OVERVIEW

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
43
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
May 22, 2012
Sequence Number: 
3
Case Number: 
Content Type: 
MISC
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PDF icon CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3.pdf1.66 MB
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 SECRET OVERVIEW The Foreign Broadcast Information Service inherited by R. Evans Hineman in 1982 was poised for perhaps the biggest change in its 41-year history. Hineman, while not the originator of the FBIS Modernization Program, in the following seven years as DDS&T influenced its scope and pace. During Hineman's tenure, was spent modernizing FBIS, the annual FBIS budget doubled, the number of FBIS staff employees grew by 20 percent, and the FBIS headquarters was moved from Arlington to western Fairfax County. In the process, Hineman named three new directors and four deputy directors of FBIS, including automation experts from the Office of Research and Development and the Office of Development and Engineering. By the time Hineman retired in 1989, FBIS was a larger and more productive service of common concern to the US Intelligence Community. FBIS was also more integrated into the DS&T than it had been since its transfer from the Directorate for Intelligence 13 years earlier. Nevertheless, FBIS in 1989 remained different from other DS&T offices in several respects: It dealt primarily, although not exclusively, with unclassified information; it employed mostly liberal arts graduates; and its overseas posts were not under cover, an anomaly in CIA ascribable to the unique history of the monitoring service. 1 SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 n Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 '? 7 R Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 SECRET HALF A CENTURY OF FOREIGN MEDIA COLLECTION Looking Back Prior to joining the DS&T on 22 November 1976, FBIS had performed its mission for 35 years as a subcomponent of other organizations. It was established by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in 1941 to monitor, analyze, and report on foreign radio broadcasts for the US Government. Known during World War II as the Foreign Broadcast Intelligence Service, FBIS disseminated information from Axis and other radio and press agency transmissions to US war agencies. With the cutback in governmental spending at the end of the war, the FCC could not afford a service unrelated to its domestic regulatory responsibilities. As a result, FBIS became a temporary orphan while Washington officials attempted to establish a post-war national intelligence apparatus to prevent future surprises like Pearl Harbor. In this period FBIS was maintained by the War Department (1946) and the Central Intelligence Group (1946-47). When the National Security Act of 1947 established the Central Intelligence Agency, six-year-old FBIS, renamed Foreign Broadcast Information Service, became a charter component. Responding to CIA collection guidance, FBIS supplied a steady flow of information on developments abroad from foreign radios, press agencies, newspapers, and journals. By the start 2 SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94601417R000100270003-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 SECRET of Hineman's time as DDS&T, a network of 17 field bureaus around the world supplied monitored information by teleprinter to FBIS headquarters, located since 1965 in Key Building at 1200 Wilson Boulevard in the Rosslyn area of Arlington, Virginia. By 1982 FBIS had field bureaus in Vienna, Austria; Nicosia, Cyprus; Tel Aviv, Israel; Amman, Jordan; Manama, Bahrain; Abidjan, Ivory Coast; Mbabane, Swaziland; Okinawa, Japan; Bangkok, Thailand; Hong Kong; Seoul, South Korea; Panama; Asuncion, Paraguay; and Key West, Florida. London Bureau operated jointly with the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) Monitoring Service, with which FBIS has exchanged monitored information since World War II. _ 25X1 25X1 25X1 The bureaus, most situated at overseas US diplomatic or military installations, employed foreign national linguists as monitors under the supervision of staff editors. At FBIS headquarters, field information was prepared for publication in regional Daily Reports and for a 24-hour Wire Service to intelligence watch offices. Also at headquarters, staff linguists scrutinized thousands of foreign-language publications, a task assumed in 1967 when the Foreign Documents Division of the CIA's Office of Central Reference was merged with FBIS. Material selected by the staff linguists was 3 SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 SECRET processed by freelance translators under contract with the Joint Publications Research Service, an FBIS auxiliary in Arlington. A small group of staff analysts in Key Building read Communist media for clues to policy trends, and reported their findings. In the 1970s it was generally recognized that FBIS, which had been maintained on a spartan budget in the Directorate of Intelligence, had not kept pace with automation and other advances in information handling. For example, a speech by a foreign leader was typed at least three times before appearing in the Daily Report: first by the field monitor who translated it into English, then by a communicator who manually copied it on a teleprinter keyboard for transmission to headquarters. At Key Building, the printout was edited by pencil, then retyped for printing. If the speech was also carried on the FBIS Wire Service, it was retyped a fourth time. FBIS had long dreamed of regenerating material by some