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Body of Secrets: Anatomy of the Ultra-Secret National Security Agency Paperback – April 30, 2002
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Here is a scrupulously documented account—much of which is based on unprecedented access to previously undisclosed documents—of the agency’s tireless hunt for intelligence on enemies and allies alike. Body of secrets is a riveting analysis of this most clandestine of agencies, a major work of history and investigative journalism.
A New York Times Notable Book
- Print length784 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateApril 30, 2002
- Dimensions5.19 x 1.77 x 8 inches
- ISBN-100385499086
- ISBN-13978-0385499088
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“Extraordinary. . . . A galvanizing narrative brimming with heretofore undisclosed details.” —The New York Times Book Review
“Crisply written and prodigiously researched, Body of Secrets . . . is the most detailed picture yet of the activities of the world’s largest intelligence-gathering operation.” —The Washington Post Book World
“Part history, part expose, the book offers an ‘anatomy’ of the NSA, seeking to strip away the myth surrounding it. . . . [An] authoritative and engaging book.” –The Wall Street Journal
“Body of Secrets is one fascinating book…chock-full of juicy stuff…. Interesting to read, well-written and scrupulously documented.”–Salon
“An engaging and informed history…. Bamford weaves a narrative about the NSA that includes…many heretofore undisclosed tidbits of information.”–The Nation
“James Bamford, who wrote one of the really good books about American intelligence twenty years ago…has now done it again…. Body of Secrets has something interesting and important to add to many episodes of cold war history…[and] has much to say about recent events.”–The New York Review of Books
“At times surprising, often quite troubling but always fascinating…. Writing with a flair and clarity that rivals those of the best spy novelists, Bamford has created a masterpiece of investigative reporting.”–Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Body of Secrets adds fresh material about the world’s nosiest and most secret body…. Will fascinate anyone interested in the shadow war.”–The Economist
From the Inside Flap
Here is a scrupulously documented account?much of which is based on unprecedented access to previously undisclosed documents?of the agency?s tireless hunt for intelligence on enemies and allies alike. Body of secrets is a riveting analysis of this most clandestine of agencies, a major work of history and investigative journalism.
From the Back Cover
Here is a scrupulously documented account-much of which is based on unprecedented access to previously undisclosed documents-of the agency's tireless hunt for intelligence on enemies and allies alike. Body of secrets is a riveting analysis of this most clandestine of agencies, a major work of history and investigative journalism.
About the Author
James Bamford is available for select readings and lectures. To inquire about a possible appearance, please contact Penguin Random House Speakers Bureau at speakers@penguinrandomhouse.com or visit www.prhspeakers.com.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
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His step had an unusual urgency to it. Not fast, but anxious, like a child heading out to recess who had been warned not to run. It was late morning and the warm, still air had turned heavy with moisture, causing others on the long hallway to walk with a slow shuffle, a sort of somber march. In June 1930, the boxy, sprawling Munitions Building, near the Washington Monument, was a study in monotony. Endless corridors connecting to endless corridors. Walls a shade of green common to bad cheese and fruit. Forests of oak desks separated down the middle by rows of tall columns, like concrete redwoods, each with a number designating a particular workspace.
Oddly, he made a sudden left turn into a nearly deserted wing. It was lined with closed doors containing dim, opaque windows and empty name holders. Where was he going, they wondered, attempting to keep up with him as beads of perspiration wetted their brows. At thirty-eight years old, the Russian-born William Frederick Friedman had spent most of his adult life studying, practicing, defining the black art of codebreaking. The year before, he had been appointed the chief and sole employee of a secret new Army organization responsible for analyzing and cracking foreign codes and ciphers. Now, at last, his one-man Signal Intelligence Service actually had employees, three of them, who were attempting to keep pace close behind.
Halfway down the hall Friedman turned right into Room 3416, a small office containing a massive black vault, the kind found in large banks. Reaching into his inside coat pocket, he removed a small card. Then, standing in front of the thick round combination dial to block the view, he began twisting the dial back and forth. Seconds later he yanked up the silver bolt and slowly pulled open the heavy door, only to reveal another wall of steel behind it. This time he removed a key from his trouser pocket and turned it in the lock, swinging aside the second door to reveal an interior as dark as a midnight lunar eclipse.
