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INSIDE
BEJUCAL BASE IN CUBA:
A REAL THREAT
Dr. Manuel Cereijo
*
Contribuitor
La Nueva Cuba
May 25, 2006
Since 1998,
in spite that very little has been written about the Bejucal base
in Cuba, Cubas system of international communications surveillance
is in full operation. Most of what has been written has been ignored
by US and European authoritities. Bejucal is an electronic espionage
base used by the Cuban military intelligence to intercept and process
international communications passing via communications satellites.
Other parts
of the same system intercept messages from the Internet, from undersea
cables, from radio transmissions, from secret equipment installed
inside embassies, or use orbiting satellites to monitor signals
anywhere on the earth's surface.
The world's
most secret electronic surveillance system has its main origin
in the former Soviet Union Lourdes base in Cuba.. In a deeper sense,
it results
from the invention of radio and the fundamental nature of telecommunications.
The creation of radio permitted governments and other
communicators to pass messages to receivers over transcontinental
distances. But there was a penalty - anyone else could
listen in. Previously, written messages were physically secure (unless
the courier carrying them was ambushed, or a spy compromised communications).
The invention of radio thus created a new importance
for cryptography, the art and science of making secret codes.
It also led to the business of signals intelligence, now an industrial
scale activity.
Dozens of advanced
nations use sigint as a key source of intelligence. Even smaller
European nations such as Denmark, the Netherlands or Switzerland
have recently constructed small, stations to obtain and process
intelligence by eavesdropping on civil satellite communications.
All of them
are smaller than Cubas Bejucal, and none of them are so close
to the United States.Everything
produced in the Bejucal sigint base is marked by hundreds
of special codewords that "compartmentalize" knowledge
of intercepted
communications and the systems used to intercept them. The
scale and significance of the global surveillance system has been
transformed since 1980. The arrival of low cost wideband
international communications has created a wired world. But few
people
are aware that the first global wide area network (WAN) was not
the internet, but the international network connecting sigint stations
and processing centers.
By the early
1970s, the laborious process of scanning paper printouts
for names or terms appearing on the "watch lists" had
begun
to be replaced by automated computer systems. These computers performed
a task essentially similar to the search engines of the internet.
Prompted with a word, phrase or combination of words, they will
identify all messages containing the desired words or phrases.
Their job,
now performed on a huge scale, is to match the "key words"
or phrases of interest to intelligence agencies to the huge volume
of international communications, to extract them and pass them
to where they are wanted. During the 1980s, the NSA developed a
"fast
data finder" microprocessor that was optimally designed for
this
purpose. It was later commercially marketed, with claims that it
"the most comprehensive character-string comparison functions
of any
text retrieval system in the world". A single unit could work
with:
*trillions
of bytes of textual archive and thousands of online users,
or gigabytes of live data stream per day that are filtered
against tens of thousands of complex interest profiles.
Although different
systems are in use, the key computer system at the heart of a modern
sigint station's processing operations is the "Dictionary".
Bejucal contains a Dictionary. Portable versions are even available,
and can be loaded into briefcase-sized units known as "Oratory"
10 . The Dictionary
computers scan
communications input to them, and extract for reporting and further
analysis those that match the profiles of interest.
In one sense,
the main function of Dictionary computers are to throw most intercepted
information away.
The "common
automated processing equipment (ADPE) in the Bejucal base include
the following elements:
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Local
management subsystem
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Remote management subsystem
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Radio frequency distribution
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Communications
handling subsystem
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Telegraphy
message processing subsystem
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Frequency
division multiplex telegraphy processing subsystem
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Time
division multiplex telegraphy processing subsystem
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Voice
processing subsystem
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Voice
collection module
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Facsimile
processing subsystem
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[Voice] Tape Production Facility
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Software systems to load and update the Dictionary databases.
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There are 10 satellite antennas at Bejucal.
There were 12 at Lourdes
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New methods
which have been developed during the 1990s available to recognize
the "topics" of phone calls, and allow to automate the
processing of the content
of telephone
messages Under the rubric of "information warfare", the
sigint bases also hope to overcome the ever more extensive use of
encryption by direct interference with and attacks on targeted computers.
These methods include information stealing viruses, software audio,
video, and data bugs, and pre- emptive tampering with software or
hardware ("trapdoors").
Satellites
Satellite communications
provide the relaying of data, telephone, transoceanic and national
TV signals. Most communication satellites are placed in geostationary
orbit (GEO), located at 22,300 miles above the equator. The most
used frequencies for these satellites are: 6GHz uplink, 4GHZ downlink,
or 14 GHZ uplink and 12 GHZ downlink. Each satellite has a number
of transponders aboard to amplify the received signal from the uplink
and to down convert the signal for transmission on the down link.
Most transponders are designed for bandwidth of 36, 54, or 72 MHZ.
China has converted
an ICBM base at Taiyuan, southwest of Beijing, into a satellite-
launching center. China is only the third country in the world to
operate recoverable satellites, which can bring photographic film
and experimental specimens back to earth.
The first satellite
to be launched on Earth in the 21st century was a test of the Shenzhou-2
unmanned spaceship on January 9, 2001. China has launched 10 space
vehicles since January 2001 up to date. This is twice the annual
rate of the 1990s.
*
Dr. Manuel Cereijo, a professor at Florida International University,
Miami, Florida, United States
is an expert in Cuba's current issues such as economy, Havana's support
to international terrorism, and the Cuban's military programs for
asymetric, biological and cybernetic warfare.
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