Richard Aldrich

GCHQ


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Security Intelligence Organisation

      BDS—British Defence Staff, Washington

      BfV—West German security service

      BJ—‘Blue jacket’ file for signals intelligence or an individual intercept

      Blue Book—Weekly digest of comint material for the PM

      BND—Bundesnachrichtendienst – foreign intelligence service of West Germany

      Brixmis—British Military Mission to the HQ Soviet Army in East Germany

      BRUSA—Anglo–American signals intelligence agreement, 1943

      ‘C’—Chief of the British Secret Intelligence Service (SIS)

      CESD—Communications-Electronics Security Department, succeeded by CESG

      CESG—Communications-Electronics Security Group

      CIA—Central Intelligence Agency [American]

      comint—Communications intelligence

      comsec—Communications security

      CSE—Communications Security Establishment [Canadian]

      CSU—Civil Service Union

      CX—Prefix for a report originating with SIS

      DIS—Defence Intelligence Staff

      DMSI—Director of Management and Support for Intelligence in DIS

      DSD—Defence Signals Department [Australian], formerly DSB

      DWS—Diplomatic Wireless Service

      elint—Electronic intelligence

      FBI—Federal Bureau of Investigation [American]

      GC&CS—Government Code and Cypher School

      GCHQ—Government Communications Headquarters

      GRU—Soviet Military Intelligence

      GTAC—Government Technical Assistance Centre, established in 2000 – later NTAC

      IRSIG—Instructions and Regulations concerning the Security of Signals Intelligence [Allied]

      JIC—Joint Intelligence Committee

      JSRU—Joint Speech Research Unit

      JSSU—Joint Services Signals Unit, combined sigint collection units

      KGB—Russian secret service

      LCSA—London Communications Security Agency, until 1963

      LCSA—London Communications-Electronics Security Agency, until 1965

      LPG—London Processing Group

      MI5—Security Service

      MI6—Secret Intelligence Service (also SIS)

      MiG—Mikoyan – Soviet fighter aircraft

      MoD—Ministry of Defence

      MTI—Methods to Improve, sequential five-year sigint programmes at GCHQ

      NATO—North Atlantic Treaty Organisation

      NSA—National Security Agency [American]

      NTAC—National Technical Assistance Centre, previously GTAC

      PHP—Post-Hostilities Planning Committee

      PSIS—Permanent Secretaries’ Committee on the Intelligence Services

      SAS—Special Air Service

      SBS—Special Boat Service

      SDECE—French intelligence service

      Sigdasys—An allied operational sigint distribution system in Germany in the 1980s

      sigint—Signals intelligence

      SIS—Secret Intelligence Service (also MI6)

      SOE—Special Operations Executive

      SUSLO—Special United States Liaison Officer based in Britain

      TICOM—Target Intelligence Committee dealing with signals intelligence

      UKUSA—UK–USA signals intelligence agreements

      VHF—Very High Frequency

      Y—Wireless interception, usually low-level

      Y Section—SIS unit undertaking interception activities

      Y Service—Signals interception arms of the three services

       Introduction

       GCHQ – The Last Secret?

       GCHQ has been by far the most valuable source of intelligence for the British Government ever since it began operating at Bletchley during the last war. British skills in interception and code-breaking are unique and highly valued by our allies. GCHQ has been a key element in our relationship with the United States for more than forty years.

      Denis Healey, House of Commons, 27 February 19841

      ‘GCHQ’ is the last great British secret. For more than half a century, Government Communications Headquarters – the successor to the famous wartime code-breaking organisation at Bletchley Park – has been the nation’s largest and yet most elusive intelligence service. During all of this period it has commanded more staff than the Security Service (MI5) and the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) combined, and has enjoyed the lion’s share of Britain’s secret service budget. GCHQ’s product, known as signals intelligence or ‘sigint’, constituted the majority of the secret information available to political decision-makers during the Cold War. Since then, it has become yet more significant in an increasingly ‘wired’ world. GCHQ now plays a leading role in shaping Britain’s secret state, and in the summer of 2003 it relocated to a spectacular new headquarters that constituted the single largest construction project in Europe. Today, it is more important than ever – yet we know almost nothing about it.2

      By contrast, the wartime work of Bletchley Park is widely celebrated. The importance of decrypted German communications – known as ‘the Ultra secret’ – to Britain’s victory over the Axis is universally recognised. Winston Churchill’s wartime addiction to his daily supply of ‘Ultra’ intelligence, derived from supposedly impenetrable German cypher machines such as ‘Enigma’, is legendary. The mathematical triumphs of brilliant figures such as Alan Turing are a central part of the story of Allied success in the Second World War. The astonishing achievement of signals intelligence allowed Allied prime ministers and presidents to see into the minds of their Axis enemies. Thanks to ‘sigint’ we too can now read about the futile attempts of Japanese leaders to seek a favourable armistice in August 1945, even as the last screws were being tightened on the atomic bombs destined for Hiroshima and Nagasaki.3

      However, shortly after VJ-Day, something rather odd happens. In the words of Christopher Andrew, the world’s leading intelligence historian, we are confronted with the sudden disappearance of signals intelligence from the historical landscape. This is an extraordinary omission which, according to Andrew, has ‘seriously distorted the study of the Cold War’.4 Intelligence services were at the forefront of the Cold War, yet most accounts of international relations after 1945 stubbornly refuse to recognise even the existence of the code-breakers who actually constituted the largest part of this apparatus.5 Nor did this amazing cloak of historical invisibility stop with the end of the Cold War. In 2004, following the furore over the role of intelligence in justifying the invasion of Iraq, Lord Butler,