Disappearing into the void, he drew out a small box of matches and lit one. The gentle flame seemed to soften the hard lines of his face: the bony cheeks; the pursed, pencil-thin lips; the narrow mustache, as straight as a ruler; and the wisps of receding hair combed back tight against his scalp. Standing outside the vault were his three young hires. Now it was time to tell them the secret. Friedman yanked on the dangling cord attached to an overhead lightbulb, switched on a nearby fan to circulate the hot, stale air, and invited them in. "Welcome, gentlemen," he said solemnly, "to the secret archives of the American Black Chamber."
Until a few weeks before, none of the new recruits had had even the slightest idea what codebreaking was. Frank B. Rowlett stood next to a filing cabinet in full plumage: blue serge jacket, white pinstriped trousers, and a virgin pair of white suede shoes. Beefy and round-faced, with rimless glasses, he felt proud that he had luckily decided to wear his new wardrobe on this day. A high school teacher from rural southern Virginia, he received a degree in math the year earlier from Emory and Henry College, a small Virginia school.
The two men standing near Rowlett were a vision of contrasts. Short, bespectacled Abraham Sinkov; Brooklynite Solomon Kullback, tall and husky. Both were high school teachers from New York, both were graduates of City College in New York, and both had received master's degrees from Columbia.
Like a sorcerer instructing his disciples on the mystic path to eternal life, Friedman began his introduction into the shadowy history of American cryptology. In hushed tones he told his young employees about the Black Chamber, America's first civilian codebreaking organization. How for a decade it operated in utmost secrecy from a brownstone in New York City. How it skillfully decoded more than 10,000 messages from nearly two dozen nations, including those in difficult Japanese diplomatic code. How it played the key role in deciphering messages to and from the delegates to the post–World War I disarmament talks, thus giving the American delegation the inside track. He told of Herbert Osborne Yardley, the Black Chamber's hard-drinking, poker-playing chief, who had directed the Army's cryptanalytic activities during the war.
Then he related the story of the Chamber's demise eight months earlier. How the newly appointed secretary of state, Henry Stimson, had become outraged and ordered its immediate closing when he discovered that America was eavesdropping on friends as well as foes. Friedman told of the firing of Yardley and the rest of the Chamber's employees and of how the government had naively taken itself out of the codebreaking business.
It was a troubling prospect. If a new war were to break out, the United States would once again have to start from scratch. The advances achieved against Japan's codes would be lost forever. Foreign nations would gain great advantage while the United States clung to diplomatic niceties. Standing in the vault containing the salvaged records of the old Black Chamber, Friedman told his three assistants, fresh out of college, that they were now the new Black Chamber. The Army, he said, had given its cautious approval to secretly raise the organization from the ashes, hide it deep within the bureaucracy, and rename it the Signal Intelligence Service. The State Department, they were sternly warned, was never to know of its existence.
In late June 1930, America's entire cryptologic body of secrets—personnel, equipment and records—fit comfortably in a vault twenty-five feet square.
On the southbound lane of the Baltimore—Washington Parkway, near the sleepy Maryland hamlet of Annapolis Junction, a restricted, specially constructed exit ramp disappears quickly from view. Hidden by tall earthen berms and thick trees, the ramp leads to a labyrinth of barbed-wire fences, massive boulders placed close together, motion detectors, hydraulic antitruck devices, and thick cement barriers. During alerts, commandos dressed in black paramilitary uniforms, wearing special headgear, and brandishing an assortment of weapons including Colt 9mm submachine guns, quickly respond. They are known as the "Men in Black." Telephoto surveillance cameras peer down, armed police patrol the boundaries, and bright yellow signs warn against taking any photographs or making so much as a note or a simple sketch, under the penalties of the Internal Security Act. What lies beyond is a strange and invisible city unlike any other on earth. It contains what is probably the largest body of secrets ever created.
Seventy-one years after Friedman and his three new employees gathered for the first time in their vault, with room to spare, the lineal descendant of the Black Chamber now requires an entire city to contain it. The land beyond the steel-and-cement no-man's-land is a dark and mysterious place, virtually unknown to the outside world. It is made up of more than sixty buildings: offices, warehouses, factories, laboratories, and living quarters. It is a place where tens of thousands of people work in absolute secrecy. Most will live and die without ever having told their spouses exactly what they do. By the dawn of the year 2001, the Black Chamber had become a black empire and the home to the National Security Agency, the largest, most secret, and most advanced spy organization on the planet.
