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                Date: 2001-07-16
                 
                 
                Scheiss auf ECHELON
                
                 
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      Kann Grossbritannien eine führende Rolle in Europa spielen und  
gleichzeitig ECHELON-Partner der Amerikaner sein? 
 
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http://www.chelidonia.com
                   
 
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Intimate relations Can Britain play a leading role in European  
defence -- and keep its special links to US intelligence?  
 
Charles Grant  
 
Charles Grant is director of the Centre for European Reform and a  
former defence editor of The Economist.  
Centre for European Reform 29 Tufton Street London SW1P 3QL  
 
 
 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
 
 
A problem which must be addressed One of the most constant  
features of the geopolitical landscape is the special relationship  
between London and Washington on intelligence matters.1 One of  
the most rapidly changing and unpredictable elements of that  
landscape is the emergence of a European Common Foreign and  
Security Policy (CFSP). This paper examines whether, and to what  
degree, these two phenomena may be compatible.  
 
____________________  
 
1 The author wishes to thank the many people who have offered  
comments and criticisms of earlier drafts. Most of them would wish  
to remain anonymous. He is grateful to Francois Heisbourg and to  
Nicole Gnesotto for suggesting that he write this paper. An earlier  
version was commissioned by the [balance missing]. 
 
Many British officials involved in defence and foreign policy are  
relaxed about the question raised in the title of this paper. They  
assume that Britain can continue to have its cake and eat it -  
enjoying privileged access to US intelligence, while counting as  
much as any country in the embryonic CFSP. They argue that  
"firewalls" within the British government allow the British to keep a  
foot in both camps: the US will hand over certain reports on the  
understanding that Britain's European allies will not get to see  
them, while at the same time Britain can exchange other material  
with its European partners.  
 
But some continental officials are convinced that if Europe  
becomes a significant player in foreign and defence policy, Britain  
will eventually have to confront a painful strategic dilemma. One  
French official argues that Britain will not be able to play a leading  
role in the EU unless it jettisons the special intelligence links to  
the US: "Britain must choose Europe or betray it."  
 
That assessment is over-dramatic and, in the opinion of this author,  
false. But the British are too insouciant. For if the CFSP proves a  
successful enterprise, the special relationship will start to create  
difficulties. Since the formation of foreign policy depends, at least  
in part, on intelligence assessments, the fact that EU countries  
receive different and divergent assessments must make it harder  
for them to forge common policies.  
 
Intelligence may not often be the determinant factor in the making  
of foreign policy. But sometimes it does matter, particularly in the  
shaping of policy towards countries with closed societies, such as  
the so-called rogue states; in an open society, one can usually find  
out what is going on in through monitoring the media. And  
intelligence is hugely important for the successful conduct of  
military operations. Thus Europe's embryonic foreign policy and the  
projected European Security and Defence Policy (ESDP) will be  
handicapped unless there is a high degree of intelligence sharing  
among EU governments,  
 
Britain's intimate connections to the US may make it harder for the  
Europeans to share intelligence among themselves - because  
Britain may be less interested in intra-European sharing, and  
because its EU partners may trust Britain less. Equally, if the  
Americans believe that Britain has developed special links with its  
European partners, and that it is part of a European enterprise that  
is challenging American power, they may become wary of sharing  
with the British.  
 
Britain has a clear national interest in encouraging the development  
of a European intelligence capability, as a means towards a more  
effective CFSP; but also in preserving its special access to US  
intelligence. The point of this paper is to suggest how those  
objectives can be reconciled.  
 
The paper examines the nature of the special relationship; the  
extent of intelligence co-operation among Europeans; the  
controversy over the Anglo-Saxon countries' signals intelligence  
network, known as Echelon; the argument over whether Europe  
should have its own spy satellites; and the significance of  
intelligence in the formation of European countries' foreign policy.  
Finally, the paper makes some suggestions on how the Europeans  
could deepen their cooperation on intelligence, in ways that need  
not damage the special UK-US relationship. 
 