mechanical or electronic means. Experiments with mechanical means in the 1960s proved unsuccessful, as did an effort in the 1970s to introduce electronic text handling, Project RAPID (Radio and Press Information Dissemination). The failure of RAPID contributed to a perception that FBIS was "all thumbs" when it came to technical matters. The transfer of FBIS from the DI to the DS&T in 1976, part of a swapping of several offices, was expected to help the monitoring service overcome its technological shortcoming. The 4 SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22: CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 SECRET move took several years to bear fruit, however, with the main benefit to FBIS of DS&T membership coming in the 19805 during the Hineman era. In 1980, following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and with US-Iranian granted FBIS relations in a crisis, Congress unexpectedly 25X1 DDS&T Dirks authorized 25X1 this windfall to start a new FBIS headquarters automation 25X1 effort involving the FBIS Wire Report volumes. Service and two regional Daily formerly deputy director of was selected to head the project under the the Office of ELINT, Office of Research and Development. Called MIDAS, for Media Intelligence Dissemination Automation System, it was due to be operational in 1982. Meanwhile, the boost to FBIS capabilities provided by the was followed in 1981 by the advent of the Reagan administration, with William J. Casey as DCI. The desire of the administration and Congress to strengthen US intelligence and security capabilities -- reflected in 25X1 25X1 increased defense and intelligence spending exceptional opportunity to improve FBIS. In these circumstances, FBIS Director -- provided an 25X1 ordered an internal study to assess the situation of FBIS and to identify its goals. Deputy Director wrote 25X1 the report on the study. It pointed out that FBIS had been 5 SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 SECRET performing in basically the same fashion since 1941, and concluded: "Clearly we need to modernize." In particular, FBIS needed to automate the handling of the material it collected, expand its monitoring of foreign communications satellites, and develop its own satellite communications network. DDS&T Dirks endorsed the spring of 1982, after which Modernization Program" into concept in principle in the staff developed the "FBIS 25X1 a budget initiative for FY-1984 to FY-88. The program eventually was extended through FY-1989. Hineman Oversees FBIS Modernization The FBIS Modernization Program was among the pending Directorate projects when Hineman succeeded Dirks as DDS&T in July 1982. The CIA Executive Committee in September 1982 approved the FBIS initiative as part of the Agency's budget for FY-1984 and beyond. Throughout Hineman's tenure the Modernization Program would be the main consideration in his oversight of FBIS. It was the biggest, most complex, and most costly undertaking in the history of the monitoring service. FBIS managers did not assume they would be in full charge of the modernization project. They did, however, want an active role in determining its characteristics. They did not want it imposed by outsiders unfamiliar with FBIS, regardless of their technical expertise. Hineman's response was to appoint experienced DS&T technical managers to oversee the Modernization Program as 6 SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 SECRET director or deputy director of FBIS, letting FBIS managers and contractors work out the details within agreed bounds. Hineman explained later that this approach "probably takes a little longer because you've got some people to train, but I think you'll end up with a better end product and people more willing to use the end product because they've been part of the development." Modernization Managers The first appointment finished his assignment veteran opportunity arose early in three-year stint as head in the Directorate of 1983 when of FBIS deputy 25X1 25X1 and left for a new Operations. FBIS for three years, wanted a turn at the job before retiring and expressed reluctance to "train" another outsider to be director. was the author of the 1981 study that led 25X1 to the modernization initiative, but he lacked personal interest in new technologies, as evidenced by his continuing use of a manual typewriter. After some hesitation, lineman named as director, but stipulated that his deputy had 25X1 to be an experienced manager of technical programs. Chosen was 25X1 previously deputy director of ORD. 25X1 their respective new positions in January 25X1 assumed and February 1983. expected to succeed as director upon 25X1 was the latter's retirement at the end of 1984. As it turned out, 25X1 7 SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94601417R000100270003-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 SECRET however, Hineman needed a new director of : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 the Office of Technical Service in 1984 and considered the best 25X1 choice. an experienced OD&E 25X1 engineer/manager, was named to replace as the FBIS 25X1 25X1 deputy. Because of this unexpected development, asked to delay his retirement a year. This would give 25X1 time to become familiar with FBIS before succeeding as director. 