Known to some as Crypto City, it is an odd and mysterious place, where even the priests and ministers have security clearances far above Top Secret, and religious services are held in an unbuggable room. "The NSA Christmas party was a big secret," recalled one former deputy director of the agency. "They held it at Cole field house but they called it something else." Officials hold such titles as Chief of Anonymity, and even the local newsletter, with its softball scores and schedules for the Ceramic Crafters Club, warns that copies "should be destroyed as soon as they have been read." Crypto City is home to the largest collection of hyperpowerful computers, advanced mathematicians, and language experts on the planet. Within the fence, time is measured by the femtosecond—one million billionth of a second—and scientists work in secret to develop computers capable of performing more than one septillion (1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000) operations every second.
Nearby residents can only guess what lies beyond the forbidden exit ramp. County officials say they have no idea how many people work there, and no one will tell them. Traffic planners from the county planning department, it is said, once put a rubber traffic-counting cord across a road leading to the city, but armed guards came out and quickly sliced it. "For a long time we didn't tell anybody who we were," admitted one agency official. "The focus was not on community activity. [It was] like everyone outside the agency was the enemy."
In an effort to ease relations with its neighbors, officials from the city gave Maryland's transportation secretary, James Lighthizer, a rare tour. But the state official was less than overwhelmed. "I didn't get to see a darn thing," he said.
At a nearby gas station, owner Clifford Roop says the people traveling into and out of the city keep to themselves. "They say they work for the DoD [Department of Defense]. They don't talk about their work at all." Once, when a reporter happened into the station and began taking a few notes, two police cruisers from the secret city rushed up to the office and demanded an ID from the journalist. This was not an unusual response. When a photographer hired by real estate developers started up a hill near Crypto City to snap some shots of a future construction site, he was soon surrounded by NSA security vehicles. "They picked him up and hauled him in and asked what he was doing," said Robert R. Strott, a senior vice president at Constellation Real Estate, which was a partner in the project. During interrogation the photographer not only denied attempting to take a shot of Crypto City, he said he had never even heard of NSA. Worried that occupants of an eleven-story office building might be able to look into the city, NSA leased the entire building before it was completed.
To dampen curiosity and keep peace with the neighbors, NSA director William O. Studeman, a three-star admiral, once gave a quiet briefing to a small group of community leaders in the area. "I do this with some trepidation," he warned, "because it is the ethic of the agency—sometimes called in the vernacular the supersecret NSA—to keep a low profile." Nevertheless, he gave his listeners a brief idea of NSA's tremendous size. "We're the largest and most technical of all the [U.S. intelligence] agencies. We're the largest in terms of people and we're the largest in terms of budget....We have people not only here at NSA but there are actually more people out in the field that we have operational control over—principally military—than exist here in Maryland....The people number in the tens of thousands and the budget to operate that system is measured in the billions of dollars annually.
A decade ago, on the third floor of Operations Building 1 at the heart of the sprawling city, a standing-room-only crowd packed a hall. On stage was Frank Rowlett, in whose honor an annual award was being established. As he looked out toward the audience in the Friedman Auditorium, named after his former boss, his mind no doubt skipped back in time, back to that hot, sticky, June afternoon in 1930 when he walked into the dim vault, dressed in his white suede shoes and blue serge jacket, and first learned the secrets of the Black Chamber. How big that vault had grown, he must have marveled.
For most of the last half of the twentieth century, that burgeoning growth had one singular objective: to break the stubborn Russian cipher system and eavesdrop on that nation's most secret communications. But long before the codebreakers moved into the sterile supercomputer laboratories, clean rooms, and anechoic chambers, their hunt for the solution to that ultimate puzzle took them to dark lakebeds and through muddy swamps in the early light of the new Cold War.
Product details
- Publisher : Anchor Books
- Publication date : April 30, 2002
- Edition : Reprint
- Language : English
- Print length : 784 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0385499086
- ISBN-13 : 978-0385499088
- Item Weight : 1.26 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.19 x 1.77 x 8 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #207,602 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #137 in National & International Security (Books)
- #165 in Intelligence & Espionage History
- #247 in Political Intelligence
- Customer Reviews:
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Customers find the book well-written and fascinating, with one noting it reads like a Tom Clancy novel. Moreover, they appreciate its historical content, with one review highlighting how it provides detailed coverage of major events. Additionally, the book receives positive feedback for its information quality, with customers praising its well-documented approach and interesting material about the NSA.
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Customers find the book well written and enjoy reading it, with one customer noting it reads like a Tom Clancy novel.
