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Bill Pasternak WA6ITF
Joe Schroeder, W9JUV
Prologue
Tuesday, 11 September, is a day that changed America, and the world
like never before. It proved beyond any shadow of a doubt that even
the worlds only super-power is vulnerable to attack from extremist
elements. As this is written in early October, the United States
Government has pointed the finger of guilt at a cowardly terrorist
leader, hiding in caves in Afghanistan, named Osama bin Laden. President
George Bush has promised full retribution for these heinous acts
of terror in New York City and just outside Washington DC.
By the time you read this, there is a very good chance that the
United States and our allies will be at war against bin Laden and
all who follow his doctrine. This will be the kind of war never
before seen by Americans because it will, in effect, be a clandestine
war. A war to seek out and destroy what amounts to ghosts
living in the desert and hiding under rocks. Press coverage
will be minimal or non-existent because the good-guys dont
want the bad-guys to be watching CNN and knowing our next move.
Shortly after the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon,
the FCC asked the nations Amateur Radio Community to keep
its ears open for any suspicious communications and report it. About
a day later, the Federal Bureau of Investigation set up a toll free
telephone number and a web site. It also requested that all Americans
use only these avenues to submit leads and other pertinent data
that might have some bearing on the twin tragedies. As of 1 October,
the FBI, which is the lead domestic organization investigating the
terrorist attack, says it has received over 100,000 leads and the
list is growing daily.
Amateur Radio holds the promise of being able to provide extra
ears (and eyes) for our government as it continues the hunt for
any co-conspirators or other terrorist cells still in operation.
The downside is the fact is that few Hams probably know what to
listen for, or where to listen. A person with experience in this
area is Chicago writer and consultant Joe Schroeder, W9JUV. A Ham
and SWL for over half a century, Schroeder is well aware that listening
is an art. In the following paragraphs, he shares some of
what he has learned with all of us.
How to listen
WR: You have been a Ham most of your life. You love DXing.
I would guess that to be a good DXer you also have to be a good
listener. Is that correct?
W9JUV: By all means. DXing is 98% listening and only 2%
transmitting.
WR: Do you think terrorists in need of communications will
even bother with the Amateur Radio or CB bands?
W9JUV: We Hams do listen to one another as we tune around
listening for DX, friends or just a chat. So if this communications
is actually in-band and is enough of an unusual nature it would
attract attention. So if I were a terrorist operative or such, I
would probably set up outside of the Amateur Radio bands.
WR: So if you were a terrorist trapped without any other
way to communicate, and were scared that Hams might discover you,
where would you go?
W9JUV: Well, he would want to put it at a frequency where
the equipment is still going to work pretty well. Of course, nowdays,
most modern Amateur Radio equipment will work most of the way throughout
its design range with the necessary modifications that are made
for such services as Civil Air Patrol and MARS.
Back in what we might want to call the early days, I used to do
some listening up above 14.500 MHz, and I heard many interesting
things which I will guess was drug trafficking. Or at least suspected
drug traffickers. So, I would say out of band but not way
out of band.
This could be an interesting exercise for someone with the time
to tune up above 14.350 MHz. In major cities like Los Angeles or
here in Chicago there is always the possibility that there could
be a terrorist group with a small, inconspicuous, antenna trying
to maintain contact with others of the same ilk.
WR: Our government believes there could be several clandestine
terrorist cells still lurking. With all normal means of communications
(telephone, cellular, e-mail, the Internet, etc.) being so tightly
monitored, lets suppose that the bad guys need to communicate.
They will need alternate and perhaps rudimentary routes and may
take to the ham bands or nearby frequencies. Starting with the HF
bands, what type of communications might that be?
W9JUV: Thats a tall question because there are so
many variations to it. But anyone who is an active Ham pretty well
knows what a normal Amateur Radio conversation is. Whether its
a group that gets together every morning to chat on 20 Meters or
a DXer exchanging a quick report with another DXer. So, anything
that seems to depart from that obviously is worth listening to.
WR: What about languages?
W9JUV: Yes, coming across people who are speaking in an
unusual language. Note that I say unusual. Let me explain.
I suspect that just about anyone who listens to the DX bands has
heard stateside stations talking to friends in places like Germany
and speaking German. Or, stations talking to South America or Spain
in Spanish. Or France in French, or the other many well-known languages.
But the various Middle-Eastern languages we do not hear very often
unless you are listening on the low-end of 10 Meters to the
cab drivers [unlicensed illegal stations]. Those deserve our attention
even if we do not understand the words being said.
WR: What about signal strength and time of day?
W9JUV: Any time you run across an unusually loud signal
at a time when the propagation should not be available in the direction
the station indicates he is talking to, or is using prefixes that
do not fit the time of day, I would say that would be an indicator.
Also, a station that is extremely loud at a time when a given band
is not open in the indicated direction and who is talking in a language
that you cannot identify. Most of us who are DXers can identify
the common Asian languages, the various Russian based languages
even though we might not understand what is being said. At least
you have an idea of who it is.
