Photo: Name Withheld; Digital
Manipulation: Jesse Lenz
Today Bluffdale is
home to one of the nation’s largest sects of polygamists, the Apostolic United
Brethren, with upwards of 9,000 members. The brethren’s complex includes a
chapel, a school, a sports field, and an archive. Membership has doubled since
1978—and the number of plural marriages has tripled—so the sect has recently
been looking for ways to purchase more land and expand throughout the town.
But new pioneers have quietly begun moving
into the area, secretive outsiders who say little and keep to themselves. Like
the pious polygamists, they are focused on deciphering cryptic messages that
only they have the power to understand. Just off Beef Hollow Road, less than a
mile from brethren headquarters, thousands of hard-hatted
construction workers in sweat-soaked T-shirts are laying the groundwork for the
newcomers’ own temple and archive, a massive complex so large that it
necessitated expanding the town’s boundaries. Once built, it will be more than
five times the size of the US Capitol.
Rather than Bibles, prophets, and
worshippers, this temple will be filled with servers, computer intelligence
experts, and armed guards. And instead of listening for words flowing down from
heaven, these newcomers will be secretly capturing, storing, and analyzing vast
quantities of words and images hurtling through the world’s telecommunications
networks. In the little town of Bluffdale, Big Love
and Big Brother have become uneasy neighbors.
The NSA has become the largest, most
covert, and potentially most intrusive intelligence agency ever.
Under construction by contractors with
top-secret clearances, the blandly named Utah Data Center is being built for
the National Security Agency. A project of immense secrecy, it is the final
piece in a complex puzzle assembled over the past decade. Its purpose: to
intercept, decipher, analyze, and store vast swaths of the world’s
communications as they zap down from satellites and zip through the underground
and undersea cables of international, foreign, and domestic networks. The
heavily fortified $2 billion center should be up and running in September 2013.
Flowing through its servers and routers and stored in near-bottomless databases
will be all forms of communication, including the complete contents of private
emails, cell phone calls, and Google searches, as well as all sorts of personal
data trails—parking receipts, travel itineraries, bookstore purchases, and
other digital “pocket litter.” It is, in some measure, the realization of the
“total information awareness” program created during the first term of the Bush
administration—an effort that was killed by Congress in 2003 after it caused an
outcry over its potential for invading Americans’ privacy.
But “this is more than just a data center,”
says one senior intelligence official who until recently was involved with the
program. The mammoth Bluffdale center will have
another important and far more secret role that until now has gone unrevealed.
It is also critical, he says, for breaking codes. And code-breaking is crucial,
because much of the data that the center will handle—financial information,
stock transactions, business deals, foreign military and diplomatic secrets,
legal documents, confidential personal communications—will be heavily
encrypted. According to another top official also involved with the program,
the NSA made an enormous breakthrough several years ago in its ability to cryptanalyze, or break, unfathomably complex encryption
systems employed by not only governments around the world but also many average
computer users in the US. The upshot, according to this official: “Everybody’s
a target; everybody with communication is a target.”
For the NSA, overflowing with tens of
billions of dollars in post-9/11 budget awards, the cryptanalysis breakthrough
came at a time of explosive growth, in size as well as in power. Established as
an arm of the Department of Defense following Pearl Harbor, with the primary
purpose of preventing another surprise assault, the NSA suffered a series of
humiliations in the post-Cold War years. Caught offguard
by an escalating series of terrorist attacks—the first World Trade Center
bombing, the blowing up of US embassies in East Africa, the attack on the USS Cole
in Yemen, and finally the devastation of 9/11—some began questioning the
agency’s very reason for being. In response, the NSA has quietly been reborn.
And while there is little indication that its actual effectiveness has
improved—after all, despite numerous pieces of evidence and
intelligence-gathering opportunities, it missed the near-disastrous attempted
attacks by the underwear bomber on a flight to Detroit in 2009 and by the car
bomber in Times Square in 2010—there is no doubt that it has transformed itself
into the largest, most covert, and potentially most intrusive intelligence
agency ever created.
In the process—and for the first time since
Watergate and the other scandals of the Nixon administration—the NSA has turned
its surveillance apparatus on the US and its citizens. It has established
listening posts throughout the nation to collect and sift through billions of
email messages and phone calls, whether they originate within the country or
overseas. It has created a supercomputer of almost unimaginable speed to look
for patterns and unscramble codes. Finally, the agency has begun building a
place to store all the trillions of words and thoughts and whispers captured in
its electronic net. And, of course, it’s all being done in secret. To those on
the inside, the old adage that NSA stands for Never Say Anything applies more
than ever.
When construction is completed in 2013, the
heavily fortified $2 billion facility in Bluffdale
will encompass 1 million square feet.
A $9.7 million facility for ensuring that
only cleared personnel gain access.
Designated space for
technical support and administrative personnel.
Four 25,000-square-foot facilities house rows
and rows of servers.
Can power the center for at
least three days.
Able to pump 1.7 million
gallons of liquid per day.
About 60,000 tons of
cooling equipment to keep servers from overheating.
An electrical substation to
meet the center’s estimated 65-megawatt demand.
Video surveillance, intrusion detection, and
other protection will cost more than $10 million.
Source: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Conceptual
Site plan
A swath of freezing fog blanketed Salt Lake
City on the morning of January 6, 2011, mixing with a weeklong coating of heavy
gray smog. Red air alerts, warning people to stay indoors unless absolutely
necessary, had become almost daily occurrences, and the temperature was in the
bone-chilling twenties. “What I smell and taste is like coal smoke,” complained
one local blogger that day. At the city’s international airport, many inbound
flights were delayed or diverted while outbound regional jets were grounded.
But among those making it through the icy mist was a figure whose gray suit and
tie made him almost disappear into the background. He was tall and thin, with
the physique of an aging basketball player and dark caterpillar eyebrows beneath
a shock of matching hair. Accompanied by a retinue of bodyguards, the man was
NSA deputy director Chris Inglis, the agency’s
highest-ranking civilian and the person who ran its worldwide day-to-day
operations.
A short time later, Inglis
arrived in Bluffdale at the site of the future data
center, a flat, unpaved runway on a little-used part of Camp Williams, a
National Guard training site. There, in a white tent set up for the occasion, Inglis joined Harvey Davis, the agency’s associate director
for installations and logistics, and Utah senator Orrin Hatch, along with a few
generals and politicians in a surreal ceremony. Standing in an odd wooden
sandbox and holding gold-painted shovels, they made awkward jabs at the sand
and thus officially broke ground on what the local media had simply dubbed “the
spy center.” Hoping for some details on what was about to be built, reporters
turned to one of the invited guests, Lane Beattie of the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce. Did he have any idea of the purpose behind the new
facility in his backyard? “Absolutely not,” he said with a self-conscious half
laugh. “Nor do I want them spying on me.”
