantless wiretaps Edit See also NSA warrantless surveillance 2001 07 On December 16 2005 The New York Times reported that under White House pressure and with an executive order from President George W Bush the National Security Agency in an attempt to thwart terrorism had been tapping phone calls made to persons outside the country without obtaining warrants from the United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court a secret court created for that purpose under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act FISA 97 Edward Snowden Edit Edward Snowden is a former American intelligence contractor who revealed in 2013 the existence of secret wide ranging information gathering programs conducted by the National Security Agency NSA 243 More specifically Snowden released information that demonstrated how the United States government was gathering immense amounts of personal communications emails phone locations web histories and more of American citizens without their knowledge 244 One of Snowden s primary motivators for releasing this information was fear of a surveillance state developing as a result of the infrastructure being created by the NSA As Snowden recounts I believe that at this point in history the greatest danger to our freedom and way of life comes from the reasonable fear of omniscient State powers kept in check by nothing more than policy documents It is not that I do not value intelligence but that I oppose omniscient automatic mass surveillance That seems to me a greater threat to the institutions of free society than missed intelligence reports and unworthy of the costs 245 In March 2014 Army General Martin Dempsey Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff told the House Armed Services Committee The vast majority of the documents that Snowden exfiltrated from our highest levels of security had nothing to do with exposing government oversight of domestic activities The vast majority of those were related to our military capabilities operations tactics techniques and procedures 246 When asked in a May 2014 interview to quantify the number of documents Snowden stole retired NSA director Keith Alexander said there was no accurate way of counting what he took but Snowden may have downloaded more than a million documents 247 Other surveillance Edit On January 17 2006 the Center for Constitutional Rights filed a lawsuit CCR v Bush against the George W Bush Presidency The lawsuit challenged the National Security Agency s NSA s surveillance of people within the U S including the interception of CCR emails without securing a warrant first 248 249 In the August 2006 case ACLU v NSA U S District Court Judge Anna Diggs Taylor concluded that NSA s warrantless surveillance program was both illegal and unconstitutional On July 6 2007 the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the decision on the grounds that the ACLU lacked standing to bring the suit 250 In September 2008 the Electronic Frontier Foundation EFF filed a class action lawsuit against the NSA and several high ranking officials of the Bush administration 251 charging an illegal and unconstitutional program of dragnet communications surveillance 252 based on documentation provided by former AT amp T technician Mark Klein 253 As a result of the USA Freedom Act passed by Congress in June 2015 the NSA had to shut down its bulk phone surveillance program on November 29 of the same year The USA Freedom Act forbids the NSA to collect metadata and content of phone calls unless it has a warrant for terrorism investigation In that case the agency must ask the telecom companies for the record which will only be kept for six months The NSA s use of large telecom companies to assist it with its surveillance efforts has caused several privacy concerns 254 1568 69 AT amp T Internet monitoring Edit Further information Hepting v AT amp T Jewel v NSA Mark Klein and NSA warrantless surveillance controversy In May 2008 Mark Klein a former AT amp T employee alleged that his company had cooperated with NSA in installing Narus hardware to replace the FBI Carnivore program to monitor network communications including traffic between U S citizens 255 Data mining Edit NSA was reported in 2008 to use its computing capability to analyze transactional data that it regularly acquires from other government agencies which gather it under their own jurisdictional authorities As part of this effort NSA now monitors huge volumes of records of domestic email data web addresses from Internet searches bank transfers credit card transactions travel records and telephone data according to current and former intelligence officials interviewed by The Wall Street Journal The sender recipient and subject line of emails can be included but the content of the messages or of phone calls are not 256 A 2013 advisory group for the Obama administration seeking to reform NSA spying programs following the revelations of documents released by Edward J Snowden 257 mentioned in Recommendation 30 on page 37 that the National Security Council