United States Air Force Security Service

Initially established as the Air Force (USAF) Security Group in June, 1948, the USAF Security Service (USAFSS) was activated as a major command on Oct 20, 1948[2] (For redesignations, see Successor units.)

The USAFSS emblem. The globe symbolizes worldwide Influence, the lightning bolt symbolizes communications, the wing symbolizes the Air Force itself, and the sword symbolizes protection and security.[1]

The USAFSS was a secretive branch of the Air Force tasked with monitoring, collecting and interpreting military voice and electronic signals of countries of interest (which often were Soviet and their satellite Eastern bloc countries). USAFSS intelligence was often analyzed in the field, and the results transmitted to the National Security Agency for further analysis and distribution to other intelligence recipients. USAFSS was tasked to carry out a cryptologic mission and to provide communications security for the newly-established Air Force.[1] The USAFSS motto, adopted Jul 27, 1963,[3] was "Freedom Through Vigilance". Colonel Roy H. Lynn was the first USAFSS commander.[4]

Some of the many world events in which USAFSS processed and reported special intelligence information include the Korean War, Middle Eastern conflicts, the Cuban Missile Crisis, and the Vietnam War, as well as College Eye[1] and COMBAT APPLE [5]

History

AN/FLR-9 antenna system, Misawa Air Base

The USAFSS was tasked with monitoring, collecting and interpreting military voice and electronic signals from countries of interest. The Soviet Union and their satellite Eastern bloc countries were a primary focus. USAFSS intelligence was often analyzed in the field, and the results transmitted to the National Security Agency for further analysis and distribution to other intelligence recipients.[6]

The USAFSS began with a staff of 34 officers, 6 enlisted personnel, and 116 civilians. It grew to an authorized strength of 17,143 airmen, officers, and civilians by the end of the Korean war,[1] with more than 28,000 personnel at its peak.[7] Members of the USAFSS included morse intercept operators, voice intercept and linguists, non-morse intercept operators, direction finding (DF) equipment operators, and analysts.[6]

In June, 1951, the largest U.S. air victory in the Korean War to that date was facilitated by tactical data from a USAFSS detachment, leading to a US air victory when F-86s from Inchon shot down 11 enemy planes.[2] In 1962, the first significant intelligence data on Soviet Union involvement in Cuba was provided by the USAFSS.[3]

The first AN/FLR-9 antenna system, often called "the elephant cage",[1] became operational March, 65, at Misawa AB.[3]

The USAFSS had two major areas of operations: ground-based and airborne. Ground-based units were scattered throughout the globe and collected information from fixed sites with large antenna arrays, such as the AN/FLR-9. Airborne units flew from bases around the world, skirting sensitive areas and collecting data in a variety of aircraft, including C-47s, RB-47s C-130s, EC-121s, and RC-135s.[6]

Airborne operations

The USAF identified the potential for using airborne platforms to intercept line-of-sight VHF communications during the Korean War. In April, 1952, a test mission of the first Airborne Reconnaissance Program (ARP) on a converted B-29 took place.[3] The Airborne Communications Reconnaissance Program (ACRP) was initiated in 1955, engaging in flights collecting Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) along the coasts of China, North Korea, and the Soviet Far East.[6]

On July 29, 1953, a 343d Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron RB-50G-2 was shot down off the USSR coast near Vladivostok, and resulted in the first loss of USAFSS airborne operators in a hostile act.[1]

In 1964, the USAFSS began using the C-47 Airborne Direction Finding platform, providing intelligence to U.S. and friendly commanders throughout Southeast Asia.[8]

From 1964 to 1971, Kadena AB was the home-base for long-range surveillance flights over China, DRPK, and North Vietnam by unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) or ‘drones’ produced by Ryan Aeronautical Company.[6]

Ground operations

USAFSS support to national customers expanded in the late 1950s and early 1960s. USAFSS ground units opened in out of the way places around the globe, including Diyarbakir, Samsun and Trabzon Air Force Detachments in Turkey, Iraklion Air Station, Crete, Zweibrucken and Wiesbaden Air Bases in Germany, Royal Air Force Kirknewton in Scotland, and Peshawar, Pakistan.[8] In the 1970s, major installations included Misawa AB, Japan, San Vito Air Station, Italy and RAF Chicksands, England.