For his part, Inglis
simply engaged in a bit of double-talk, emphasizing the least threatening
aspect of the center: “It’s a state-of-the-art facility designed to support the
intelligence community in its mission to, in turn, enable and protect the
nation’s cybersecurity.” While cybersecurity
will certainly be among the areas focused on in Bluffdale,
what is collected, how it’s collected, and what is done with the material are
far more important issues. Battling hackers makes for a nice cover—it’s easy to
explain, and who could be against it? Then the reporters turned to Hatch, who
proudly described the center as “a great tribute to Utah,” then added, “I can’t
tell you a lot about what they’re going to be doing, because it’s highly
classified.”
And then there was this anomaly: Although
this was supposedly the official ground-breaking for the nation’s largest and
most expensive cybersecurity project, no one from the
Department of Homeland Security, the agency responsible for protecting civilian
networks from cyberattack, spoke from the lectern. In
fact, the official who’d originally introduced the data center, at a press
conference in Salt Lake City in October 2009, had nothing to do with cybersecurity. It was Glenn A. Gaffney, deputy director of
national intelligence for collection, a man who had spent almost his entire
career at the CIA. As head of collection for the intelligence community, he
managed the country’s human and electronic spies.
Within days, the tent and sandbox and gold
shovels would be gone and Inglis and the generals
would be replaced by some 10,000 construction workers. “We’ve been asked not to
talk about the project,” Rob Moore, president of Big-D Construction, one of the
three major contractors working on the project, told a local reporter. The
plans for the center show an extensive security system: an elaborate $10
million antiterrorism protection program, including a fence designed to stop a
15,000-pound vehicle traveling 50 miles per hour, closed-circuit cameras, a
biometric identification system, a vehicle inspection facility, and a
visitor-control center.
Inside, the facility will consist of four
25,000-square-foot halls filled with servers, complete with raised floor space
for cables and storage. In addition, there will be more than 900,000 square
feet for technical support and administration. The entire site will be
self-sustaining, with fuel tanks large enough to power the backup generators
for three days in an emergency, water storage with the capability of pumping
1.7 million gallons of liquid per day, as well as a sewage system and massive
air-conditioning system to keep all those servers cool. Electricity will come
from the center’s own substation built by Rocky Mountain Power to satisfy the
65-megawatt power demand. Such a mammoth amount of energy comes with a mammoth
price tag—about $40 million a year, according to one estimate.
Given the facility’s scale and the fact that
a terabyte of data can now be stored on a flash drive the size of a man’s
pinky, the potential amount of information that could be housed in Bluffdale is truly staggering. But so is the exponential
growth in the amount of intelligence data being produced every day by the
eavesdropping sensors of the NSA and other intelligence agencies. As a result
of this “expanding array of theater airborne and other sensor networks,” as a
2007 Department of Defense report puts it, the Pentagon is attempting to expand
its worldwide communications network, known as the Global Information Grid, to
handle yottabytes (1024 bytes) of data. (A
yottabyte is a septillion
bytes—so large that no one has yet coined a term for the next higher
magnitude.)
It needs that capacity because, according to
a recent report by Cisco, global Internet traffic will quadruple from 2010 to
2015, reaching 966 exabytes per year. (A million exabytes equal a yottabyte.) In
terms of scale, Eric Schmidt, Google’s former CEO, once estimated that the
total of all human knowledge created from the dawn of man to 2003 totaled 5 exabytes. And the data flow shows no sign of slowing. In
2011 more than 2 billion of the world’s 6.9 billion people were connected to
the Internet. By 2015, market research firm IDC estimates,
there will be 2.7 billion users. Thus, the NSA’s need for a
1-million-square-foot data storehouse. Should the agency ever fill the
Utah center with a yottabyte of information, it would
be equal to about 500 quintillion (500,000,000,000,000,000,000) pages of text.
The data stored in Bluffdale
will naturally go far beyond the world’s billions of public web pages. The NSA
is more interested in the so-called invisible web, also known as the deep web
or deepnet—data beyond the reach of the public. This
includes password-protected data, US and foreign government communications, and
noncommercial file-sharing between trusted peers. “The deep
web contains government reports, databases, and other sources of information of
high value to DOD and the intelligence community,” according to a 2010 Defense
Science Board report. “Alternative tools are needed to find and index
data in the deep web … Stealing the classified secrets of a potential adversary
is where the [intelligence] community is most comfortable.” With its new Utah
Data Center, the NSA will at last have the technical capability to store, and
rummage through, all those stolen secrets. The question, of course, is how the
agency defines who is, and who is not, “a potential adversary.”
Once it’s operational, the Utah Data Center
will become, in effect, the NSA’s cloud. The center will be fed data collected
by the agency’s eavesdropping satellites, overseas listening posts, and secret
monitoring rooms in telecom facilities throughout the US. All that data will
then be accessible to the NSA’s code breakers, data-miners, China analysts,
counterterrorism specialists, and others working at its Fort Meade headquarters
and around the world. Here’s how the data center appears to fit into the NSA’s
global puzzle.—J.B.
Four satellites positioned around the globe monitor
frequencies carrying everything from walkie-talkies and cell phones in Libya to
radar systems in North Korea. Onboard software acts as the first filter in the
collection process, targeting only key regions, countries, cities, and phone
numbers or email.
Intelligence collected from the geostationary
satellites, as well as signals from other spacecraft and overseas listening
posts, is relayed to this facility outside Denver. About 850 NSA employees
track the satellites, transmit target information, and download the
intelligence haul.
Focuses on intercepts from
Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa. Codenamed Sweet Tea, the facility has been massively expanded and now
consists of a 604,000-square-foot operations building for up to 4,000 intercept
operators, analysts, and other specialists.
Focuses on intercepts from
Latin America and, since 9/11, the Middle East and Europe. Some 2,000 workers staff the operation. The NSA
recently completed a $100 million renovation on a mega-data center here—a
backup storage facility for the Utah Data Center.