staff should manage an interagency process to review on a regular basis the activities of the US Government regarding attacks that exploit a previously unknown vulnerability in a computer application Retired cybersecurity expert Richard A Clarke was a group member and stated on April 11 2014 that NSA had no advance knowledge of Heartbleed 258 Illegally obtained evidence Edit Further information Parallel construction Parallel construction in the United States Drug Enforcement Administration In August 2013 it was revealed that a 2005 IRS training document showed that NSA intelligence intercepts and wiretaps both foreign and domestic were being supplied to the Drug Enforcement Administration DEA and Internal Revenue Service IRS and were illegally used to launch criminal investigations of US citizens Law enforcement agents were directed to conceal how the investigations began and recreate an apparently legal investigative trail by re obtaining the same evidence by other means 259 260 Barack Obama administration Edit In the months leading to April 2009 the NSA intercepted the communications of U S citizens including a Congressman although the Justice Department believed that the interception was unintentional The Justice Department then took action to correct the issues and bring the program into compliance with existing laws 261 United States Attorney General Eric Holder resumed the program according to his understanding of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act amendment of 2008 without explaining what had occurred 262 Polls conducted in June 2013 found divided results among Americans regarding NSA s secret data collection 263 Rasmussen Reports found that 59 of Americans disapprove 264 Gallup found that 53 disapprove 265 and Pew found that 56 are in favor of NSA data collection 266 Section 215 metadata collection Edit On April 25 2013 the NSA obtained a court order requiring Verizon s Business Network Services to provide metadata on all calls in its system to the NSA on an ongoing daily basis for a three month period as reported by The Guardian on June 6 2013 This information includes the numbers of both parties on a call location data call duration unique identifiers and the time and duration of all calls but not t he contents of the conversation itself The order relies on the so called business records provision of the Patriot Act 267 268 In August 2013 following the Snowden leaks new details about the NSA s data mining activity were revealed Reportedly the majority of emails into or out of the United States are captured at selected communications links and automatically analyzed for keywords or other selectors Emails that do not match are deleted 269 The utility of such a massive metadata collection in preventing terrorist attacks is disputed Many studies reveal the dragnet like system to be ineffective One such report released by the New America Foundation concluded that after an analysis of 225 terrorism cases the NSA had no discernible impact on preventing acts of terrorism 270 Defenders of the program said that while metadata alone cannot provide all the information necessary to prevent an attack it assures the ability to connect the dots 271 between suspect foreign numbers and domestic numbers with a speed only the NSA s software is capable of One benefit of this is quickly being able to determine the difference between suspicious activity and real threats 272 As an example NSA director General Keith B Alexander mentioned at the annual Cybersecurity Summit in 2013 that metadata analysis of domestic phone call records after the Boston Marathon bombing helped determine that rumors of a follow up attack in New York were baseless 271 In addition to doubts about its effectiveness many people argue that the collection of metadata is an unconstitutional invasion of privacy As of 2015 update the collection process remained legal and grounded in the ruling from Smith v Maryland 1979 A prominent opponent of the data collection and its legality is U S District Judge Richard J Leon who issued a report in 2013 273 in which he stated I cannot imagine a more indiscriminate and arbitrary invasion than this systematic and high tech collection and retention of personal data on virtually every single citizen for purposes of querying and analyzing it without prior judicial approval Surely such a program infringes on that degree of privacy that the founders enshrined in the Fourth Amendment As of May 7 2015 the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled that the interpretation of Section 215 of the Patriot Act was wrong and that the NSA program that has been collecting Americans phone records in bulk is illegal 274 It stated that Section 215 cannot be clearly interpreted to allow government to collect national phone data and as a result expired on June 1 2015 This ruling is the first time a higher level court in the regular judicial system has reviewed the NSA phone records program 275 The replacement law known as the USA Freedom Act which will enable the NSA to continue