Locations like Elmendorf AFB and Clark AB were equipped with direction finding shops from which "fixes" on targets could be obtained by requesting a line of bearing from other direction finding shops in other locations around the world. This would give a triangulation fix on a target and that target could then be plotted on a board and the coordinates then forwarded to take proper action on the targets. All this was accomplished by using the AN/FLR-9 antenna. The antenna array covered 35 acres (140,000 m2) of ground and was composed of A, B and C band elements that covered the high frequency (HF) range of signals that targets of interest transmitted on.

Mobile operations

In the late 1950s, the USAFSS developed a new mobile operations concept. The first mobile unit deployment in 1956 was in response to an unstable Middle East.[1] In the 1960s, more ERUs were added to facilitate quick response of intelligence collection capabilities in a crisis.[9]

In Japan, a mobile contingency team, maintained by the 6918th Security Squadron, deployed to conduct site surveys and establish intercept sites. Some of the deployments required civilian clothing to mask the nature of their activities.[6]

In July, 1974, a 114-man ERU was sent to San Vito Air Station, when hostilities broke out between Cyprus and Crete.[3]

TRANSEC/COMSEC operations

From its inception, USAFSS also maintained a cadre of TRANSEC (Transmission Security), later known as COMSEC (Communications Security) personnel. Their mission consisted of monitoring and analyzing US military radio, teletype, and telephone communications to identify practices and individual communications that could compromise or endanger sensitive or classified operations. The missions initially employed 292X1 Morse operators and 202X0 analysts for analysis and reporting, .

TRANSEC/COMSEC teams operated in both tactical and strategic environments, utilizing both fixed locations and deployed (TDY) teams. In 1970, deployed missions became a major portion of the mission, with teams utilizing S-141 shelters specially configured for each mission. They also used a variety of "manpack" positions configured for radio and telephone surveillance and shipped or handcarried into the field. The S-141 shelters were later replaced by a command-designed truck-based system, the AN-MSR-1. Due to design shortcomings and a low ceiling, the system was better known to operators as the "MISERY."

TRANSEC/COMSEC units and teams provided a variety of message reports, parallel to SIGINT reporting, directly to their tasking authorities (not the NSA) and to tactical/field commanders who could take actions based on the reports. Units also provided hardcopy summary reports to their tasking authorities. Many USAFSS personnel were dedicated to this mission throughout their Air Force careers, while others moved between TRANSEC/COMSEC and the more traditional SIGINT operations. The TRANSEC/COMSEC mission was occasionally used as a cover story for SIGINT operations. Likewise, deployed TRANSEC/COMSEC teams occasionally used USAFSS SIGINT units as cover for Trusted Agent/covert missions.

Successor units

References

  1. Myers, Harold; Marshall, Gabriel (2009), USAFSS to AF ISR Agency, 1948–2009: A Brief History of the AF ISR Agency and its Predecessor Organizations (PDF) (5th ed.), San Antonio, Texas: AF ISR Agency History Office, retrieved 17 Nov 2018
  2. "Twenty-Fifth Air Force (ACC)". Air Force Historical Research Agency. October 20, 1948. Retrieved February 4, 2021.
  3. Myers, Harold; Williamson, John; Marshall, Gabriel; Henderson, Justin (2016), Twenty-Fifth Air Force, A Continuing Legacy Chronology 1948-2014 (PDF), San Antonio, Texas: AF ISR Agency History Office, archived from the original (PDF) on November 20, 2018, retrieved 17 Nov 2018
  4. "Lieutenant General Roy H. Lynn". U.S. Air Force. July 31, 2017. Retrieved February 4, 2021.
  5. Boyne, Walter (July 2008), "The Teaball Tactic" (PDF), Air Force Magazine, pp. 67–70, retrieved 17 July 2018
  6. Ball, Desmond; Tanter, Richard (23 Dec 2015), "US Signals Intelligence activities in Japan 1945-2015: A Visual Guide" (PDF), Nautilus Institute NAPSNet Special Report
  7. Johnson, Thomas R (1995). American Cryptology During the Cold War 1945-1989: The Complete Declassified Official Four-Volume History of the NSA. Center for Cryptologic History, Washington DC.
  8. Marshall, Gabe (12 Dec 2012), "Twenty-Fifth Air Force: 70 Years in the Fight", Air Force ISR Agency History Office, retrieved 18 Nov 2018
  9. "The aftermath, Oct. 29 and beyond - USAFSS in the Cuban Missile Crisis", 25th Air Force Public Affairs and History Office, 14 Sep 2018
  10. Garcia, Jeannette E. (October 18, 2019). "16th Air Force emerges from combination of 24th, 25th Air Force". www.bizjournals.com. Retrieved 2020-10-05.

Further reading

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