Focuses on intercepts from
Asia. Built to house an aircraft
assembly plant during World War II, the 250,000-square-foot bunker is nicknamed
the Hole. Like the other NSA operations centers, it has since been expanded:
Its 2,700 employees now do their work aboveground from a new 234,000-square-foot
facility.
The NSA has long been free to eavesdrop on
international satellite communications. But after 9/11, it installed taps in US
telecom “switches,” gaining access to domestic traffic. An ex-NSA official says
there are 10 to 20 such installations.
According to a knowledgeable intelligence
source, the NSA has installed taps on at least a dozen of the major overseas
communications links, each capable of eavesdropping on information passing by at
a high data rate.
At a million square feet, this $2 billion
digital storage facility outside Salt Lake City will be the centerpiece of the
NSA’s cloud-based data strategy and essential in its plans for decrypting previously
uncrackable documents.
Some 300 scientists and computer engineers
with top security clearance toil away here, building the world’s fastest
supercomputers and working on cryptanalytic applications and other secret
projects.
Analysts here will access material stored at Bluffdale to prepare reports and recommendations that are
sent to policymakers. To handle the increased data load, the NSA is also
building an $896 million supercomputer center here.
Before yottabytes
of data from the deep web and elsewhere can begin piling up inside the servers
of the NSA’s new center, they must be collected. To better accomplish that, the
agency has undergone the largest building boom in its history, including
installing secret electronic monitoring rooms in major US telecom facilities.
Controlled by the NSA, these highly secured spaces are where the agency taps
into the US communications networks, a practice that came to light during the
Bush years but was never acknowledged by the agency. The broad outlines of the
so-called warrantless-wiretapping program have long been exposed—how the NSA
secretly and illegally bypassed the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court,
which was supposed to oversee and authorize highly targeted domestic
eavesdropping; how the program allowed wholesale monitoring of millions of
American phone calls and email. In the wake of the program’s exposure, Congress
passed the FISA Amendments Act of 2008, which largely made the practices legal.
Telecoms that had agreed to participate in the illegal activity were granted
immunity from prosecution and lawsuits. What wasn’t revealed until now,
however, was the enormity of this ongoing domestic spying program.
For the first time, a former NSA official has
gone on the record to describe the program, codenamed Stellar Wind, in detail.
William Binney was a senior NSA crypto-mathematician
largely responsible for automating the agency’s worldwide eavesdropping network.
A tall man with strands of black hair across the front of his scalp and dark,
determined eyes behind thick-rimmed glasses, the 68-year-old spent nearly four
decades breaking codes and finding new ways to channel billions of private
phone calls and email messages from around the world into the NSA’s bulging
databases. As chief and one of the two cofounders of the agency’s Signals
Intelligence Automation Research Center, Binney and
his team designed much of the infrastructure that’s still likely used to intercept
international and foreign communications.
He explains that the agency could have
installed its tapping gear at the nation’s cable landing stations—the more than
two dozen sites on the periphery of the US where fiber-optic cables come
ashore. If it had taken that route, the NSA would have been able to limit its
eavesdropping to just international communications, which at the time was all
that was allowed under US law. Instead it chose to put the wiretapping rooms at
key junction points throughout the country—large, windowless buildings known as
switches—thus gaining access to not just international communications but also
to most of the domestic traffic flowing through the US. The network of
intercept stations goes far beyond the single room in an AT&T building in
San Francisco exposed by a whistle-blower in 2006. “I think there’s
10 to 20 of them,” Binney says. “That’s not just San
Francisco; they have them in the middle of the country and also on the East
Coast.”
The eavesdropping on Americans doesn’t stop
at the telecom switches. To capture satellite communications in and out of the
US, the agency also monitors AT&T’s powerful earth stations, satellite
receivers in locations that include Roaring Creek and Salt Creek. Tucked away
on a back road in rural Catawissa, Pennsylvania, Roaring Creek’s three 105-foot
dishes handle much of the country’s communications to and from Europe and the
Middle East. And on an isolated stretch of land in remote Arbuckle, California,
three similar dishes at the company’s Salt Creek station service the Pacific
Rim and Asia.
The former
NSA official held his thumb and forefinger close together: “We are that far
from a turnkey totalitarian state.”
Binney left the NSA in late 2001, shortly after the agency
launched its warrantless-wiretapping program. “They violated the Constitution
setting it up,” he says bluntly. “But they didn’t care. They were going to do
it anyway, and they were going to crucify anyone who stood in the way. When
they started violating the Constitution, I couldn’t stay.” Binney
says Stellar Wind was far larger than has been publicly disclosed and included
not just eavesdropping on domestic phone calls but the inspection of domestic
email. At the outset the program recorded 320 million calls a day, he says,
which represented about 73 to 80 percent of the total volume of the agency’s
worldwide intercepts. The haul only grew from there. According to Binney—who has maintained close contact with agency
employees until a few years ago—the taps in the secret rooms dotting the
country are actually powered by highly sophisticated software programs that
conduct “deep packet inspection,” examining Internet traffic as it passes
through the 10-gigabit-per-second cables at the speed of light.
The software, created by a company called Narus that’s now part of Boeing, is controlled remotely
from NSA headquarters at Fort Meade in Maryland and searches US sources for
target addresses, locations, countries, and phone numbers, as well as
watch-listed names, keywords, and phrases in email. Any communication that
arouses suspicion, especially those to or from the million or so people on
agency watch lists, are automatically copied or recorded and then transmitted
to the NSA.
The scope of surveillance expands from there,
Binney says. Once a name is entered
into the Narus database, all phone calls and other
communications to and from that person are automatically routed to the
NSA’s recorders. “Anybody you want, route to a recorder,” Binney
says. “If your number’s in there? Routed and gets
recorded.” He adds, “The Narus device allows you to
take it all.” And when Bluffdale is completed,
whatever is collected will be routed there for storage and analysis.
According to Binney,
one of the deepest secrets of the Stellar Wind program—again, never confirmed
until now—was that the NSA gained warrantless access to AT&T’s vast trove
of domestic and international billing records, detailed information about who
called whom in the US and around the world. As of 2007, AT&T had more than
2.8 trillion records housed in a database at its Florham Park, New Jersey,
complex.
Verizon was also part of the program, Binney says, and that greatly expanded the volume of calls
subject to the agency’s domestic eavesdropping. “That multiplies the call rate
by at least a factor of five,” he says. “So you’re over a billion and a half
calls a day.” (Spokespeople for Verizon and AT&T said their companies would
not comment on matters of national security.)
