Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI) walked out of Arlen Specter’s

http://www.therandirhodesshow.com/live/
DEVELOPING: NSA spook Gen. Michael Hayden is undergoing
CIA Director conformation hearings today. Hayden insists
that it’s legal to spy on Americans, Republicans offer
praise, Democrats don’t get their questions
answered…oversight GOP style.
Just before USA Today broke the news of Bush’s latest
illegal program that spies on all Americans without
oversight, Bush gave John “Death Squad” Negroponte
Presidential Powers to let the phone companies break the
law then lie about it.
LINK:
And shocking details from an AT&T whistleblower have now
been made public.
LINK:
=====================
Published on Wednesday, May 17, 2006 by Wired
AT&T Whistle-Blower's Evidence
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0517-10.htm
Former AT&T technician Mark Klein is the key witness in
the Electronic Frontier Foundation's class-action
lawsuit against the company, which alleges that AT&T
illegally cooperated in an illegal National Security
Agency domestic-surveillance program.
In this recently surfaced statement, Klein details his
discovery of an alleged surveillance operation in an
AT&T office in San Francisco, and offers his
interpretation of company documents that he believes
support his case.
For its part, AT&T is asking a federal judge to keep
those documents out of court, and to order the EFF to
return them to the company. Here Wired News presents
Klein's statement in its entirety, along with select
pages from the AT&T documents.
AT&T's Implementation of NSA Spying on American Citizens
31 December 2005
I wrote the following document in 2004 when it became
clear to me that AT&T, at the behest of the National
Security Agency, had illegally installed secret computer
gear designed to spy on internet traffic. At the time I
thought this was an outgrowth of the notorious Total
Information Awareness program which was attacked by
defenders of civil liberties. But now it's been revealed
by The New York Times that the spying program is vastly
bigger and was directly authorized by President Bush, as
he himself has now admitted, in flagrant violation of
specific statutes and constitutional protections for
civil liberties. I am presenting this information to
facilitate the dismantling of this dangerous Orwellian
project.
AT&T Deploys Government Spy Gear on WorldNet Network
-- 16 January, 2004
In 2003 AT&T built "secret rooms" hidden deep in the
bowels of its central offices in various cities, housing
computer gear for a government spy operation which taps
into the company's popular WorldNet service and the
entire internet. These installations enable the
government to look at every individual message on the
internet and analyze exactly what people are doing.
Documents showing the hardwire installation in San
Francisco suggest that there are similar locations being
installed in numerous other cities.
The physical arrangement, the timing of its
construction, the government-imposed secrecy surrounding
it, and other factors all strongly suggest that its
origins are rooted in the Defense Department's Total
Information Awareness (TIA) program which brought forth
vigorous protests from defenders of constitutionally
protected civil liberties last year:
"As the director of the effort, Vice Adm. John M.
Poindexter, has described the system in Pentagon
documents and in speeches, it will provide intelligence
analysts and law enforcement officials with instant
access to information from internet mail and calling
records to credit card and banking transactions and
travel documents, without a search warrant." The New
York Times, 9 November 2002
To mollify critics, the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (Darpa) spokesmen have repeatedly
asserted that they are only conducting "research" using
"artificial synthetic data" or information from "normal
DOD intelligence channels" and hence there are "no U.S.
citizen privacy implications" (Department of Defense,
Office of the Inspector General report on TIA, December
12, 2003). They also changed the name of the program to
"Terrorism Information Awareness" to make it more
politically palatable. But feeling the heat, Congress
made a big show of allegedly cutting off funding for TIA
in late 2003, and the political fallout resulted in Adm.
Poindexter's abrupt resignation last August. However,
the fine print reveals that Congress eliminated funding
only for "the majority of the TIA components," allowing
several "components" to continue (DOD, ibid). The
essential hardware elements of a TIA-type spy program
are being surreptitiously slipped into "real world"
telecommunications offices.
In San Francisco the "secret room" is Room 641A at 611
Folsom Street, the site of a large SBC phone building,
three floors of which are occupied by AT&T. High-speed
fiber-optic circuits come in on the 8th floor and run
down to the 7th floor where they connect to routers for
AT&T's WorldNet service, part of the latter's vital
"Common Backbone." In order to snoop on these circuits,
a special cabinet was installed and cabled to the
"secret room" on the 6th floor to monitor the
information going through the circuits. (The location
code of the cabinet is 070177.04, which denotes the 7th
floor, aisle 177 and bay 04.) The "secret room" itself
is roughly 24-by-48 feet, containing perhaps a dozen
cabinets including such equipment as Sun servers and two
Juniper routers, plus an industrial-size air
conditioner.
The normal work force of unionized technicians in the
office are forbidden to enter the "secret room," which
has a special combination lock on the main door. The
telltale sign of an illicit government spy operation is
the fact that only people with security clearance from
the National Security Agency can enter this room. In
practice this has meant that only one management-level
technician works in there. Ironically, the one who set
up the room was laid off in late 2003 in one of the
company's endless "downsizings," but he was quickly
replaced by another.
Plans for the "secret room" were fully drawn up by
December 2002, curiously only four months after Darpa
started awarding contracts for TIA. One 60-page
document, identified as coming from "AT&T Labs
Connectivity & Net Services" and authored by the labs'
consultant Mathew F. Casamassima, is titled Study Group
3, LGX/Splitter Wiring, San Francisco and dated
12/10/02. (See sample PDF 1-4.) This document addresses
the special problem of trying to spy on fiber-optic
circuits. Unlike copper wire circuits which emit
electromagnetic fields that can be tapped into without
disturbing the circuits, fiber-optic circuits do not
"leak" their light signals. In order to monitor such
communications, one has to physically cut into the fiber
somehow and divert a portion of the light signal to see
the information.