to have bulk access to citizens metadata but with the stipulation that the data will now be stored by the companies themselves 275 This change will not have any effect on other Agency procedures outside of metadata collection which have purportedly challenged Americans Fourth Amendment rights 276 including Upstream collection a mass of techniques used by the Agency to collect and store American s data communications directly from the Internet backbone 277 Under the Upstream collection program the NSA paid telecommunications companies hundreds of millions of dollars in order to collect data from them 278 While companies such as Google and Yahoo claim that they do not provide direct access from their servers to the NSA unless under a court order 279 the NSA had access to emails phone calls and cellular data users 280 Under this new ruling telecommunications companies maintain bulk user metadata on their servers for at least 18 months to be provided upon request to the NSA 275 This ruling made the mass storage of specific phone records at NSA datacenters illegal but it did not rule on Section 215 s constitutionality 275 Fourth Amendment encroachment Edit In a declassified document it was revealed that 17 835 phone lines were on an improperly permitted alert list from 2006 to 2009 in breach of compliance which tagged these phone lines for daily monitoring 281 282 283 Eleven percent of these monitored phone lines met the agency s legal standard for reasonably articulable suspicion RAS 281 284 The NSA tracks the locations of hundreds of millions of cellphones per day allowing it to map people s movements and relationships in detail 285 The NSA has been reported to have access to all communications made via Google Microsoft Facebook Yahoo YouTube AOL Skype Apple and Paltalk 286 and collects hundreds of millions of contact lists from personal email and instant messaging accounts each year 287 It has also managed to weaken much of the encryption used on the Internet by collaborating with coercing or otherwise infiltrating numerous technology companies to leave backdoors into their systems so that the majority of encryption is inadvertently vulnerable to different forms of attack 288 289 Domestically the NSA has been proven to collect and store metadata records of phone calls 290 including over 120 million US Verizon subscribers 291 as well as intercept vast amounts of communications via the internet Upstream 286 The government s legal standing had been to rely on a secret interpretation of the Patriot Act whereby the entirety of US communications may be considered relevant to a terrorism investigation if it is expected that even a tiny minority may relate to terrorism 292 The NSA also supplies foreign intercepts to the DEA IRS and other law enforcement agencies who use these to initiate criminal investigations Federal agents are then instructed to recreate the investigative trail via parallel construction 293 The NSA also spies on influential Muslims to obtain information that could be used to discredit them such as their use of pornography The targets both domestic and abroad are not suspected of any crime but hold religious or political views deemed radical by the NSA 294 According to a report in The Washington Post in July 2014 relying on information provided by Snowden 90 of those placed under surveillance in the U S are ordinary Americans and are not the intended targets The newspaper said it had examined documents including emails text messages and online accounts that support the claim 295 Congressional oversight Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source Excerpt of James Clapper s testimony before the Senate Select Committee on IntelligenceThe Intelligence Committees of US House and Senate exercise primary oversight over the NSA other members of congress have been denied access to materials and information regarding the agency and its activities 296 The United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court the secret court charged with regulating the NSA s activities is according to its chief judge incapable of investigating or verifying how often the NSA breaks even its own secret rules 297 It has since been reported that the NSA violated its own rules on data access thousands of times a year many of these violations involving large scale data interceptions 298 NSA officers have even used data intercepts to spy on love interests 299 most of the NSA violations were self reported and each instance resulted in administrative action of termination 300 attribution needed The NSA has generally disregarded the special rules for disseminating United States person information by illegally sharing its intercepts with other law enforcement agencies 301 A March 2009 FISA Court opinion which the court released states that protocols restricting data queries had been so frequently and systemically violated that it can be fairly said that this critical element of the overall regime has never functioned effectively 302 303 In 2011 the same court noted that the volume and nature