 
The special relationship  
 
Relations between Britain and America are very special in at least  
three areas:  
 
 
The armed forces of Britain and the United States work together  
well. Cooperation between the two navies is especially intimate.  
The air forces are quite close. The British army, at times, has a  
more European bent, because so many of its soldiers have served  
in Germany, and because of the positive experience of  
peacekeeping alongside European allies in Bosnia and Kosovo.  
Collaboration on weapons programmes is particularly strong in the  
nuclear area. Britain's Defence Evaluation and Research Agency  
(DERA) also works closely with the Defence Advance Research  
Projects Agency, its US equivalent, on conventional weapons. This  
may create problems in European defence industry consolidation:  
the US shares some stealth technology with Britain on condition  
that none of it is passed on to the French. This year the US  
persuaded the British government to modify its plans to privatise  
DERA; it feared that a privately-owned body would be less good at  
keeping American secrets. The special relationship is at its most  
special in intelligence. There is much cooperation on human  
intelligence ("humint") between the CIA and Britain's Secret  
Intelligence Service (the SIS, also known as MI6); on defence  
intelligence between America's Defence Intelligence Agency and  
the British Defence Intelligence Staff; on "overhead" intelligence -  
that deriving from satellite photos, reconnaissance aircraft or  
unmanned aerial vehicles - between America's National  
Reconnaissance Office and Britain's equivalent, the Joint Aerial  
Reconnaissance Intelligence Centre (JARIC), which is part of the  
Defence Intelligence Staff; and on signals intelligence ("sigint")  
between America's National Security Agency (NSA) and Britain's  
General Communications Headquarters (GCHQ). Each of the  
British intelligence services has a liaison office, staffed by senior  
officers, in the US. These offices obtain material from the US  
services and supply British intelligence to them. There are also  
British officers seconded to US agencies at an operational level,  
and vice versa. No other European or Asian country has such  
intimate relations with the US agencies.  
 
British-American co-operation on human intelligence usually  
involves exchanges of intelligence assessments, rather than joint  
operations. The difference in styles of the SIS and the CIA - the  
former stressing the use of agents, the latter devoting more  
resources to sophisticated technology, the processing of  
information and analysis - means that it is not easy for them to  
work together on operations.  
 
Signals intelligence is the most special part of the special  
relationship - and has been ever since 1941, when American and  
British code-breakers started to work together at Bletchley Park.  
Britain's GCHQ and America's NSA exchange many dozens of  
staff with each other. Each organisation takes responsibility for  
certain parts of the world. The British have listening posts in places  
like Cyprus, where the US has none, so the Americans regard the  
British contribution as very useful. But in "sigint", as in other forms  
of intelligence, the British services have no doubt that they get  
more out of these sharing arrangements than they contribute. So  
they are strongly wedded to the special relationship.  
 
Australia, Britain, Canada, New Zealand and the US, bound  
together by various intelligence-sharing agreements that date back  
to 1948, reveal more to each other than to other allies. This  
intelligence sharing among the five Anglo-Saxon countries is  
institutionalised at the very heart of the British system of  
government. The Joint Intelligence Committee is the body in the  
Cabinet Office which sets goals for the UK agencies; sifts and  
evaluates their output; and presents summaries to the prime  
minister. Most other countries do not have an equivalent of the JIC,  
with the result that their intelligence agencies tend to be less well  
co-ordinated. There are two categories of JIC meeting: those at  
which the Anglo-Saxon allies are represented; and those at which  
only Britons are in the room. Britain's European allies do not attend  
any sort of JIC meeting.  
 
The British and American intelligence establishments are bound  
together not only by practical co-operation, but also by a common  
approach to the use of intelligence. According to senior figures in  
the UK and US governments, intelligence has more influence on  
their foreign policies than it has on the policies of continental  
European governments. The reason, they say, is that the Anglo- 
Saxons use intelligence in an empirical way: it is about gathering  
facts, and if the facts are significant, the policies may get changed.  
The view in London and Washington is that the French and other  
continentals, being essentially deductive in their thinking, develop  
sophisticated analyses and policies and then draw on intelligence  
to support them; but that they seldom allow intelligence to shift  
policy.  
 
Is that self-congratulatory British-American analysis true?  
According to one senior French official, the conclusion, that  
intelligence is less influential in France, is correct, but not because  
the French are so Cartesian that they ignore facts. The reasons, he  
says, are social, historical, and bureaucratic. "In France there has  
been less investment in intelligence capabilities, and a lower grade  
of people choose to work in intelligence, which is seen as  
something dirty. There is no bureaucratic system for diffusing  
assessments to the key branches of government. " The result, he  
says, is that decision-makers do not have a lot of confidence in  
what the intelligence services provide.  
 