This problem is solved with "splitters" which literally
split off a percentage of the light signal so it can be
examined. This is the purpose of the special cabinet
referred to above: Circuits are connected into it, the
light signal is split into two signals, one of which is
diverted to the "secret room." The cabinet is totally
unnecessary for the circuit to perform -- in fact it
introduces problems since the signal level is reduced by
the splitter -- its only purpose is to enable a third
party to examine the data flowing between sender and
recipient on the internet.
The above-referenced document includes a diagram (PDF 3)
showing the splitting of the light signal, a portion of
which is diverted to "SG3 Secure Room," i.e., the
so-called "Study Group" spy room. Another page headlined
"Cabinet Naming" (PDF 2) lists not only the "splitter"
cabinet but also the equipment installed in the "SG3"
room, including various Sun devices, and Juniper M40e
and M160 "backbone" routers. PDF file 4 shows one of
many tables detailing the connections between the
"splitter" cabinet on the 7th floor (location 070177.04)
and a cabinet in the "secret room" on the 6th floor
(location 060903.01). Since the San Francisco "secret
room" is numbered 3, the implication is that there are
at least several more in other cities (Seattle, San
Jose, Los Angeles and San Diego are some of the rumored
locations), which likely are spread across the United
States.
One of the devices in the "Cabinet Naming" list is
particularly revealing as to the purpose of the "secret
room": a Narus STA 6400. Narus is a 7-year-old company
which, because of its particular niche, appeals not only
to businessmen (it is backed by AT&T, JP Morgan and
Intel, among others) but also to police, military and
intelligence officials. Last November 13-14, for
instance, Narus was the "Lead Sponsor" for a technical
conference held in McLean, Virginia, titled
"Intelligence Support Systems for Lawful Interception
and Internet Surveillance." Police officials, FBI and
DEA agents, and major telecommunications companies eager
to cash in on the "war on terror" had gathered in the
hometown of the CIA to discuss their special problems.
Among the attendees were AT&T, BellSouth, MCI, Sprint
and Verizon. Narus founder, Dr. Ori Cohen, gave a
keynote speech. So what does the Narus STA 6400 do?
"The (Narus) STA Platform consists of stand-alone
traffic analyzers that collect network and customer
usage information in real time directly from the
message.... These analyzers sit on the message pipe into
the ISP (internet service provider) cloud rather than
tap into each router or ISP device" (Telecommunications
magazine, April 2000). A Narus press release (1 Dec.,
1999) also boasts that its Semantic Traffic Analysis (STA)
technology "captures comprehensive customer usage data
... and transforms it into actionable information....
(It) is the only technology that provides complete
visibility for all internet applications."
To implement this scheme, WorldNet's high-speed data
circuits already in service had to be rerouted to go
through the special "splitter" cabinet. This was
addressed in another document of 44 pages from AT&T
Labs, titled "SIMS, Splitter Cut-In and Test Procedure,"
dated 01/13/03 (PDF 5-6). "SIMS" is an unexplained
reference to the secret room. Part of this reads as
follows:
"A WMS (work) Ticket will be issued by the AT&T
Bridgeton Network Operation Center (NOC) to charge time
for performing the work described in this procedure
document....
"This procedure covers the steps required to insert
optical splitters into select live Common Backbone (CBB)
OC3, OC12 and OC48 optical circuits."
The NOC referred to is in Bridgeton, Missouri, and
controls WorldNet operations. (As a sign that government
spying goes hand-in-hand with union-busting, the entire
(Communication Workers of America) Local 6377 which had
jurisdiction over the Bridgeton NOC was wiped out in
early 2002 when AT&T fired the union work force and
later rehired them as nonunion "management" employees.)
The cut-in work was performed in 2003, and since then
new circuits are connected through the "splitter"
cabinet.
Another "Cut-In and Test Procedure" document dated
January 24, 2003, provides diagrams of how AT&T Core
Network circuits were to be run through the "splitter"
cabinet (PDF 7). One page lists the circuit IDs of key
Peering Links which were "cut-in" in February 2003 (PDF
8), including ConXion, Verio, XO, Genuity, Qwest, PAIX,
Allegiance, AboveNet, Global Crossing, C&W, UUNET, Level
3, Sprint, Telia, PSINet and Mae West. By the way, Mae
West is one of two key internet nodal points in the
United States (the other, Mae East, is in Vienna,
Virginia). It's not just WorldNet customers who are
being spied on -- it's the entire internet.
The next logical question is, what central command is
collecting the data sent by the various "secret rooms"?
One can only make educated guesses, but perhaps the
answer was inadvertently given in the DOD Inspector
General's report (cited above):
"For testing TIA capabilities, Darpa and the U.S. Army
Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM) created an
operational research and development environment that
uses real-time feedback. The main node of TIA is located
at INSCOM (in Fort Belvoir, Virginia)…."
Among the agencies participating or planning to
participate in the INSCOM "testing" are the "National
Security Agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency, the
Central Intelligence Agency, the DOD Counterintelligence
Field Activity, the U.S. Strategic Command, the Special
Operations Command, the Joint Forces Command and the
Joint Warfare Analysis Center." There are also
"discussions" going on to bring in "non-DOD federal
agencies" such as the FBI.
This is the infrastructure for an Orwellian police
state. It must be shut down!
© Copyright 2006, Lycos, Inc.
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