of the NSA s bulk foreign Internet intercepts was fundamentally different from what the court had been led to believe 301 Email contact lists including those of US citizens are collected at numerous foreign locations to work around the illegality of doing so on US soil 287 Legal opinions on the NSA s bulk collection program have differed In mid December 2013 U S District Judge Richard Leon ruled that the almost Orwellian program likely violates the Constitution and wrote I cannot imagine a more indiscriminate and arbitrary invasion than this systematic and high tech collection and retention of personal data on virtually every single citizen for purposes of querying and analyzing it without prior judicial approval Surely such a program infringes on that degree of privacy that the Founders enshrined in the Fourth Amendment Indeed I have little doubt that the author of our Constitution James Madison who cautioned us to beware the abridgement of freedom of the people by gradual and silent encroachments by those in power would be aghast 304 Later that month U S District Judge William Pauley ruled that the NSA s collection of telephone records is legal and valuable in the fight against terrorism In his opinion he wrote a bulk telephony metadata collection program is a wide net that could find and isolate gossamer contacts among suspected terrorists in an ocean of seemingly disconnected data and noted that a similar collection of data prior to 9 11 might have prevented the attack 305 Official responses Edit At a March 2013 Senate Intelligence Committee hearing Senator Ron Wyden asked Director of National Intelligence James Clapper does the NSA collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans Clapper replied No sir Not wittingly There are cases where they could inadvertently perhaps collect but not wittingly 306 This statement came under scrutiny months later in June 2013 when details of the PRISM surveillance program were published showing that the NSA apparently can gain access to the servers of nine Internet companies for a wide range of digital data 306 Wyden said that Clapper had failed to give a straight answer in his testimony Clapper in response to criticism said I responded in what I thought was the most truthful or least untruthful manner Clapper added There are honest differences on the semantics of what when someone says collection to me that has a specific meaning which may have a different meaning to him 306 NSA whistle blower Edward Snowden additionally revealed the existence of XKeyscore a top secret NSA program that allows the agency to search vast databases of the metadata as well as the content of emails and other internet activity such as browser history with capability to search by name telephone number IP address keywords the language in which the internet activity was conducted or the type of browser used 307 XKeyscore provides the technological capability if not the legal authority to target even US persons for extensive electronic surveillance without a warrant provided that some identifying information such as their email or IP address is known to the analyst 307 Regarding the necessity of these NSA programs Alexander stated on June 27 2013 that the NSA s bulk phone and Internet intercepts had been instrumental in preventing 54 terrorist events including 13 in the US and in all but one of these cases had provided the initial tip to unravel the threat stream 308 On July 31 NSA Deputy Director John Inglis conceded to the Senate that these intercepts had not been vital in stopping any terrorist attacks but were close to vital in identifying and convicting four San Diego men for sending US 8 930 to Al Shabaab a militia that conducts terrorism in Somalia 309 310 311 The U S government has aggressively sought to dismiss and challenge Fourth Amendment cases raised against it and has granted retroactive immunity to ISPs and telecoms participating in domestic surveillance 312 313 The U S military has acknowledged blocking access to parts of The Guardian website for thousands of defense personnel across the country 314 315 and blocking the entire Guardian website for personnel stationed throughout Afghanistan the Middle East and South Asia 316 An October 2014 United Nations report condemned mass surveillance by the United States and other countries as violating multiple international treaties and conventions that guarantee core privacy rights 317 Responsibility for international ransomware attack Edit An exploit dubbed EternalBlue created by the NSA was used in the unprecedented worldwide WannaCry ransomware attack in May 2017 318 The exploit had been leaked online by a hacking group The Shadow Brokers nearly a month prior to the attack A number of experts have pointed the finger at the NSA s non disclosure of the underlying vulnerability and their loss of control over the EternalBlue attack tool that exploited it Edward Snowden said that if the NSA had privately disclosed the flaw used to attack hospitals when they found it not when they lost it the attack might