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Lange's secrets 15 January 2006
Archives New
Zealand describes itself as 'the memory of government'. This
memory includes a dozen cardboard boxes filled with papers
belonging to former Prime Minister David Lange. Access to most
of them was barred during his lifetime, and since his death in
August, available only at the discretion of the Chief
Archivist. Political editor HELEN BAIN applied to view
the files, and was granted permission - after Archives NZ
sought Cabinet approval. An application to publish was also
approved. This is what she found.
Among the personal papers bequeathed to
the nation by former Prime Minister David Lange is a numbered
copy of a top secret report from the organisation that runs
the 'spy domes' at Waihopai and Tangimoana. It provides an
unprecedented insight into how espionage was conducted 20
years ago.
The top-secret intelligence report found
among David Lange's papers shows New Zealand had been spying
on friendly countries throughout the region.
Targets included Japanese and Philippines
diplomatic cables and the government communications of Fiji,
the Solomons, Tonga and "international organisations operating
in the Pacific".
The Government Communications Security
Bureau's 1985/86 annual report also reveals that one of New
Zealand's main targets was "UN diplomatic" cables, but which
agencies of the United Nations were targeted is not stated.
The GCSB is New Zealand's largest and
least-known intelligence agency, specialising in electronic
eavesdropping on other countries' communications as part of an
American-led global intelligence network.
The 1986 spying operations were done at
the GCSB listening station at Tangimoana, near Palmerston
North.
The report detailing these operations is
stamped with the codeword "Umbra", the modern equivalent of
the World War II "Ultra" codeword, applied to high level
intercepted German communications.
The report shows that GCSB operations in
the year after the ANZUS crisis were still closely integrated
with its intelligence allies.
Much of the GCSB's work involved
translating and analysing communications intercepted by other
agencies, "most of the raw traffic used ... (coming) from
GCHQ/NSA sources", the British and US signals intelligence
agencies.
Its report says "reporting on items of
intelligence derived from South Pacific telex messages on
satellite communications links was accelerated during the
year.
"A total of 171 reports were published,
covering the Solomons, Fiji, Tonga and international
organisations operating in the Pacific. The raw traffic for
this reporting provided by NSA the US National Security
Agency)."
The GCSB also produced 238 intelligence
reports on Japanese diplomatic cables, using "raw traffic from
GCHQ/NSA sources". This was down from the previous year: "The
Japanese government implementation of a new high grade cypher
system seriously reduced the bureau's output." For French
government communications, the GCSB "relied heavily on
(British) GCHQ acquisition and forwarding of French Pacific
satellite intercept".
The report lists the Tangimoana station's
targets in 1985-86 as "French South Pacific civil, naval and
military; French Antarctic civil; Vietnamese diplomatic; North
Korean diplomatic; Egyptian diplomatic; Soviet merchant and
scientific research shipping; Soviet Antarctic civil. Soviet
fisheries; Argentine naval; Non-Soviet Antarctic civil; East
German diplomatic; Japanese diplomatic; Philippine diplomatic;
South African Armed Forces; Laotian diplomatic (and) UN
diplomatic."
The station intercepted 165,174 messages
from these targets, "an increase of approximately 37,000 on
the 84/85 figure. Reporting on the Soviet target increased by
20% on the previous year".
After the Rainbow Warrior bombing - which
the GCSB report calls the "Rainbow Warrior incident" - "a
special collection and reporting effort was mounted against
French vessels in the NZ area, particularly the yacht Ouvea
(on which some of the French agents escaped from New Zealand).
NSA and GCHQ were also requested to monitor certain Paris
telephone addresses. Coverage of the Ouvea produced some
valuable intercept."
The report also mentions New Zealand
involvement in spying on Indian and Polish activity in
Antarctica and Chinese and other government traffic derived
chiefly from GCHQ/NSA satellite intercepts.
Each page of the 31-page report that
mentioned eavesdropping operations was headed "TOP SECRET
UMBRA HANDLE VIA COMINT CHANNELS ONLY". COMINT stands for
"communications intelligence".
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