After he left the NSA, Binney
suggested a system for monitoring people’s communications according to how
closely they are connected to an initial target. The further away from the
target—say you’re just an acquaintance of a friend of the target—the less the
surveillance. But the agency rejected the idea, and, given the massive new
storage facility in Utah, Binney suspects that it now
simply collects everything. “The whole idea was, how do you
manage 20 terabytes of intercept a minute?” he says. “The way we proposed was
to distinguish between things you want and things you don’t want.” Instead, he
adds, “they’re storing everything they gather.” And the agency is gathering as
much as it can.
Once the communications are intercepted and
stored, the data-mining begins. “You can watch everybody all the time with
data- mining,” Binney says. Everything a person does becomes charted on a graph, “financial transactions or
travel or anything,” he says. Thus, as data like bookstore receipts, bank
statements, and commuter toll records flow in, the NSA is able to paint a more
and more detailed picture of someone’s life.
The NSA also has the ability to eavesdrop on
phone calls directly and in real time. According to Adrienne J. Kinne, who worked both before and after 9/11 as a voice
interceptor at the NSA facility in Georgia, in the wake of the World Trade
Center attacks “basically all rules were thrown out the window, and they would
use any excuse to justify a waiver to spy on Americans.” Even journalists
calling home from overseas were included. “A lot of time you could tell they
were calling their families,” she says, “incredibly intimate, personal
conversations.” Kinne found the act of eavesdropping
on innocent fellow citizens personally distressing. “It’s almost like going
through and finding somebody’s diary,” she says.
In secret
listening rooms nationwide, NSA software examines every email, phone call, and
tweet as they zip by.
But there is, of course, reason for anyone to
be distressed about the practice. Once the door is open for the government to spy
on US citizens, there are often great temptations to abuse that power for
political purposes, as when Richard Nixon eavesdropped on his political enemies
during Watergate and ordered the NSA to spy on antiwar protesters. Those and
other abuses prompted Congress to enact prohibitions in the mid-1970s against
domestic spying.
Before he gave up and left the NSA, Binney tried to persuade officials to create a more
targeted system that could be authorized by a court. At the time, the agency
had 72 hours to obtain a legal warrant, and Binney
devised a method to computerize the system. “I had proposed that we automate
the process of requesting a warrant and automate approval so we could manage a
couple of million intercepts a day, rather than subvert the whole process.” But
such a system would have required close coordination with the courts, and NSA
officials weren’t interested in that, Binney says.
Instead they continued to haul in data on a grand scale. Asked how many
communications—”transactions,” in NSA’s lingo—the agency has intercepted since
9/11, Binney estimates the number at “between 15 and
20 trillion, the aggregate over 11 years.”
When Barack Obama took office, Binney hoped the new administration might be open to
reforming the program to address his constitutional concerns. He and another
former senior NSA analyst, J. Kirk Wiebe, tried to
bring the idea of an automated warrant-approval system to the attention of the
Department of Justice’s inspector general. They were given the brush-off. “They
said, oh, OK, we can’t comment,” Binney says.
Sitting in a restaurant not far from NSA
headquarters, the place where he spent nearly 40 years of his life, Binney held his thumb and forefinger close together. “We
are, like, that far from a turnkey totalitarian state,” he says.
There is still one technology preventing untrammeled government access
to private digital data: strong encryption. Anyone—from terrorists and weapons
dealers to corporations, financial institutions, and ordinary email senders—can
use it to seal their messages, plans, photos, and documents in hardened data
shells. For years, one of the hardest shells has been the Advanced Encryption
Standard, one of several algorithms used by much of the world to encrypt data.
Available in three different strengths—128 bits, 192 bits, and 256 bits—it’s
incorporated in most commercial email programs and web browsers and is
considered so strong that the NSA has even approved its use for top-secret US
government communications. Most experts say that a so-called brute-force
computer attack on the algorithm—trying one combination after another to unlock
the encryption—would likely take longer than the age of the universe. For a
128-bit cipher, the number of trial-and-error attempts would be 340 undecillion (1036).
Breaking into those complex mathematical
shells like the AES is one of the key reasons for the construction going on in Bluffdale. That kind of cryptanalysis requires two major
ingredients: super-fast computers to conduct brute-force attacks on encrypted
messages and a massive number of those messages for the computers to analyze.
The more messages from a given target, the more likely it is for the computers
to detect telltale patterns, and Bluffdale will be
able to hold a great many messages. “We questioned it one time,” says another
source, a senior intelligence manager who was also involved with the planning.
“Why were we building this NSA facility? And, boy, they rolled out all the old
guys—the crypto guys.” According to the official, these experts told then-director
of national intelligence Dennis Blair, “You’ve got to build this thing because
we just don’t have the capability of doing the code-breaking.” It was a candid
admission. In the long war between the code breakers and the code makers—the
tens of thousands of cryptographers in the worldwide computer security
industry—the code breakers were admitting defeat.
So the agency had one major ingredient—a
massive data storage facility—under way. Meanwhile, across the country in
Tennessee, the government was working in utmost secrecy on the other vital
element: the most powerful computer the world has ever known.
The plan was launched in 2004 as a modern-day
Manhattan Project. Dubbed the High Productivity Computing Systems program, its
goal was to advance computer speed a thousandfold,
creating a machine that could execute a quadrillion (1015)
operations a second, known as a petaflop—the computer
equivalent of breaking the land speed record. And as with the Manhattan
Project, the venue chosen for the supercomputing program was the town of Oak
Ridge in eastern Tennessee, a rural area where sharp ridges give way to low,
scattered hills, and the southwestward-flowing Clinch River bends sharply to
the southeast. About 25 miles from Knoxville, it is the “secret city” where
uranium- 235 was extracted for the first atomic bomb. A sign near the exit
read: what you see here, what you do
here, what you hear here, when you leave here, let it stay here. Today,
not far from where that sign stood, Oak Ridge is home to the Department of
Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and it’s engaged in a new secret war.
But this time, instead of a bomb of almost unimaginable power, the weapon is a
computer of almost unimaginable speed.
In 2004, as part of the supercomputing
program, the Department of Energy established its Oak Ridge Leadership
Computing Facility for multiple agencies to join forces on the project. But in
reality there would be two tracks, one unclassified, in which all of the
scientific work would be public, and another top-secret, in which the NSA could
pursue its own computer covertly. “For our purposes, they had to create a
separate facility,” says a former senior NSA computer expert who worked on the
project and is still associated with the agency. (He is one of three sources
who described the program.) It was an expensive undertaking, but one the NSA
was desperate to launch.