not have happened 319 Wikipedia co founder Jimmy Wales stated that he joined with Microsoft and the other leaders of the industry in saying this is a huge screw up by the government the moment the NSA found it they should have notified Microsoft so they could quietly issue a patch and really chivvy people along long before it became a huge problem 320 Activities of previous employees Edit Former employee David Evenden who had left the NSA to work for US defense contractor Cyperpoint at a position in the United Arab Emirates was tasked with hacking UAE neighbor Qatar in 2015 to determine if they were funding terrorist group Muslim Brotherhood He quit the company after learning his team had hacked Qatari Sheikha Moza bint Nasser s email exchanges with Michelle Obama just prior to her visit to Doha 321 Upon Evenden s return to the US he reported his experiences to the FBI The incident highlights a growing trend of former NSA employees and contractors leaving the agency to start up their own firms and then hiring out to countries like Turkey Sudan and even Russia a country involved in numerous cyberattacks against the US 321 2021 Denmark NSA collaborative surveillance Edit Further information Operation Dunhammer In May 2021 it was reported that Danish Defence Intelligence Service collaborated with NSA to wiretap on fellow EU members and leaders 322 323 leading to wide backlash among EU countries and demands for explanation from Danish and American governments 324 See also EditPortal United States Australian Signals Directorate ASD Australia Criticomm FAPSI Russia 1991 2003 Garda National Surveillance Unit NSU Ireland GCHQ United Kingdom Ghidra software Internal Security Department Singapore ISD Singapore Korean Air Lines Flight 007 Harold T Martin III Mass surveillance in the United Kingdom Ministry of State Security Stasi former German Democratic Republic Ministry of State Security China MSS China National Intelligence Priorities Framework National Technical Research Organisation NTRO India Operation Ivy Bells Operation Eikonal Special Communications Service of Russia Spetssvyaz Russia Unit 8200 Israel s equivalent to the NSA U S Department of Defense Strategy for Operating in CyberspaceNotes Edit Burns Thomas L 1990 The Origins of the National Security Agency PDF United States Cryptologic History National Security Agency p 97 Archived from the original PDF on March 22 2016 a b 60 Years of Defending Our Nation PDF National Security Agency 2012 p 3 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 06 14 Retrieved July 6 2013 On November 4 2012 the National Security Agency NSA celebrates its 60th anniversary of providing critical information to U S decision makers and Armed Forces personnel in defense of our Nation NSA has evolved from a staff of approximately 7 600 military and civilian employees housed in 1952 in a vacated school in Arlington VA into a workforce of more than 30 000 demographically diverse men and women located at NSA headquarters in Ft Meade MD in four national Cryptologic Centers and at sites throughout the world Priest Dana July 21 2013 NSA growth fueled by need to target terrorists The Washington Post Retrieved July 22 2013 Since the attacks of Sept 11 2001 its civilian and military workforce has grown by one third to about 33 000 according to the NSA Its budget has roughly doubled a b c d Introverted Then NSA wants you Archived 2020 11 06 at the Wayback Machine Florida Championship Wrestling April 2012 Retrieved July 1 2013 a b Rosenbach Marcel Stark Holger Stock Jonathan June 10 2013 Prism Exposed Data Surveillance with Global Implications Spiegel Online Spiegel Online International p 2 How can an intelligence agency even one as large and well staffed as the NSA with its 40 000 employees work meaningfully with such a flood of information a b Gellman Barton Greg Miller August 29 2013 U S spy network s successes failures and objectives detailed in black budget summary The Washington Post p 3 Retrieved August 29 2013 Shane Scott August 29 2013 New Leaked Document Outlines U S Spending on Intelligence Agencies The New York Times Retrieved August 29 2013 About NSA Mission National Security Agency Retrieved September 14 2014 a b Ellen Nakashima January 26 2008 Bush Order Expands Network Monitoring Intelligence Agencies to Track Intrusions The Washington Post Retrieved February 9 2008 Executive Order 13470 2008 Amendments to Executive Order 12333 United States Intelligence Activities July 30 2008 PDF Schorr Daniel January 29 2006 A Brief History of the NSA NPR Retrieved September 15 2021 Bamford James Body of Secrets Anatomy of the Ultra Secret National Security Agency Random House Digital Inc December 18 2007 Malkin Bonnie NSA surveillance US bugged EU offices The Daily Telegraph June 30 2013 Ngak Chenda NSA leaker Snowden claimed U S and Israel co wrote Stuxnet virus CBS July 9 2013 Bamford James June 12 2013 The Secret War Wired Archived from the original on January 25 2014 Lichtblau Eric February 28 2001 Spy Suspect May Have Revealed U S Bugging Espionage Hanssen left