Thus the common ground between the British and American  
intelligence services is extensive. It is inconceivable that a British  
government would ever wish to abandon the special relationship.  
So the key questions are whether, and how that special  
relationship can be made to fit with Europe's emerging CFSP. 
 
 
Intelligence sharing in Europe  
 
There is a large amount of intelligence sharing among European  
governments. Some of this sharing is multilateral, within NATO and  
the Western European Union (a rather sleepy organisation which  
has acted as the EU's defence club2). However, governments are  
generally reluctant to circulate the highest-grade material within  
multinational organisations, because too many people are liable to  
see it. They tend to be more willing to share sensitive material  
bilaterally.  
 
____________________  
 
2 The WEU has ten full members: the EU's 15 countries, minus  
Austria, Denmark, Finland, Ireland and Sweden. But it often meets  
with those five, plus the six European countries in NATO but not  
the [balance missing]. 
 
It is important to distinguish between the raw data of intelligence -  
reports from agents, transcripts of wire-taps or satellite photos -  
and the assessments based on the data. Governments are  
naturally more relaxed about sharing analysis than source material.  
For example, if Britain passed on a report from an agent in Iraq, it  
could endanger his or her life; passing on the assessment of that  
report need not.  
 
Even assessments, however, are often regarded as highly  
sensitive. If one government studies several of another  
government's assessments carefully, it may be able to guess the  
sources, and it will certainly gain some insight into the other  
government's intelligence capabilities. Thus a country with  
sophisticated intelligence networks is unlikely to want to share  
high-grade assessments with another country unless it thinks it will  
get a good "trade" in return. On the other hand, one government's  
intelligence is more likely to influence another government if it is  
passed on in a relatively raw state: a photo of a missile silo is more  
potent than a report saying "there are missile silos".  
 
It is also worth distinguishing between political intelligence, which  
is relevant to decision-making at the highest levels of government;  
and military intelligence. The latter can be "strategic", concerned,  
for example, with a country's weapons programmes, or its defence  
industrial base; or "tactical", information that is relevant to a  
military operation. Governments tend to be more willing to share  
tactical intelligence than the political or strategic sort, particularly  
with allies who are engaged in a common military enterprise.  
 
For example, in June 1999, just after Milosevic agreed to withdraw  
from Kosovo, the Russian army despatched 200 of its  
peacekeeping troops from Bosnia towards Pristina airport. This  
was the first move in a plan which, if it had succeeded, would have  
led to thousands of Russian troops flying into Pristina and  
partitioning Kosovo. The Americans discovered the troop movement  
as soon as it started, through signals intelligence, and informed  
their NATO allies immediately. The allies therefore knew about the  
troop movement before the Russian foreign ministry.  
 
All governments are inherently reluctant to share even military  
intelligence, especially within multilateral bodies such as NATO.  
The American, French, British and German intelligence services  
are among those that provide reports to NATO, but they are  
doctored so that references to sources or sensitive pieces of  
information are removed. America's allies have long complained  
that it is particularly mean with its intelligence; for example it  
refused, until quite recently, to let NATO allies see satellite photos.  
However. the US has become more generous in recent years,  
perhaps because of the growing availability of imagery from  
commercial satellites.  
 
Any multinational organisation is by definition leaky. Throughout  
the Bosnian war, NATO secrets were ending up in Bosnian Serb  
hands. In November 1998 a French officer working within NATO,  
Pierre-Henri Bunel, was found to have passed NATO's target plans  
for Kosovo to a Yugoslav diplomat in Brussels. And in March 2000  
it emerged that, at the start of the bombing campaign against  
Serbia which had begun a year earlier, 600 people within NATO  
had had access to the flight plans of the NATO bombers. That may  
explain why the Serbs evacuated so many prime targets in Kosovo  
a few hours before the bombs struck.  
 
The Western European Union, which will soon be folded into the  
EU's Council of Ministers secretariat, has a small unit that gathers  
and analyses intelligence from its member-governments.3 The  
WEU also has its own "satellite centre" at Torrejón in Spain. This  
processes information from commercial satellites and the two  
Helios 1 spy satellites (which belong to France, Italy and Spain).  
 
 
 
Mehr 
http://cryptome.org/uk-us-abed.htm
                   
 
 
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edited by Harkank 
published on: 2001-07-16 
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