Known as the Multiprogram
Research Facility, or Building 5300, the $41 million, five-story,
214,000-square-foot structure was built on a plot of land on the lab’s East
Campus and completed in 2006. Behind the brick walls and green-tinted windows,
318 scientists, computer engineers, and other staff work in secret on the
cryptanalytic applications of high-speed computing and other classified projects.
The supercomputer center was named in honor of George R. Cotter, the NSA’s
now-retired chief scientist and head of its information technology program. Not
that you’d know it. “There’s no sign on the door,” says the ex-NSA computer
expert.
At the DOE’s unclassified center at Oak
Ridge, work progressed at a furious pace, although it was a one-way street when
it came to cooperation with the closemouthed people in Building 5300.
Nevertheless, the unclassified team had its Cray XT4 supercomputer upgraded to
a warehouse-sized XT5. Named Jaguar for its speed, it clocked in at 1.75 petaflops, officially becoming the world’s fastest computer
in 2009.
Meanwhile, over in Building 5300, the NSA
succeeded in building an even faster supercomputer. “They made a big breakthrough,”
says another former senior intelligence official, who helped oversee the
program. The NSA’s machine was likely similar to the unclassified Jaguar, but
it was much faster out of the gate, modified specifically for cryptanalysis and
targeted against one or more specific algorithms, like the AES. In other words,
they were moving from the research and development phase to actually attacking
extremely difficult encryption systems. The code-breaking effort was up and
running.
The breakthrough was enormous, says the
former official, and soon afterward the agency pulled the shade down tight on
the project, even within the intelligence community and Congress. “Only the
chairman and vice chairman and the two staff directors of each intelligence
committee were told about it,” he says. The reason?
“They were thinking that this computing breakthrough was going to give them the
ability to crack current public encryption.”
In addition to giving the NSA access to a
tremendous amount of Americans’ personal data, such an advance would also open
a window on a trove of foreign secrets. While today most sensitive
communications use the strongest encryption, much of the older data stored by
the NSA, including a great deal of what will be transferred to Bluffdale once the center is complete, is encrypted with
more vulnerable ciphers. “Remember,” says the former intelligence official, “a
lot of foreign government stuff we’ve never been able to break is 128 or less.
Break all that and you’ll find out a lot more of what you didn’t know—stuff
we’ve already stored—so there’s an enormous amount of information still in
there.”
The NSA
believes it’s on the verge of breaking a key encryption algorithm—opening up
hoards of data.
That, he notes, is where the value of Bluffdale, and its mountains of long-stored data, will come
in. What can’t be broken today may be broken tomorrow. “Then you can see what
they were saying in the past,” he says. “By extrapolating the way they did
business, it gives us an indication of how they may do things now.” The danger,
the former official says, is that it’s not only foreign government information
that is locked in weaker algorithms, it’s also a great
deal of personal domestic communications, such as Americans’ email intercepted
by the NSA in the past decade.
But first the supercomputer must break the
encryption, and to do that, speed is everything. The faster the computer, the
faster it can break codes. The Data Encryption Standard, the 56-bit predecessor
to the AES, debuted in 1976 and lasted about 25 years. The AES made its first
appearance in 2001 and is expected to remain strong and durable for at least a
decade. But if the NSA has secretly built a computer that is considerably
faster than machines in the unclassified arena, then the agency has a chance of
breaking the AES in a much shorter time. And with Bluffdale
in operation, the NSA will have the luxury of storing an ever-expanding archive
of intercepts until that breakthrough comes along.
But despite its progress, the agency has not
finished building at Oak Ridge, nor is it satisfied with breaking the petaflop barrier. Its next goal is to reach exaflop speed, one quintillion (1018) operations
a second, and eventually zettaflop (1021)
and yottaflop.
These goals have considerable support in
Congress. Last November a bipartisan group of 24 senators sent a letter to
President Obama urging him to approve continued funding through 2013 for the
Department of Energy’s exascale computing initiative
(the NSA’s budget requests are classified). They cited the necessity to keep up
with and surpass China and Japan. “The race is on to develop exascale computing capabilities,” the senators noted. The
reason was clear: By late 2011 the Jaguar (now with a peak speed of 2.33 petaflops) ranked third behind Japan’s “K Computer,” with
an impressive 10.51 petaflops, and the Chinese
Tianhe-1A system, with 2.57 petaflops.
But the real competition will take place in
the classified realm. To secretly develop the new exaflop
(or higher) machine by 2018, the NSA has proposed constructing two connecting
buildings, totaling 260,000 square feet, near its current facility on the East
Campus of Oak Ridge. Called the Multiprogram
Computational Data Center, the buildings will be low and wide like giant
warehouses, a design necessary for the dozens of computer cabinets that will
compose an exaflop-scale machine, possibly arranged
in a cluster to minimize the distance between circuits. According to a
presentation delivered to DOE employees in 2009, it will be an “unassuming
facility with limited view from roads,” in keeping with the NSA’s desire for
secrecy. And it will have an extraordinary appetite for electricity, eventually
using about 200 megawatts, enough to power 200,000 homes. The computer will
also produce a gargantuan amount of heat, requiring 60,000 tons of cooling
equipment, the same amount that was needed to serve both of the World Trade
Center towers.
In the meantime Cray is working on the next
step for the NSA, funded in part by a $250 million contract with the Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency. It’s a massively parallel supercomputer
called Cascade, a prototype of which is due at the end of 2012. Its development
will run largely in parallel with the unclassified effort for the DOE and other
partner agencies. That project, due in 2013, will upgrade the Jaguar XT5 into
an XK6, codenamed Titan, upping its speed to 10 to 20 petaflops.
Yottabytes and exaflops, septillions
and undecillions—the race for computing speed and
data storage goes on. In his 1941 story “The Library of Babel,” Jorge Luis
Borges imagined a collection of information where the entire world’s knowledge
is stored but barely a single word is understood. In Bluffdale
the NSA is constructing a library on a scale that even Borges might not have
contemplated. And to hear the masters of the agency tell it, it’s only a matter
of time until every word is illuminated.
James Bamford (washwriter@gmail.com)
is the author of The Shadow Factory: The Ultra-Secret NSA from 9/11 to the
Eavesdropping on America.
See also:
NSA chief General Keith Alexander,
Courtesy NSA
In a rare break from the NSA’s tradition of
listening but not speaking, NSA chief General Keith Alexander was grilled
Tuesday on the topic of eavesdropping on Americans in front of a House
subcommittee.