signs that he told Russia where top secret overseas eavesdropping devices are placed 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Agency pp 107 08 Archived from the original PDF on March 22 2016 Anne Gearan June 7 2013 No Such Agency spies on the communications of the world The Washington Post Retrieved November 9 2013 Shane Scott October 31 2005 Vietnam Study Casting Doubts Remains Secret The New York Times The National Security Agency has kept secret since 2001 a finding by an agency historian that during the Tonkin Gulf episode which helped precipitate the Vietnam War a b Declassified NSA Files Show Agency Spied on Muhammad Ali and MLK Operation Minaret Set Up in the 1960s to Monitor Anti Vietnam Critics Branded Disreputable If Not Outright Illegal by NSA Itself The Guardian September 26 2013 Boak David G July 1973 1966 A History of U S Communications Security the David G Boak Lectures Vol 1 PDF 2015 partial declassification ed Ft George G Meade MD U S National Security Agency Retrieved 2017 04 23 Pre Emption The Nsa And The Telecoms Spying On The Home Front FRONTLINE PBS pbs org Cohen Martin 2006 No Holiday 80 Places You Don t Want to Visit New York Disinformation Company Ltd ISBN 978 1 932857 29 0 Retrieved March 14 2014 William Burr ed September 25 2017 National Security Agency Tracking of U S Citizens Questionable Practices from 1960s amp 1970s National Security Archive Retrieved August 2 2018 a b c Bill Moyers Journal October 26 2007 The Church Committee and FISA Public Affairs Television Retrieved June 28 2013 Book IV Supplementary Detailed Staff Reports on Foreign and Military Intelligence 94th Congress Senate report 94 755 PDF United States Senate Select Committee on Intelligence April 23 1976 p 67 72 Archived from the original PDF on September 22 2013 Retrieved June 28 2013 Book II Intelligence Activities and the Rights of Americans 94th Congress Senate report 94 755 PDF United States Senate Select Committee on Intelligence April 26 1976 p 124 108 Archived from the original PDF on May 21 2013 Retrieved June 28 2013 Seymour M Hersh February 22 1987 Target Qaddafi The New York Times Retrieved January 12 2014 David Wise May 18 1986 Espionage Case Pits CIA Against News Media The Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 12 2014 the President took an unprecedented step in discussing the content of the Libyan cables He was by implication revealing that NSA had broken the Libyan code Peggy Becker October 1999 Development of Surveillance Technology and Risk of Abuse of Economic Information Report STOA European Parliament p 12 Archived from the original on January 25 2014 Retrieved November 3 2013 a b c Staff June 13 2003 NSA honors 4 in the science of codes The Baltimore Sun Tribune Company Archived from the original on June 14 2013 Retrieved June 11 2013 James Bamford 2007 Body of Secrets Anatomy of the Ultra Secret National Security Agency Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group p 454 ISBN 978 0 307 42505 8 Koblitz Neal 2008 Random Curves Journeys of a Mathematician Springer Verlag p 312 ISBN 9783540740773 Landau Susan 2015 NSA and Dual EC DRBG Deja Vu All Over Again The Mathematical Intelligencer 37 4 72 83 doi 10 1007 s00283 015 9543 z S2CID 124392006 Curtis Sophie 13 November 2014 Ex NSA technical chief How 9 11 created the surveillance state The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 2022 01 11 In 2002 Brian Snow was moved from the technical directorship of IAD to a different position within the NSA that had high status but little influence particularly with regard to actions that were being proposed by SIGINT Mike Jacobs retired from the NSA the same year Koblitz Neal Menezes Alfred J 2016 A riddle wrapped in an enigma IEEE Security amp Privacy 14 6 34 42 doi 10 1109 MSP 2016 120 S2CID 2310733 Footnote 9 in the full version see A riddle wrapped in an enigma PDF Retrieved 12 April 2018 Gorman Siobhan May 17 2006 NSA killed system that sifted phone data legally Baltimore Sun Tribune Company Chicago IL Archived from the original on September 27 2007 Retrieved March 7 2008 The privacy protections offered by ThinThread were also abandoned in the post September 11 push by the president for a faster response to terrorism Bamford Shadow Factory pp 325 340 Baltimore Sun May 6 2007 Management shortcomings seen at NSA baltimoresun com a b NSA surveillance exposed by Snowden ruled unlawful BBC News 3 September 2020 Retrieved 4 September 2020 Bamford James December 25 2005 The Agency That Could Be Big Brother The New York Times Retrieved September 11 2005 Dana Priest William Arkin July 19 2010 A hidden world growing beyond control The Washington Post Archived from the original on May 15 2013 Retrieved April 12 2015 National Security Agency and the U S Department of Homeland Security Form New Partnership to Increase National Focus on Cyber Security Education Press release NSA Public and Media Affairs April 22 2004 Archived from the original on 2009 01 17 Retrieved July 4 2008 Mission amp Combat Support www nsa gov Retrieved 2022 01 21 Hager