"...that as with many other things, this should be required reading by all red blooded Americans. What's not to believe?..." Read more
"James Bamford has done a beautifully rendered work of the entire body and structure of the National Security Agency...." Read more
"This book is well written and an easy read of one of the most fascinating agencies of all time...." Read more
"...The book is solid though for people who want to take the time to learn about a very technical government agency which operates from the shadows...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's historical content, describing it as a compelling story that covers fascinating bits of history, with one customer noting its detailed coverage of major events.
"...I will say this... He does seemingly make a good effort, when writing about the subject... and I do believe he has created the best collection of..." Read more
"...He will enthrall you with everything from the departments in the NSA, how they conduct themselves, how they hire new employees, incidents they have..." Read more
"...It does cover the spectrum...history, technology, people, etc. I'm not sure he could have organized it any better than he did...." Read more
"...The book covers fascinating bits of history from the USS Pueblo and USS Liberty incidents to stories of electronic espionage from the arctic to..." Read more
Customers find the book informative and well-documented, with a good amount of interesting material about the NSA, and one customer notes it provides an insider's view of intelligence gathering operations without getting technical.
"...Bamford continues to tell the truth and if that gets a little close to home so be it. Without the spooks who knows where we'd be or be going." Read more
"...and our covert hierarchy, this is a very well detailed and informative book. Down to earth, easy to read and very enjoyable in all aspects...." Read more
"...The NSA is the largest, most secretive, and most powerful intelligence agency in the world, but even it had its moment of breakdown...." Read more
"...thing that disappointed me about the book was the lack of discussion about important events in the 1980s and 1990s...." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 18, 2013A wide ranging book that covers the activities, both internal and external, of the NSA from the early 1950s through the following half century. Recent revelations that the NSA seems to be spying on virtually everyone on the planet comes as little surprise to anyone who has read this book - the NSA has been a power unto itself seemingly unaccountable to Congress since the agency's inception and the extent of its technological spying tool kit, something Bamford goes into great detail about, is somewhat terrifying.
The best parts of the book are about the agency's involvement in certain geopolitical events. The most damning was Israel's murderous attack on the USS Liberty during the '67 War, including the failure of Congress, or anyone else in D.C., to hold the Israelis to account to this day. Eisenhower's use of electronic eavesdropping and over flights of the USSR is covered in great detail, including a seemingly very provocative flight of multiple RB-47 aircraft over the Soviet's northern regions, a move that could easily have been interpreted as a surprise nuclear attack - had the Soviets had radars in that region, that they didn't. Ike comes across as a bit of a madman with his constant probing of Soviet air defenses and here I'd be a bit critical of what the author left out: Eisenhower did not believe the reports he was getting from the U.S. military about the Soviet's bomber or ICBM nuclear capabilities; the country simply didn't have the economic capacity to carry out such an effort, something that was becoming increasingly clear from photographic over flights of various air bases and missile sites. Once Ike had sufficient proof about the inadequacies of the Soviet threat he planned on launching a peace offensive, basically telling the Soviets to get real. One more mission was required to make this case, and it was flown by Gary Powers. One final nail in the coffin of our Vietnam disaster was the total disregard Westmoreland & Co had for the NVA's signals intelligence program, one that was quite sophisticated. The U.S. military refused to believed the gooks had this capacity and broadcast the details of upcoming missions, including B-52 strikes, in the clear with disastrous results.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2021Bamford, an NSA outsider, gives us an insider's look at the ultra secret agency through the use of open source, unclassified, and declassified material. He blends this with first-hand accounts from former NSA employees and affiliates, including those at the most senior level. This book includes a shocking account of the June 1967 Israeli attack on the USS Liberty electronic reconnaissance ship which took the lives of 34 Americans and wounded more than 170 others. He concludes that the attack by a supposed US "friend and ally" was deliberate, and he provides a graphic report on the savagery of that attack. Highly recommended.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 18, 2013I like the book overall. I've read all of his books on the NSA. Unfortunately... This one also comes with somewhat of a typical 'anti' agenda. Bamford tends to try and slip in some sort of negative comment whenever he gets a chance. What's interesting is that... each of his books on the subject, have gotten more whiney as time goes on. But the same could be said for any book on the subject. It would be nice to read a book that is purely based on facts and history, without the personal 'alarmist' agenda... but nobody seems to be willing to do that. People like Bamford, Michael Moore and the like, have always amused me. They constantly rail against the very subject that feeds them.