The questioning from Rep. Hank Johnson
(D-Georgia) was prompted by Wired’s cover story this month on the NSA’s
growing reach and capabilities, but leaves Americans with as many
questions about the reach of spy agency’s powers as they had before Alexander
spoke.
Alexander denied, in carefully parsed words,
that the NSA has the power to monitor Americans’ communications without getting
a court warrant.
But Alexander’s comments fly in the face of
people who actually helped create the agency’s eavesdropping and data mining
infrastructure. Few people know that system as well as William Binney, who served as the technical director for the
agency’s M Group, which stood for World Geopolitical Military Analysis and
Reporting, the giant 6,000-person organization responsible for eavesdropping on
most of the world.
He was also the founder and co-director of
the agency’s Signals Intelligence Automation Research Center, which helped
automate that eavesdropping network. Binney decided
to leave after a long career rather than be involved in the agency warrantless
eavesdropping program, a program he said involves secret monitoring facilities
in ten to twenty large telecom switches around the country, such as the one
discovered in San Francisco’s AT&T installation a few years ago.
Historically, the NSA’s initial response has
always been to either deny or evade when confronted with issues involving
eavesdropping on Americans. For decades the agency secretly hid from Congress
the fact that it was copying, without a warrant, virtually every telegram
traveling through the United States, a program known as Project Shamrock. Then it hid
from Congress the fact that it was illegally targeting the phone calls of
anti-war protesters during the Vietnam War, known as Project
Minaret.
More recently, President Bush said falsely
that no American had been wiretapped without a warrant at the same time the
agency was eavesdropping on thousands of Americans without a warrant as part of
the later revealed Operation Stellar Wind. The
Congress then passed a bill granting immunity from prosecution and law suits to
the telecom companies involved in the illegal program.
Also, in the same way that General Alexander
carefully parsed his words, the agency has always
maintained its own secret definition of words in a document known as United
States Signals Intelligence Directive 18, a document classified above top
secret.
For example, NSA can intercept millions of
domestic communications and store them in a data center like Bluffdale and still be able to say it has not “intercepted”
any domestic communications. This is because of its definition of the word.
“Intercept,” in NSA’s lexicon, only takes place when the communications are
“processed” “into an intelligible form intended for human inspection,” not as
they pass through NSA listening posts and transferred to data warehouses.
Complicating
matters is the senseless
scenario made up for the questioning by Congress, which makes it difficult to
make sense of his answers, especially since many seem very parsed, qualified,
and surrounded in garbled syntax.
That scenario involved NSA targeting U.S.
citizens for making fun of a President Dick Cheney for shooting a fellow hunter
in the face with a shotgun, and then the fun-makers being waterboarded
for their impertinence.
Asked whether the NSA has the capability of
monitoring the communications of Americans, he never denies it – he simply
says, time and again, that NSA can’t do it “in the United States.”
In other words it can monitor those communications from satellites in space,
undersea cables, or from one of its partner countries, such as Canada or
Britain, all of which it has done in the past.
In my article I quote from a former NSA
intercept operator, Adrienne Kinne, who was posted at
the NSA’s giant listening post in Georgia and who eavesdropped on many communications
between Americans overseas and in the U.S., including personal calls between
journalists and their families. But while she was in Georgia, satellites deep
in space did the actual interception.
“Basically all rules were thrown out the
window and they would use any excuse to justify a waiver to spy on Americans,”
she said. She added, “A lot of time you could tell they were calling their
families, waking them up in the middle of the night because of the time
difference. And so they would be talking all quiet and soft and their family
member is like half asleep and incredibly intimate, personal conversations.” Kinne protested both within NSA and then in a letter to the
Senate Intelligence Committee, but neither took any action.
Her allegations were confirmed by a second
source I interviewed several years ago. David Murfee
Faulk was also an intercept operator at NSA Georgia, but at a later date than Kinne, whom he never met. While there, a colleague told him
about being instructed to begin warrantless targeting of Americans overseas
calling the U.S. “The calls were all in English, they were all American, and
the guy goes back to his supervisor, a warrant officer, and says, ‘Sir, these
people are all Americans,’” according to Faulk. “He said, ‘No, just transcribe
it, that’s an order, transcribe everything.’ . . . A lot of these people were
having personal phone calls, calling their families back home, having all kinds
of personal discussions, and everything just disappeared somewhere, someone’s
got it.”
Like Kinne, Faulk’s
fellow intercept operator also complained. “After a few days he said he didn’t
want to do it anymore, didn’t think it was right. And in a situation like that
the officer just gets someone else to do it. So they got somebody else to do it.
There is always somebody else who will do something like that. The whole agency
down here, at least the way it operates in Georgia, there’s a lot of
intimidation, everybody’s afraid of getting in trouble, and people just follow
orders.” Like Kinne, Faulk also told his story
privately to the Senate Intelligence Committee.
The agency can also do the actual domestic
eavesdropping from foreign countries, such as Canada, or from its greatly
expanding listening post in Central England, and then just retransmit the data
to the U.S. A former NSA deputy director, Louis Tordella,
once referred to this technique when testifying before Congress. He noted that
the NSA had asked the CIA to conduct illegal domestic eavesdropping but was
turned down because the monitoring would take place “on U.S. soil.”
He added, “I was told that if they could move
a group of Cubans up to Canada it would be quite all right, but they would not
do it in the United States.” And the U.S. frequently asks its very close
foreign partners, Canada, the U.K., Australia, and New Zealand, to conduct
eavesdropping on its behalf and vice versa. The countries call themselves, the
“Five Eyes.” Prior to 9/11, says Kinne, these
countries were not supposed to monitor citizens in each other’s countries, but
that also changed. “We listened to Australians, Canadians, Brits.
And so it wasn’t just the Americans but that whole idea that you weren’t
supposed to monitor those five countries either – citizens of those five
countries.” With the borderlessness of modern digital
communications, where the actual eavesdropping is done becomes almost
irrelevant.
For years, public interest groups such as the
ACLU, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and the Electronic Privacy
Information Center have been trying through court suits to find out the extend
of NSA’s eavesdropping on Americans, only to be rebuffed at every turn with
claims of secrecy, while whistleblowers such as Adrienne Kinne,
David Murfee Faulk, and William Binney
have risked going to prison in order to expose NSA’s actions.
