8 September 2014

NSA’s Foreign SIGINT Partners

Peter Koop
September 4, 2014

For fulfilling its task of gathering foreign signals intelligence, the National Security Agency (NSA) is cooperating with partner agencies from over 35 countries all over the world.

These relationships are based upon secret bilateral agreements, but there are also some select groups in which intelligence information is shared on a multilateral basis, like the SIGINT Seniors Europe (SSEUR), the SIGINT Seniors Pacific (SSPAC) and the Afghanistan SIGINT Coalition (AFSC).

Until recently, very little was known about these foreign relationships, but the Snowden-leaks have revealed the names of all the countries that are cooperating with NSA. This made it possible to create the following graphic, which also shows various multilateral intelligence exchange groups, which will be discussed here too:

2nd Party Partners

The closest cooperation is between NSA and the signals intelligence agencies of the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Formally this is based upon bilateral agreements, the first being the UKUSA-Agreement from 1946, but soon the group got a multilateral character, which means partners can exchange information among the other members too (as far as there’s a “need to know”)

The five partners under the UKUSA-agreement, commonly called the Five Eyes, agreed that they would follow common procedures for operations and reporting, and also use the same target identification systems, equipment, methods andsource designations. They would not only share end reports and analyses, but also most of the raw data they collect.

As a kind of gentlemen’s agreement it is supposed that the Five Eyes countries are not spying on each other, although some of the documents from the Snowden-leaks show that at least NSA secretly keeps that option open.

Since

1946

1946

1949

1952

1952

Five Eyes

(FVEY)

United States

United Kingdom

Canada

Australia

New Zealand


Four Eyes

(ACGU)


United States

United Kingdom

Canada

Australia


Three Eyes

(TEYE)

United States

United Kingdom

Australia

Despite the very close and longstanding relationship between the Five Eyes partners, two sub-groups have been formed for specific military operations in which not all five partners participate. These sub-groups are designated Four Eyes (abbreviation for classification purposes: ACGU) and Three Eyes (TEYE).

Representatives

For maintaining these extensive relationships, NSA has representatives in each Second Party country. These are called Special US Liaison Officer (SUSLO), followed by the name of the nation’s capital. So for example the NSA representative in Britain is the Special US Liaison Officer, London (SUSLOL) and the one in Canada the Special US Liaison Officer, Ottawa (SUSLOO).

Likewise, the other Five Eyes countries have a representative at the NSA headquarters. These are called Special UK Liaison Officer (SUKLO), Special Canada Liaison Officer (SCALO), Special Australia Liaison Officer (SAUSLO), and Special New Zealand Liaison Officer (SNZLO).


Slide from an NSA presentation titled ‘Foreign Partner Review’ from

fiscal year 2013, showing the 2nd and 3rd Party partners

and some coalition and multilateral exchange groups.

Published in No Place To Hide, May 13, 2014.

3rd Party Partners

One step below the 2nd Party partnerships, there’s cooperation between NSA and agencies from countries who are called 3rd Party partners. This is based upon formal agreements, but the actual scope of the relationship can vary from country to country and from time to time.

For the US, this kind of cooperation is useful because foreign agencies can have better access to high-priority targets because of their geographic location, or they could have a specific expertise on certain areas, or just simply because they have a better knowledge of the local situation and language.

The foreign partner agencies are mostly interested in American technology, money and access to the worldwide interception capabilities of NSA and its Five Eyes partners. This makes these 3rd Party partnerships especially attractive for smaller countries, for whom it means a sometimes substantial increase of their otherwise limited capabilities.

One big difference with the countries from the 2nd Party category is that 3rd Party partners do spy upon each other, and many of the Snowden-documents have shown this. From these documents we also learned that in 2013, there were 33 countries with 3rd Party status:

since

1954

1962

2005?