25X1 and replaced him as director on 3 25X1 .. agreed January 1986, with an FBIS careerist, as his 25X1 deputy. had the distinction of being the first 25X1 Director of FBIS from elsewhere in the DS&T, the first electrical engineer to head FBIS, and the Director with the shortest tenure. After eight months in the position 25X1 retired upon reaching age 50 in September 1986. With abrupt departure, Hineman was compelled to 25X1 send to FBIS a technical manager new to the Modernization Program. He needed a quick study who could take over the reins of modernization while developments proceeded apace. He chose then serving as Deputy Director of 25X1 ORD. Since leaving the aerospace industry had served in four DS&T Offices and on the DDS&T's staff, where as a planner he had become acquainted with FBIS. At FBIS, saw the Modernization Program through some of its most challenging phases to completion in 1989. 8 SECRET continued as Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 R Next 2 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22: CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 SECRET Deputy Director under and was succeeded by another FBIS 25X1 careerist. At lower levels the Directorate assigned technical personnel from other offices to FBIS to help carry out the Modernization Program. Skilled personnel on rotation from other Directorates also provided expertise. until April 1988, when he retired 25X1 In 1985 created the FBIS Engineering Support Group, consolidating technical efforts related to modernization and conventional operations. rfrom- the-Office of Cammunications, served as chr?iher-g-rotirp- 'IEom 19115 te-i-9-917; Automation Gets Priority Of the three FBIS modernization goals enunciated in 1981, automation of the handling of collected material had top priority among most FBIS employees. Information was the business of FBIS and electronic handling would improve efficiency, volume, and speed. Further development of the MIDAS project, which in 1983 had introduced electronic word processing to the FBIS Wire Service and two of the eight Daily Reports, was terminated in 1985. It was considered too limited to serve as the foundation for computerized information handling, storage, and retrieval throughout FBIS. 9 SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 25X1 .// 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 SECRET In its place, the much more ambitious Automated FBIS System (AFS) was designed to serve the varied information handling needs of headquarters editors, linguists, and analysts. To persons involved in its developmemt-r?AFS also meant the who jojned FBIS from the Office of Research and Development in 1983, spent the remainder of the decade on FBIS automation efforts. In June 1985 Lockheed Electronics Corp. was selected as contractor for the AFS project. AFS consisted of separate unclassified and classified computer systems. The unclassified segment had subsystems for handling electronic mail, editorial terminals, and editorial composition, and was mainly used for preparing information for publication. This segment went into service in August 1987. The more complex classified system handled communications with field bureaus, reference materials, and product data bases. It became operational in January 1989. In the field, automation began in June 1987 when Austria Bureau started using personal computers for word processing in translation, editing, and communications processes. Electronic information handling was introduced among other bureaus as funding permitted, but tight budgets precluded its introduction worldwide until the early 1990s. In lineman's view, automation was a major advancement for FBIS, resulting from its move to the DS&T from the DI. The 10 SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22: CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 SECRET transformation of FBIS information-handling processes to electronic means was "a pretty slick revolution" and "a big achievement that I was proud of," he said after his retirement. Move to Reston: Great Leap Forward Automation developers initially assumed AFS would be installed in FBIS headquarters in Key Building in Rosslyn. The 20-year old structure was ill suited for high-tech wiring and air conditioning requirements, however, and the FBIS space was already crowded, even with some components in two other Arlington buildings. Computer engineers were daunted by the prospect of maintaining MIDAS while installing AFS in such quarters. In addition, rising rental costs indicated that FBIS might have to relocate to a more suburban location. favored moving sooner rather than later. He wanted to find a new building to house all FBIS components, one in which the new AFS equipment could be installed and tested before it was occupied. In March 1986 he learned of the availability of Some FBIS employees expressed concern that the move to western Fairfax county would isolate them from governmental 11 SECRET 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 SECRET analytical and policymaking centers. FBIS management pledged to make special efforts to maintain customary contacts. Following installation of the unclassified segment of AFS in mid-1987, FBIS components began moving from Rosslyn to the new headquarters. The FBIS Wire Service and two of the eight Daily Report volumes began operating on AFS on 20 August 1987 and by early October all FBIS components were working there under the same roof. For the first time in its 46-year history, the entire Daily Report was prepared for publication on computer terminals by editors and compositors, without need of typists. The Age of Satellite Monitorina Another part of the Modernization Program involved increasing the initial capability of FBIS to monitor broadcasts from communications satellites. When outlined the need in his 1981 paper, FBIS had barely foreign entered the age of satellites, although their potential as a source of information had been recognized for years. The funding in 1980 enabled FBIS to procure its first two receive-only satellite earth terminals (ROSETs) 12 SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 25X1 STAT 25X1 25X1 OcY1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 The second FHIS Headquarters building, at 1424 K Street NW in Washington, D.C. