| ® || 200 | HOW AMERICA LOST ITS SECRETS Central Intelligence Agency, the Treasury Department, the Atomic Energy Commission, and the FBI. With a multibillion-dollar “black budget” hidden from public scrutiny, the NSA’s technology director- ate invested in state-of-the-art equipment, including supercomputers that could break almost any cipher, antennas mounted on geosyn- chronous satellites that vacuumed in billions of foreign telephone calls, and other exotic capabilities. It also devised stealthy means of breaking into channels that its adversaries believed were secure. This enterprise required not only an army of technical specialists capable of remotely intercepting even the faintest traces of electromagnetic signals, hacking into computers, and eavesdropping on distant con- versations but also special units called “tailored access operations,” to plant listening devices in embassies and diplomatic pouches. The NSA also organized elaborate expeditions to give access to or even penetrate physical cables in enemy territory. In 1971, for example, the NSA sent a specially equipped submarine into Russia’s Sea of Okhotsk in Asia to tap through Arctic ice. The target was a Russian cable four hundred feet below the surface that connected the Rus- © sian naval headquarters in Vladivostok with a missile testing range. re) In 1980, President Ronald Reagan gave the NSA a clear mandate to expand its interception of foreign communications. In Executive Order 12333, he told the NSA that “all means, consistent with appli- cable Federal law and this [Executive] order, and with full consider- ation of the rights of United States persons, shall be used to obtain reliable intelligence information to protect the United States and its interests.” It did not restrict any foreign country, either an adversary or an ally, from its surveillance. The NSA’s target soon became nothing short of the entire elec- tromagnetic spectrum. “We are approaching a time when