NSA collects data from undersea cables
by aletho
South East Asia–Middle East–Western Europe 4 (SEA-ME-WE 4) optical fiber submarine communications cable
Press TV - December 29, 2013
The
US National Security Agency (NSA) has collected sensitive data on key
undersea optical fiber telecommunications cables between Europe, North
Africa and Asia.
Citing classified documents labeled “top secret” and “not for foreigners”, German news magazine Der Spiegel reported on Sunday
that the NSA spied on the so-called "South East Asia-Middle East-West
Europe 4" also known as "Sea-Me-We 4" undersea cable system.
The
German magazine said NSA specialists had hacked an internal website
belonging to the operator consortium to mine documents about technical
infrastructure including circuit mapping and network management
information. “More operations are planned in the future to collect more
information about this and other cable systems.” Spiegel quoted the NSA documents, dating from February, as saying.
According to the website
of the project “the South East Asia-Middle East-West Europe 4 project
is a next generation submarine cable system linking South East Asia to
Europe via the Indian Sub-Continent and Middle East. The project aims to
take these regions to the forefront of global communication by
significantly increasing the bandwidth and global connectivity of users
along its route between Singapore and France.”
Spiegel
reports that “Among the companies that hold ownership stakes in it are
France Telecom, now known as Orange and still partly government-owned,
and Telecom Italia Sparkle.”
In
March 2004, a consortium of 16 international telecommunications
companies signed construction and maintenance agreements for the new
optical fiber submarine cable system linking South East Asia to Europe
via the Indian Sub-Continent and Middle East with Terminal Stations in
Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka, Pakistan,
United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Italy, Tunisia, Algeria and
France. The contract is being awarded jointly to Alcatel Submarine
Networks, France and Fujitsu Ltd., Japan and the estimated project cost
is of the order of $500 million.
The
submarine cable system is approximately 20,000km long. It consists of
the main backbone across the Eastern and Western worlds plus the
extension links in various countries. The project seeks to support
telephone, internet, multimedia and various broadband data applications.
It
seems the method was employed by the NSA’s elite hacking unit (TAO) via
incorporating routers and servers from non-NSA networks into its covert
network by infecting these networks with "implants" that then allow the
government hackers to control the computers remotely.
The document leaked by Der Spiegel
proudly says that, on Feb. 13, 2013, TAO “successfully collected
network management information for the SEA-Me-We Undersea Cable Systems
(SMW-4).” With the help of a “website masquerade operation,” the agency
managed to “gain access to the consortium's management website and
collected Layer 2 network information that shows the circuit mapping for
significant portions of the network.”
The
US government claims that its spying operations that are taking place
both at home and abroad are vital for fighting terrorism.
A federal judge ruled Friday
that the NSA’s bulk collection of millions of Americans' telephone and
Internet records is legal. US District Judge William Pauley also
concluded that the operation is an important part of America’s effort to
combat the threat of terrorism.
NSA
spies on millions of telephone and Internet records that are routed
through American networks on daily basis. According to some estimates,
NSA spies on 380 million cellphones in the US.
Prior
to Pauley’s ruling, another US District Court Judge, Richard Leon, had
described the massive NSA spying program “Almost Orwellian”.
“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,” Judge Leon wrote.
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