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 SECRET As part of the Modernization Program, FBIS developed plans to install second-generation ROSETs at three other sites around the world. Together the chain of five sites could cover the entire geosynchronous plane, monitoring satellites parked at any point over the equator. A high-capacity, two-dish antenna was inaugurated at Panama Bureau in December 1984 and a similar installation at Bangkok Bureau in December 1985. 13 SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94601417R000100270003-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 SECRET Smaller satellite antennas, however, were erected at other bureaus for limited coverage, including Paraguay Bureau in 1986 and Tel Aviv Bureau in 1988. In addition to the overseas ROSETs, a 9-meter satellite dish was erected on the grounds at CIA Headquarters in 1985 to provide selected foreign television broadcasts to analysts. To plan and coordinate field coverage in the satellite era the seven-person FBIS Field Coverage Staff was enlarged in 1983 into Monitoring Operations Division. Budget Constrains Communications Modernization The most contentious proposal in the FBIS Modernization Program called for the establishment of a satellite-based communications network to link FBIS headquarters and field facilities. Only a portion of the original proposal survived repeated reviews by skeptics and budget managers who were intent on protecting FBIS automation, which was seen by more employees as more important. 25X1 25X1 As envisioned by engineer the network, 25X1 called Internet, would have been a real-time, interactive information exchange system linking 17 FBIS sites on five continents. Each site would have a small dish antenna for transmitting and receiving by way of leased Intelsat satellite transponders. FBIS could send whatever signals it chose over 14 SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 SECRET this "pipeline," free of the message format and queuing requirements of the teleprinter circuits used by FBIS since the 1940s. Besides carrying the texts of monitored information, the wide-band network would introduce various new capabilities. For example, field bureaus could send monitored television broadcasts to headquarters and relay broadcasts among themselves to share translation loads, while headquarters could use the network as a command channel. The primary obstacle to the establishment of Internet was its anticipated cost, which approximated the entire premodernization FBIS budget. Adding to the expense was an international convention requiring the employment of communications contractors to handle transmissions via commercial satellites. Because of budget pressures, in May 1984 DDS&T Hineman and ADDS&T Hirsch limited plans for Internet to FBIS headquarters and the five bureaus projected to have ROSET satellite-monitoring facilities. A few months later, as a result of another budget cut, Internet planning was further reduced to a "Phase I" consisting only of FBIS headquarters and London and Panama Bureaus. Subsequent phases were not developed due to lack of funds. The three-site Internet was established in 1987 after communications contractors set up send/receive satellite facilities at London and Panama Bureaus costing 15 SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22: CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3_xi SECRET Envious analysts of Far Eastern and other countries had to be told that while similar live relays from their regions were technically possible, FBIS could not afford them. They had to settle for FBIS field videotapes of monitored newscasts from Beijing, Tokyo, Jerusalem, Havana, and Bonn sent by commercial air courier, a service instituted at the request of the DDI in 1985. 16 SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 SECRET While the original Internet concept proved to be too ambitious for FBIS in the 1980s, several other innovations helped FBIS improve its communications capability at relatively modest cost. These included computer-to-computer communications using international direct-dial telephone circuits, faster transmission speeds, and facsimile equipment at each site. Changes Wrought lay Modernization The FBIS Modernization Program formally ended as a separate budget category at the close of the 1989 fiscal year, but FBIS in FY-1990 had a base budget higher than before the program started. Much of the increase was for continuing annual operating and maintenance costs stemming from the program. lineman saw the modernization of FBIS as a process that ought to continue indefinitely. "Once we get FBIS modernized," he said early in 1989, "we cannot afford to just stop. There will be a continuous effort to be sure that each year we're 17 SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/22 : CIA-RDP94B01417R000100270003-3 SECRET "bringing more and more modernization in.... We now have to keep up with the state of the art and bring in new and better ways of doing business as we go along." At the end of the Modernization Program in 1989, FBIS was publishing monitored information at the rate of about 180 million words a year. About 113 million appeared in the Daily Report, some 45 million more than in 1982. The FBIS Wire in 1989 carried approximately 19 million words, compared with -1-1AS42.4-42