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THE NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY (NSA)

by  B.Raman

 

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The US National Security Agency (NSA) was set up on November 1, 1952, to unify all foreign communications intelligence (COMINT) activities of the US Govt. in order to improve collection, production and dissemination and make it cost-effective. However, other intelligence agencies were allowed to continue their separate COMINT activities with the approval of the National Security Council (NSC).

On December 23,1971, it was decided to expand the charter of the NSA to cover Electronic (ELINT) and Telemetric intelligence (TELINT) also under the head SIGINT. It was also entrusted with the responsibility for preventing foreign penetration of US SIGINT assets (SIGCOUNTERINT) and for the development and protection of the US Cryptologic systems. For this purpose, a Central Security Service was created as a wing of the NSA.

At the same time, it was decided that the NSA should thereafter focus on the collection of only foreign SIGINT protected through the use of cipher and electronic countermeasures and that the other agencies of the US Intelligence Community should have their own SIGINT capability for the collection of unprotected intelligence such as enclair messages, telephone conversations without any protective measures and transmissions without any evasive techniques.

The post-Watergate enquiries by the Congress discovered the misuse of the NSA for the collection of domestic intelligence during the Vietnam war for the electronic surveillance of the opponents of the US involvement in the war. The Carter Administration, therefore, stipulated that the NSA was an agency for the collection of external intelligence and not law enforcement intelligence. At the same time, law enforcement agencies such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Narcotics Control agency etc were allowed to seek the NSA's assistance under specific circumstances by following a prescribed procedure, which would rule out misuse.

In 1996, the NSA was also made responsible for CYBERINT and CYBERCOUNTERINT--that is, collection of intelligence from foreign computer networks and protection of the US Govt. networks from foreign penetration.

The orders of 1952 placed the NSA under the administrative control of the Secretary of Defence.The Defence Department was designated as the executive agent for the COMINT activities of the US Govt. It has since been designated as the executive agent for all SIGINT activities. The NSA was also designated as a member of the US Intelligence Community, thereby making the Director of Central Intelligence (DCI) responsible for assisting the Secretary of Defence and the National Security Council (NSC) in monitoring the performance of the NSA.

By an Executive Order, President Ronald Reagan ordered that the Secretary of Defence would forward his recommendation on the appointment of the Director of the NSA, in consultation with the DCI. This was incorporated in the amended National Security Act passed by the Congress in 1992. The Les Aspen/Brown Commission recommended in 1996 that the Secretary of Defence should make his proposal with the concurrence of the DCI.

It has also been laid down since the beginning that while the Director of the NSA would be a three-star General from the US armed forces, his No.2 would be a civilian. However, his No. 2 in the Central Security Service would be a two-star General from the armed forces, not belonging to the same service as the Director.

Since 1952, the NSC has been given the responsibility for vetting all proposals from the NSA and other agencies regarding SIGINT policies and budgets and submitting its recommendations to the President. All proposals go to the full NSC for final examination through the US Communications Intelligence Board (USCIB), which is chaired by the DCI and consists of the representatives of the State and Defence Departments and all the members of the Intelligence Community, and a special committee consisting of the Secretaries of Defence and State.  (See Full Text)

 

(18-7-00)

(Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail: corde@vsnl.com)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
            
               
 

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