Nicky 1996 Secret Power New Zealand s Role in the International Spy Network Craig Potton Publishing p 55 ISBN 978 0 908802 35 7 a b c It s kind of a legacy system this whole idea the Echelon Bamford said Communications have changed a great deal since they built it in Muir Pat May 27 2013 Secret Yakima facility may be outdated expert says Yakima Herald Republic Seattle Times Archived from the original on June 16 2013 Retrieved June 15 2013 Richelson Jeffrey T Ball Desmond 1985 The Ties That Bind Intelligence Cooperation Between the UKUSA Countries London Allen amp Unwin ISBN 0 04 327092 1 Patrick S Poole Echelon America s Secret Global Surveillance Network Washington D C Free Congress Foundation October 1998 Echelon 60 Minutes February 27 2000 Campbell Duncan August 12 1988 They ve Got It Taped PDF New Statesman via duncancampbell org Archived from the original PDF on June 14 2013 Retrieved June 19 2007 Bomford Andrew November 3 1999 Echelon spy network revealed BBC Retrieved June 7 2013 European Parliament Report on Echelon PDF July 2001 Retrieved July 4 2008 Glenn Greenwald November 26 2013 Top Secret Documents Reveal NSA Spied on Porn Habits as Part of Plan to Discredit Radicalizers The Huffington Post London Retrieved May 6 2014 James Risen Laura Poitras May 31 2014 N S A Collecting Millions of Faces From Web Images The New York Times Retrieved June 1 2014 Ellen Nakashima Joby Warrick July 14 2013 For NSA chief terrorist threat drives passion to collect it all observers say The Washington Post Retrieved July 15 2013 Collect it all tag it store it And whatever it is you want you go searching for it Glenn Greenwald July 15 2013 The crux of the NSA story in one phrase collect it all The actual story that matters is not hard to see the NSA is attempting to collect monitor and store all forms of human communication The Guardian Retrieved July 16 2013 Greg Miller and Julie Tate October 17 2013 Documents reveal NSA s extensive involvement in targeted killing program The Washington Post Retrieved October 18 2013 Laura Poitras Marcel Rosenbach Fidelius Schmid und Holger Stark Geheimdokumente NSA horcht EU Vertretungen mit Wanzen aus Der Spiegel in German Retrieved June 29 2013 US Geheimdienst horte Zentrale der Vereinten Nationen ab Der Spiegel in German Retrieved August 25 2013 Spiegel de Wikileaks Enthullung NSA soll auch franzosische Wirtschaft bespizelt haben German June 2015 Wikileaks Und taglich grusst die NSA Handelsblatt com July 9 2015 Archived from the original on October 18 2017 Retrieved March 10 2017 Schultz Tanjev US Spionage ist eine Demutigung fur Deutschland Suddeutsche de Retrieved 23 February 2022 NSA tapped German Chancellery for decades WikiLeaks claims The Guardian Reuters 8 July 2015 France in the NSA s crosshair phone networks under surveillance Le Monde October 21 2013 Perlroth Nicole September 10 2013 Government Announces Steps to Restore Confidence on Encryption Standards The New York Times Bits blog a b Perlroth Nicole Larson Jeff and Shane Scott September 5 2013 The NSA s Secret Campaign to Crack Undermine Internet Security ProPublica This story has been reported in partnership between The New York Times the Guardian and ProPublica based on documents obtained by The Guardian For the Guardian James Ball Julian Borger Glenn Greenwald For the New York Times Nicole Perlroth Scott Shane For ProPublica Jeff Larson a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Schneier on Security The Strange Story of Dual EC DRBG Schneier com November 15 2007 Retrieved October 9 2013 J Appelbaum A Gibson J Goetz V Kabisch L Kampf L Ryge July 3 2014 NSA targets the privacy conscious Panorama Norddeutscher Rundfunk Retrieved July 4 2014 Lena Kampf Jacob Appelbaum amp John Goetz Norddeutscher Rundfunk July 3 2014 Deutsche im Visier des US Geheimdienstes Von der NSA als Extremist gebrandmarkt in German ARD TechWeekEurope Linus Torvalds Jokes The NSA Wanted A Backdoor In Linux linuxfoundation org Archived from the original on 2015 09 16 NSA Asked Linus Torvalds To Install Backdoors Into GNU Linux falkvinge net Civil Liberties Justice and Home Affairs Hearings europa eu The Swedes discover Lotus Notes has key escrow The Risks Digest Volume 19 Issue 52 December 24 1997 Only NSA can listen so that s OK Heise 1999 Gallagher Sean May 14 2014 Photos of an NSA upgrade factory show Cisco router getting implant Ars Technica Whitwam Ryan December 30 2013 The NSA regularly intercepts laptop shipments to implant malware report says extremetech com Archived copy Archived from the original on 2015 03 10 Retrieved 2015 03 10 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link nsa gov The NSA story Archived 2014 12 09 at the Wayback Machine retrieved January 19 2015 Page 3 NSA will work with the FBI and other agencies to connect the dots between foreign based actors and their activities in the U S Domestic Surveillance Directorate website Nsa gov1 info retrieved January 19 2015 The Definitive NSA Parody Site Is Actually Informative Forbes com retrieved January 19 2015 John D Bates October 3 2011 