Personally, I think all the recent hysteria about the NSA, is just that... Hysteria. The media and the general public are simply ignorant about this subject, therefore they're against it. When I listen to Bamford these days, he's like the proverbial 'grumpy gram-pa' that hates computers or something. He can't understand what's going on... therefore in his mind, it has no value and should be eliminated. I recently saw him do a guest spot on a show (he's in big demand these days of course)... where when asked by the host if he thought the collection of data could help protect the country in any way... he responded in his best 'grumpy gram-pa' voice and proclaimed... "I have serious doubts". He went on to essentially claim that... because so much data is allegedly collected... that it would be virtually impossible to do anything with it.
OK... Lets say you catch Joe terrorist. You find a phone on him that was unknown. You take the number of that phone and put it into the phone metadata database. Metadata is basically just the same info you would see on a phone bill. So after putting that number in, you then get hits on some higher level guy in another country. The metadata shows this guy was talking to Joe terrorist on a regular basis. This could then lead to finding a higher level financier, and so on. This would literally take one person 5 minutes, sitting down at a computer. This is not potentially helpful? Sure sounds like it would be to me. But grumpy Bamford proclaims this is a giant waste and would never work. That's kind of like saying Google is a giant waste and would never work.
He has also often used the old tried and true grumpy stance that... since terror attacks have happened in the past... that proves the efforts don't work. OK, so I guess... because there are still auto thefts in cities every single night, that means cops should just disband their auto theft divisions around the country? You can see where this sort of defeatist attitude gets a little silly at some point.
I will say this... He does seemingly make a good effort, when writing about the subject... and I do believe he has created the best collection of work overall. It's just a shame that he seems to have grown into the typical old, negative, government hater, and refuses to see anything good, in the very thing that he's spent most of his life talking about.
Undoubtedly, there will be new people reading books on this subject, due to recent events. My advice to those people... Keep an open mind. Don't assume that everything the government does is evil. Don't let media outlets that are desperate for traffic and viewers, cloud your judgment with sensationalism. Try to see life for what it is... A bunch of imperfect people, all trying to get along in a very imperfect world, the best way they can. We elect officials, and those officials then entrust people with power, to do the right thing and protect us. I seriously doubt that tens of thousands of people working at the NSA, get up everyday and say to themselves... "Hmm... How can I hurt my fellow countrymen today?" For better or worse, this is the system we have. It's not perfect, but it's a heck of a lot better than no system at all.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 23, 2009The first time I read this book was immediately after it was published. After another read, I have come to the conclusion that as with many other things, this should be required reading by all red blooded Americans. What's not to believe? The people that don't believe it are the direct descendents of the ones chanting "Peace in our time" after Neville Chamberlain returned from his meeting with der furher and are doing it again every time Bin Laden goes on the air. Bamford continues to tell the truth and if that gets a little close to home so be it. Without the spooks who knows where we'd be or be going.
Top reviews from other countries
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SAMReviewed in Spain on September 6, 2024
4.0 out of 5 stars Gosto mas…
O livro é bom mas muitas vezes tem descrições demasiado longas sem acrescentar valor ou mais informação. Por vezes também é repetitivo.
- Gary D ChanceReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 30, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Fundamental to Understanding
A must read for everyone. Don't miss.
-
LuxdocReviewed in Germany on October 9, 2014
4.0 out of 5 stars Leichtere Lektüre als erwartet
Gründlich aber doch nicht langweilig ist diese genaue Untersuch der US-Geheimdienste, besonders der NSA (Abhördienst).
Auch wenn man nicht alles mit derselben Aufmerksamkeit lesen muss, ist dieses Buch auch für Europäer wichtig, zeigt es nähmlich so ziemlich alle Möglichkeiten des Abhördienstes auf. Und die sind einfach enorm! Und wenn man annehmen darf dass noch lange nicht alles preisgegeben wird, läuft es einem kalt den Rücken runter. Big Brother ist sogut wie Peannuts degegen! Also ich kann mir schon sicher sein dass dieser Kommentar auch gelesen werden kann!
- Z. M.Reviewed in Canada on June 21, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Highly recommended
Great book
- arshad qayyumReviewed in Canada on June 29, 2014
5.0 out of 5 stars BODY OF SECRETS.
ONE OF THE BEST I HAVE READ. JAMES BAMFORD IS MATER OF DETAIL AND SIMPLICITY WHEN EXPLAINING COMPLICATED SCENES. I WILL CERTAINLY BUY MORE BOOKS WRITTEN BY THIS WRITER..