1954

1954

1949

CNO
(19 countries)

Austria

Belgium

Czech Republic

Denmark

Germany

Greece

Hungary

Iceland

Italy

Japan

Luxemburg

Netherlands

Norway

Poland

South Korea

Spain

Sweden

Switzerland

Turkey

3rd Parties

(33 countries)

Algeria

Austria

Belgium

Croatia

Czech Republic

Denmark

Ethiopia

Finland

France

Germany

Greece

Hungary

India

Israel

Italy

Japan

Jordan

Macedonia

Netherlands

Norway

Pakistan

Poland

Romania

Saudi Arabia

Singapore

South Korea

Spain

Sweden

Taiwan

Thailand

Tunisia

Turkey

UAE

SSEUR

(14-Eyes)

Belgium

Denmark

France

Germany

Italy

Netherlands

Norway

Spain

Sweden


SSPAC

(10-Eyes)

Japan

Singapore

South Korea

Thailand


The countries in the column under “CNO” are from a list which is in an undated NSA document about collaboration regarding Computer Network Operations (CNO). The document was first published on October 30, 2013 by the Spanish paper El Mundo and classifies cooperation on four different levels, which was also explained by The Guardian.

The first level is called “Tier A - Comprehensive Cooperation”, which comprises Britain, Australia, Canada and New Zealand. A second group, called “Tier B - Focused Cooperation” includes the 19 mostly European countries listed above. A third group of “Limited cooperation” consists of countries such as France, Israel, India and Pakistan, and finally a fourth group is about “Exceptional Cooperation” with countries that the US considers to be hostile to its interests.
In May 2014, the list with the “Tier A” and “Tier B” countries was also published in Greenwald’s book No Place To Hide, where he ignores the fact that the document was about CNO cooperation and simply assumes that the “Tier B” countries are the same as those with 3rd Party status.*

Representatives

The representatives of NSA in major Third Party countries are called Special US Liaison Advisor (SUSLA), followed by the name of the country. So for example the NSA representative in Germany is the Special US Liaison Advisor, Germany (SUSLAG).

The office staff of such an advisor is called the Special US Liaison Activity (also abbreviated as SUSLA), and for example the SUSLA Germany had 18 personnel (12 civilians and 6 contractors) in 2012, a number which was to be reduced to 6 in 2013.*

It is not clear whether the various Third Party agencies also have a representative at NSA headquarters and if so, what their title is. At NSA these relationships are managed by the Foreign Affairs Directorate (FAD), which has a Country Desk Officer (CDO) for every country or region that matters.

Multilateral groups

Although the Third Party relationships are strictly bilateral, some of these countries have also worked very close with each other for a long time. This has been formalized into a few multilateral groups in which intelligence is exchanged not only between one particular country and the US, but also among all other participants. Besides NATO, the following three SIGINT sharing groups are known:

- SIGINT Seniors Europe (SSEUR)

This group consists of the Five Eyes and nine European countries: France, Germany, Spain, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, Denmark, Norway and Sweden. Except for Sweden, all are NATO members. After the number of countries, the SSEUR are also called 14-Eyes. The “Seniors” refers to the heads of the participating military or signals intelligence agencies, who in this group coordinate the exchange of military intelligence according to the needs of each member. There’s also a SIGINT Seniors Europe Counter Terrorism (SISECT) coalition.*

- SIGINT Seniors Pacific (SSPAC)

There’s a similar group for multilateral exchange of military intelligence among some 3rd party nations from the East Asia/Pacific Rim region. Besides the members of the Five Eyes, the SIGINT Seniors Pacific include Singapore, South Korea and most likely Japan and Thailand. Probably one other country is participating too, making this group also being identified as the 10-Eyes.

- Afghanistan SIGINT Coalition (AFSC)

According to an NSA paper from 2013, this group consists of the same 14 countries as the SSEUR and is aimed at sharing Afghanistan-related intelligence reports and metadata with the other participants. At the time of the paper, each AFSC-member was responsible for covering a specific area of interest, maybe corresponding to the region in Afghanistan where they had troops deployed.
Snowden and Greenwald agreed not to publish about NSA’s involvement in Afghanistan, but the German book about the Snowden-leaks, Der NSA Komplex, reveals that the 14 AFSC-members cooperated closely in decrypting and analysing mobile communications and have a dedicated data center codenamed CENTER ICE for exchanging this kind of intelligence.*

This makes it likely that much of the metadata that various European countries shared with the US, mistakenly presented by Glenn Greenwald as NSA spying on European citizens, was collected as part of this Afghanistan SIGINT Coalition.

Links and Sources

- NSA document about Foreign Relations Mission Titles


- Duncan Campbell, Echelon and its role in COMINT

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