Now that General Alexander has broached the
subject in an open session of Congress, it is time for the American people to
know the real truth about their communications, not heavily parsed, qualified
denials about an unlikely hypothetical. Let Congress call an open panel where
whistleblowers such as Kinne, Faulk, and Binney give sworn testimony, and NSA, at last, responds
fully concerning its domestic involvement.
The spring air in the small, sand-dusted town has a soft haze to it, and clumps of
green-gray sagebrush rustle in the breeze. Bluffdale
sits in a bowl-shaped valley in the shadow of Utah’s Wasatch Range to the east
and the Oquirrh Mountains to the west. It’s the heart
of Mormon country, where religious pioneers first arrived more than 160 years
ago. They came to escape the rest of the world, to understand the mysterious
words sent down from their god as revealed on buried golden plates, and to
practice what has become known as “the principle,” marriage to multiple wives.
Today Bluffdale
is home to one of the nation’s largest sects of polygamists, the Apostolic
United Brethren, with upwards of 9,000 members. The brethren’s complex includes
a chapel, a school, a sports field, and an archive. Membership has doubled
since 1978—and the number of plural marriages has tripled—so the sect has
recently been looking for ways to purchase more land and expand throughout the
town.
But new pioneers have quietly begun
moving into the area, secretive outsiders who say little and keep to
themselves. Like the pious polygamists, they are focused on deciphering cryptic
messages that only they have the power to understand. Just off Beef Hollow
Road, less than a mile from brethren headquarters, thousands of hard-hatted construction workers in sweat-soaked T-shirts are
laying the groundwork for the newcomers’ own temple and archive, a massive
complex so large that it necessitated expanding the town’s boundaries. Once
built, it will be more than five times the size of the US Capitol.
Rather than Bibles, prophets, and
worshippers, this temple will be filled with servers, computer intelligence
experts, and armed guards. And instead of listening for words flowing down from
heaven, these newcomers will be secretly capturing, storing, and analyzing vast
quantities of words and images hurtling through the world’s telecommunications
networks. In the little town of Bluffdale, Big Love
and Big Brother have become uneasy neighbors.
The NSA has become the largest, most
covert, and potentially most intrusive intelligence agency ever.
Under construction by contractors
with top-secret clearances, the blandly named Utah Data Center is being built
for the National Security Agency. A project of immense secrecy, it is the final
piece in a complex puzzle assembled over the past decade. Its purpose: to
intercept, decipher, analyze, and store vast swaths of the world’s
communications as they zap down from satellites and zip through the underground
and undersea cables of international, foreign, and domestic networks. The
heavily fortified $2 billion center should be up and running in September 2013.
Flowing through its servers and routers and stored in near-bottomless databases
will be all forms of communication, including the complete contents of private
emails, cell phone calls, and Google searches, as well as all sorts of personal
data trails—parking receipts, travel itineraries, bookstore purchases, and
other digital “pocket litter.” It is, in some measure, the realization of the
“total information awareness” program created during the first term of the Bush
administration—an effort that was killed by Congress in 2003 after it caused an
outcry over its potential for invading Americans’ privacy.
But “this is more than just a data
center,” says one senior intelligence official who until recently was involved
with the program. The mammoth Bluffdale center will
have another important and far more secret role that until now has gone
unrevealed. It is also critical, he says, for breaking codes. And code-breaking
is crucial, because much of the data that the center will handle—financial
information, stock transactions, business deals, foreign military and
diplomatic secrets, legal documents, confidential personal communications—will
be heavily encrypted. According to another top official also involved with the
program, the NSA made an enormous breakthrough several years ago in its ability
to cryptanalyze, or break, unfathomably complex
encryption systems employed by not only governments around the world but also
many average computer users in the US. The upshot, according to this official:
“Everybody’s a target; everybody with communication is a target.”
For the NSA, overflowing with tens
of billions of dollars in post-9/11 budget awards, the cryptanalysis
breakthrough came at a time of explosive growth, in size as well as in power.
Established as an arm of the Department of Defense following Pearl Harbor, with
the primary purpose of preventing another surprise assault, the NSA suffered a
series of humiliations in the post-Cold War years. Caught offguard
by an escalating series of terrorist attacks—the first World Trade Center
bombing, the blowing up of US embassies in East Africa, the attack on the USS Cole
in Yemen, and finally the devastation of 9/11—some began questioning the
agency’s very reason for being. In response, the NSA has quietly been reborn.
And while there is little indication that its actual effectiveness has
improved—after all, despite numerous pieces of evidence and
intelligence-gathering opportunities, it missed the near-disastrous attempted
attacks by the underwear bomber on a flight to Detroit in 2009 and by the car
bomber in Times Square in 2010—there is no doubt that it has transformed itself
into the largest, most covert, and potentially most intrusive intelligence
agency ever created.
In the process—and for the first
time since Watergate and the other scandals of the Nixon administration—the NSA
has turned its surveillance apparatus on the US and its citizens. It has
established listening posts throughout the nation to collect and sift through
billions of email messages and phone calls, whether they originate within the
country or overseas. It has created a supercomputer of almost unimaginable
speed to look for patterns and unscramble codes. Finally, the agency has begun
building a place to store all the trillions of words and thoughts and whispers
captured in its electronic net. And, of course, it’s all being done in secret.
To those on the inside, the old adage that NSA stands for Never Say Anything
applies more than ever.
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Foot
Notes from Stew Webb Federal Whistleblower:
March
22, 2012 I just scrapped my article Titled:
NSA:
Bluffdale, Utah’s Secret Underground Base
for the Satanic New World Order, No one is
Safe.
Because
I just learned of the above article had been printed this past week.
Thank
GOD for wired.com and the NSA Whistleblower.
My
article and details were to be released tonight March 22, 2012 at 7pm central
time on a radio show
You
might want to tune in and listen as we reveal other details of the Bush Crime
Syndicate and the “New World Order”
http://www.journeyswithrebecca.com
Read
the Notes from my scraped article.
