Meltdown Showed Extent of NSA Surveillance — and Other Tales From Hundreds of Intelligence Documents

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The problem had been brewing for nearly a decade, intelligence sources had warned, as the National Security Agency vacuumed up more and more surveillance information into computer systems at its Fort Meade, Maryland, headquarters: There just wasn’t enough power coming through the local electric grid to support the rate at which the agency was hoarding other people’s communications.

“If there’s a major power failure out there, any backup systems would be inadequate to power the whole facility,” a former NSA manager told the Baltimore Sun in August 2006.

“It’s obviously worrisome, particularly on days like today.”

It turns out that manager, and other sources quoted in the Sun piece, were even more correct than was publicly known at the time: The NSA had, just the prior month, already experienced a major power outage and been forced for the first time to switch over its most critical monitoring — its nerve center, the National Security Operations Center — to a backup facility in Augusta, Georgia, according to an internal report classified “secret.” The culprit: hot weather and electric company problems generating sufficient power, according to an article posted on the internal agency news site known as SIDtoday.

For the NSA, the relatively smooth handoff was a triumph. But the incident marked an important turning point, underlining how the NSA was collecting too much information for its facilities to handle. The agency would go on to build a massive data center in a barren stretch of Utah desert, estimated to be capable of holding billions of gigabytes of information.

Indeed, the story of the 2006 Fort Meade brownout is one of several stories of overwhelming mass surveillance to emerge from a review of 287 SIDtoday articles, provided by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden. Other tales, collected below, include how an NSA intern working in the English countryside marked for killing or capture nine people in Iraq; how a secret team of NSA commandos deployed to foreign countries to break codes; and how the NSA spied on satellite internet systems in the Middle East.

The Intercept is publishing three other articles taken from this cache of documents, including an investigation by Henrik Moltke into how revolutionary intelligence pooling technology first used by the U.S., Norway, and other allies in Afghanistan spread to the U.S.-Mexico border — raising questions about over-sharing at home and abroad. In another article, Miriam Pensack reveals how the sinking of the Russian submarine Kursk in 2000 was closely monitored by Norwegian (and eventually U.S.) intelligence, which knew more about the tragedy than was initially revealed. And Murtaza Hussain shows how the NSA drew up new rules in response to a request from its Israeli counterpart, which had sought to use U.S. intelligence to target killings, apparently at Hezbollah.

NSA Commando Unit Promised “Any Target, Anywhere, Any Time”
In 1966, a new NSA project was hatched to figure out why an electronic signal under surveillance was “exhibiting parameters outside normal operating conditions,” as an NSA history later put it. Members of “WEREWOLF,” as the project was to be called, concluded that the equipment used to monitor the signal was causing the abnormalities.

The team behind WEREWOLF would go on to conduct other “special deployment” missions, but not before a change of cover name. The unit chief decided that WEREWOLF, atop a list of automatically generated possibilities, wasn’t quite right and, reading further down, settled on the more heroic-sounding “MUSKETEEER.” At some point, the unit took on the credo “Any Target, Anywhere, Any Time.”​
 
don't worry----the kinks in the system will be ironed out. IT IS VITAL
 
don't worry----the kinks in the system will be ironed out. IT IS VITAL

A miniature " package nuke " plant would solve the problem very quickly.

For a tiny footprint and ultimately replaceable components you just can't beat that system.

They could have a hundred megawatts of power at their beck and call for pretty cheap money.

Jo
 
don't worry----the kinks in the system will be ironed out. IT IS VITAL

A miniature " package nuke " plant would solve the problem very quickly.

For a tiny footprint and ultimately replaceable components you just can't beat that system.

They could have a hundred megawatts of power at their beck and call for pretty cheap money.

Jo

do not be afraid------you are not part of the data base
 
don't worry----the kinks in the system will be ironed out. IT IS VITAL

A miniature " package nuke " plant would solve the problem very quickly.

For a tiny footprint and ultimately replaceable components you just can't beat that system.

They could have a hundred megawatts of power at their beck and call for pretty cheap money.

Jo

do not be afraid------you are not part of the data base
All Americans are being surveilled by the NSA, a clear and indisputable violation of the Fourth Amendment. Yet nothing is done about it. This is but one example among many, in which the federal government ignores the law. The police state rolls on.

The NSA Continues to Violate Americans' Internet Privacy Rights
 
All Americans are being surveilled by the NSA, a clear and indisputable violation of the Fourth Amendment. Yet nothing is done about it. This is but one example among many, in which the federal government ignores the law. The police state rolls on.

You worried the NSA is going to find out about your Midget Pron fetish?
 
All Americans are being surveilled by the NSA, a clear and indisputable violation of the Fourth Amendment. Yet nothing is done about it. This is but one example among many, in which the federal government ignores the law. The police state rolls on.

You worried the NSA is going to find out about your Midget Pron fetish?
I’m worried about unlimited government, if you had any brains you would be too.
 
Other tales, collected below, include how an NSA intern working in the English countryside marked for killing or capture nine people in Iraq; how a secret team of NSA commandos deployed to foreign countries to break codes; and how the NSA spied on satellite internet systems in the Middle East.
Does this killing or capture in Iraq include folks like Baghdad Bob and other Saddam cronies including those monster kids of his? If so, what's the problem? Didn't Bush publish a 'deck of cards' with photos of wanted officials? This article makes a lot of assumptive conclusions about 'maybes'. Taking this article at face value could be a mistake. Technology is always overcoming our ability to 'keep up'. If it passed the capacity of the local grid, is that not a common complaint?
 
All Americans are being surveilled by the NSA, a clear and indisputable violation of the Fourth Amendment. Yet nothing is done about it. This is but one example among many, in which the federal government ignores the law. The police state rolls on.

You worried the NSA is going to find out about your Midget Pron fetish?
I’m worried about unlimited government, if you had any brains you would be too.
What? We simply cannot have a limited, smaller government. That is so very fascist of you, don't you know.
 
The government insists that it uses this program to target foreigners, but that’s only half the picture: In reality, it uses PRISM as a backdoor into Americans’ private communications, violating the Fourth Amendment on a massive scale. We don’t know the total number of Americans affected, even today, because the government has refused to provide any estimate.
The NSA Continues to Violate Americans' Internet Privacy Rights


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