redacted PDF pp 73 74 a b David Alan Jordan Decrypting the Fourth Amendment Warrantless NSA Surveillance and the Enhanced Expectation of Privacy Provided by Encrypted Voice over Internet Protocol Archived 2007 10 30 at the Wayback Machine Boston College Law Review May 2006 Last access date January 23 2007 Provost Colin 2009 President George W Bush s Influence Over Bureaucracy and Policy Palgrave Macmillan pp 94 99 ISBN 978 0 230 60954 9 Charlie Savage 2015 09 20 George W Bush Made Retroactive N S A Fix After Hospital Room Showdown The New York Times a b James Risen amp Eric Lichtblau December 16 2005 Bush Lets U S Spy on Callers Without Courts The New York Times Gwu edu Gwu edu Retrieved October 9 2013 Hamdan v Rumsfeld Secretary of Defense Et Al Certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit PDF Supreme Court of the United States 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2013 09 03 Retrieved June 17 2013 McCarthy Susan The truth about the polygraph Salon Retrieved July 5 2013 a b Nagesh Gautham June 14 2010 NSA video tries to dispel fear about polygraph use during job interviews The Hill Retrieved June 15 2013 a b Stein Jeff NSA lie detectors no sweat video says The Washington Post June 14 2010 Retrieved July 5 2013 Maschke George 13 June 2010 The Truth About the Polygraph According to the NSA Youtube Archived from the original on 2021 12 11 Retrieved 15 July 2020 Drezner Daniel Tone Deaf at the Listening Post Archived 2014 08 25 at the Wayback Machine Foreign Policy December 16 2013 Retrieved March 1 2014 Snowden has also changed the way the NSA is doing business Analysts have gone from being polygraphed once every five years to once every quarter https dc newhire com faqs faq 4 Is anyone exempt from this law District of Columbia New Hire Registry FAQ Retrieved 18 November 2021 60 Years of Defending Our Nation PDF National Security Agency 2012 p 15 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as a shopping centre golf courses chain restaurants and every other accoutrement of Anywhere USA in Free introduction to Who s reading your emails The Sunday Times June 9 2013 Archived from the original on June 14 2013 Retrieved June 11 2013 subscription required Sernovitz Daniel J NSA opens doors for local businesses Baltimore Business Journal August 26 2010 Updated August 27 2010 Retrieved June 11 2013 But for many more the event was the first time attendees got the chance to take the NSA Employees Only exit off the Baltimore Washington Parkway beyond the restricted gates of the agency s headquarters Weiland and Wilsey p 208 housing integration has invalidated Montpelier s Ivory Pass and the National Security Agency has posted an exit ramp off the Baltimore Washington Parkway that reads NSA Grier Peter and Harry Bruinius In the end NSA might not need to snoop so secretly The Christian Science Monitor June 18 2013 Retrieved July 1 2013 a b c Barnett Mark L April 26 2011 Small Business 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more than 100 fixed watch posts within the secret city manned by the armed NSA police It is here that clearances are checked and visitor badges are issued a b c Bamford Body of Secrets Anatomy of the Ultra Secret National Security Agency p 490 And then there is the red badge and is normally worn by people working in the Red Corridor the drugstore and other concession areas Those with a red badge are forbidden to go anywhere near classified information and are restricted to a few corridors and administrative areas the bank the barbershop the cafeteria the credit union the airline and entertainment ticket counters and Once inside the white pentagonal Visitor Control Center employees are greeted by a six foot painting of the NSA seal Bamford Body of Secrets Anatomy of the Ultra Secret National Security Agency p 489 It is here that clearances are checked and visitor badges are issued Bamford Body of Secrets Anatomy of the Ultra Secret National Security Agency p 491 From the Visitor Control Center one enters the eleven story million OPS2A the tallest building in the City Shaped like a dark glass Rubik s Cube the building houses much of NSA s Operations Directorate which is responsible for processing the ocean of intercepts and prying open the complex cipher systems a b c d e f Bamford James June 12 2013 The Secret War Wired Retrieved June 12 2013 Career Fields Other Opportunities NSA Police Officers section of the NSA website Nsa gov Retrieved October 9 2013 T C Carrington Debra L Z Potts September 1999 National Security Agency Newsletter Protective Services More Than Meets the Eye An Overview of NSA s Protective Services volume XLVII No 9 PDF nsa gov pp 8 10 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 18 a b Explore NSA Archive National Security Agency Retrieved June 12 2013 Other Locations and Our employees live along the Colonial era streets of Annapolis and Georgetown in the suburban surroundings of Columbia near the excitement of Baltimore s Inner Harbor along rolling 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