Updated March 26, 2012
Inslaw-Promise Software eventually has lead to
this below
The_NSA_Is_Building_the_Countrys_Biggest_Spy_Center_Watch_What_You_Say_03222012.htm
GOP using Echelon software to spy on
Americans; NSA bribing media
http://www.stewwebb.com/GOP_using_Echelon_software_to_spy_on_Americans_Nsa_bribing_media.htm
NSA routing internet data thru Amsterdam
to monitor U.S. websites and e-mail
http://www.stewwebb.com/nsa_routing_internet_data_thru_amsterdam.htm
NSA Operation Stellar Wind Espionage Against the American People
http://www.stewwebb.com/nsa_operation_stellar_wind_espionage_against_the_american_people.htm
THE NSA SPYING 9-11 COVER-UP
REACHING CRITICAL MASS
THE TIME IS NOW THE MATCH IS HOT
http://www.stewwebb.com/nsa_spying_9-11_cover-up_reaching_critical_mass.htm
NSA Whistleblower Says "People Are
Going To Be Shocked" By His Testimony Next Week..."This Is Only The Tip Of The Iceberg"
http://www.stewwebb.com/NSA_Whistleblower_Says_Bush_Using_Satellites_To_Spy_on_Americans.htm
NSA-MOSSAD FINGER FOR VETS STOLEN SOCIAL
SECURITY NUMBERS
http://www.stewwebb.com/NSA-MOSSAD
FINGER_FOR_VETS_STOLEN_SS_NUMBERS.htm
Related
Link Inslaw-Promise Software and the Octopus
Up
Dated March 15, 2012 New Evidence
The
Octopus Kerre Cassidy with Stew Webb Whistleblower
2nd Interview
http://www.youtube.com/user/stewwebb1?feature=watch
Click
on the link below to view the evidence while listening to the interview:
http://www.stewwebb.com/Project_Camelot_Live_Interview_with_Stew_Webb_Tuesday_March_13_2012.htm
Project_Camelot_Live_Interview_with_Stew_Webb_Tuesday_March_13_2012.htm
Note:
From Stew Webb Federal Whistleblower March 22, 2012
I
was in the middle of my exclusive story to be released today when I heard it
had been published.
I
thank GOD for Wired Magazine and the NSA Whistleblower who came forward.
Everyone
is chipped or will be by June 2013
Chips
in everyone under Obama’s new Health Care law. Your will have insurance and take the
chip or you go to Jail and will be chipped there.
Chips
In worldwide vaccinations since the early 1980s through the World Health
Organization.
Chips
in Passports
Chips
in Drivers Licenses since 1992 under the Compact Laws
Chips
in TVs
Chips
in Computers
Chips
in Toaster
Chips
in Coffeemakers
Chips
in Light Bulbs
Chips
in the Flue Shots
Chips
in some foods we eat or have eaten that stick to the lining of your Intestines
since the early 2000s
Anyone
whom George HW Bush “Daddy Bush” and his 100 Illuminati Banker Pals and their
New World Order Stooges “Heads of Governments” the U.S. Government in
particular decides you are against their “Satanic New World Order” will be put
to Death.
He
is what they have you are not aware of!
Death
Ray zaps you then you become dust on the floor.
E-Systems
Headquarters Dallas, Texas run by George HW Bush and Retired Admiral Bobby
Inman New World Order Pigs owned by Raythion Corp.
E-Systems
Dallas-Arlington Texas Jeb Bush’s Headquarters for his World Wide Drug
operations.
E-Systems
Dallas, Texas has their Satellite control in Mobile, Alabama were the Joy Stick
control for the “Death Ray” is that will be used on anyone worldwide who has
not been chipped by the above and does not take the chip will be Zapped and
turned to dust.
The
Death Ray was used on the Destruction of the Twin Towers on September 11, 2001
(911) this is why no Bodies were found.
http://www.ae911truth.net/store/product_info.php?cPath=27&products_id=137
Drones
and Satellites will be used to dust you who do not comply with the New World
Order NOW…..
Note:
March 2012 DCI Director of CIA General Patrais
testified before congress last week chips in Toasters, TVs etc.
Note:
March 2012 Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta “NWO Pig” Hillary Clinton’s side
kick testified last week and told U.S. Congress I do not answer to you but
answer to the United Nations and NATO.
E-Systems
Mobile Alabama a U.S. Defense Contractor that NWO Pig Col. Ollie North of Fox
News had testified in the Iran Contra hearing that E-System is part of the
:Company”.
E-Systems
have controlled electronic voting machines since the 1990s. Your vote for the
only Presidential Candidate who supports the U.S. Constitution Ron Paul means
nothing. Romney or Obama both NWO
Stooges will be again in the White House. Why is it for 40 years we the
American People have heard the same old crap wait until next election and there
will be Change. Bull!
Inside
this link see Voting and who has set up the Inslaw NOW satellites that have
evolutes to the above mentioned underground base.
Project_Camelot_Live_Interview_with_Stew_Webb_Tuesday_March_13_2012.htm
US_and_international_agents_montor_us_elections.htm
Ollie
North set up “REX 84” in 1984 the American Concentration Camps aka FEMA aka as
Gov. Jessie Ventura reported on the “Fusion Centers are all ready in effect
using the Department of Homeland Security and FEMA.
DHS
and FEMA is currently Targeting Whistleblowers like myself Stew Webb and
Journalists, Radio Show Hosts and you who are making noise on the Internet
there are an estimated 10 million people in the United States being targeted
using the current technology thanks to your US Congress, US Senate, US Presidents
George HW Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama and their “New
World Order Pigs inside and outside of the U.S. Government.
Thank
GOD I believe in Jesus Christ as my LORD and SAVIOR and am forgive by his Grace
and the “HOLY SPIRIT.
For
those who do not will not have the eyes to see, the ears to hear what is said
in this article and the footnotes by myself here you are doomed.
Get
your Bibles out and Study the Mark of the Beast in the book of Revelations.
For
those who are awake it is the time to Stand up and Take action now.
Do
be fooled by the Pulpit Goons they say do nothing, isn’t this what the Evil
would want?
The
Good to do nothing?
David
by Faith slew Goliath and tens of thousands of the Evil in his time.
I am
not advocating violence or a Revolution but do not start one without me.
It
is up to the American People in the masses to clean up their own Government.
This
technology in the hands and control of Evil is a Death Trap for all Humans on
Planet Earth…
Occupy_Arrest_Recall_and_Impeach_12042011.htm
Occupy_Wall_Street_Suggestion_from_Federal_Whistleblower_Stew_Webb_11182011.htm
Occupy_the_American_Revolution_Continues_in_2011.htm
Obama_Killing_Americans_Unite_the_Governors_Revolution_11302010.htm
Project_Camelot_Live_Interview_with_Stew_Webb_Tuesday_March_13_2012.htm
WHEN_WILL_THEY_DO_SOMETHING_02222012.htm
Stew
Webb Federal Whistleblower