WR: Anything special they might try?
W9JUV: Frequency hopping comes to mind. If they have any
sense at all, they are not going to sit on 14.225 or 14.425 day
after day. Rather, they may have a pattern between transmissions
to shift frequencies. But, as I said earlier, if you hear someone
who is so loud that he is obviously in your neighborhood, and he
is not understandable and particularly if he is outside the
Amateur Radio bands I would say that is a real flag that
you should respond to and report.
WR: I would think that a terrorist cell or a spy would want
to be as inconspicuous as possible. I might want to bury myself
in low power CW. Or use a place such as Freeband or
11 Meter Class D CB where I might go unnoticed. But you are saying
to listen for high power voice. Why not low power Morse?
W9JUV: That gets you into an entirely different area. I
would not be concerned with CW at all for two reasons. The first
is that it requires a skill that I do not see these people using.
And two, frankly as a communications means in this day and age,
Morse is simply too slow.
If I were interested in communicating other than by voice I would
use PSK-31 or one of the other digital modes. Some of the results
we see Hams getting with extremely low power transmitters and the
capability of the computer controlled data communications systems
to pull signals out of the noise that the ear cannot even detect
and do so with 100% copy doing it at the speed of
manual typing or RTTY would be an ideal means for terrorists to
use.
Most Hams running across it might not realize what it was. But,
if Hams familiar with digital communications modes were to run across
something that really sounds suspicious, it should be reported.
Let me add that as a consultant, I have long been involved with
law enforcement people. There is one thing that they always say
any time you see anything that you believe may have any suspicious
character to it, let them know. They would rather get hundreds of
alarms and possibly catch the one thats real than not get
any alarms at all. And I think thats the case here.
WR: So far we have been talking of a spy or covert operative
trying to contact home base. What about the terrorist leadership
trying to contact the operative like those number stations
nobody seems to understand the meaning of.
W9JUV: What you are talking about are called blind transmissions.
Thats where the transmitting station expects no response but
the message is transmitted on a variety of frequencies and possibly,
at a variety of times. The clandestine operative at this end merely
has to be listening at one of the right times on one of the right
frequencies and he gets the message.
Its certainly a possibility, but I have to ask how one determines
a particular transmission is the case. We all know that you can
be sitting there on 20 Meters and listen to a signal from the Middle
East, Australia, Europe or wherever. He is talking to a stateside
station with a 40 over S9 signal. He stands by and even if there
is no QRM on the frequency, you do not even hear a whisper from
the stateside station due to propagation characteristics. How amateurs
in different geographic areas would be able to determine that we
are listening to a blind transmission may not be feasible.
WR: What frequency or band would you start with?
W9JUV: In my case, I would start in or near the 20-meter
band mainly because I have good antennas there. But you really
need to think in terms of international vs. inside the United States
communications.
For example, inside the United States it could take place inside
or near the 75-meter band. For international, certainly the 20-meter
band and adjacent spectrum is the place to begin. Then listen up
or down about one half megahertz from the band edges. I would also
listen around the 10 MHz band and possibly the 18 MHz band, not
21 MHz or above. These bands are just not that reliable for people
who really want to get a message through and do it quickly.
WR: So far we have talked about the HF bands, 2 MHz through
30 to 35 MHz. What about terrorists who need local communications?
Where would they bury themselves? FRS? CB?
W9JUV: CB on 11 Meters I do not see as an option. FRS probably
not an option either because there are just too many people using
it. Its not so much the chance of being overheard and having
the whistle blown. More likely, some kid is going to inadvertently
break in and break up the communications especially in a
mall or some downtown area.
I wouldnt be surprised to learn that terrorists were
caught using FM on 144.000 MHz
I would also say that the Amateur Radio bands are not a good alternative
because there is too much of an opportunity for radio amateurs to
come across such communications and recognize that it is not normal
Ham radio talk. What goes on in the amateur VHF and UHF bands is
has such a conventional pattern. In many areas the regulars on VHF/UHF
can recognize each others voices. Something unusual in content
or accent would stick out much more than on an HF band like 20 or
40 Meters.
This being said, I would suspect that they might get some Ham equipment,
but they would modify it for out-of-band operation.
Possibly use 2-meter equipment below 144 MHz or above 148 MHz on
a channel theyve found inactive by monitoring.
The same rule would apply to the 70 cm. band or even the 222 MHz
band. The 222 MHz band would be of definite interest because of
its relatively low usage even by radio amateurs. As I said earlier,
if you are going to do any monitoring, also tune either side of
any VHF Ham band just as you might do on HF.
WR: Is using a scanner a good idea for monitoring the world
above 50 MHz?
W9JUV: Scanners will provide a problem because there is
so much legitimate activity in these frequency ranges. If you do
use a scanner, use the mode where it stops on a busy channel for
a few seconds and then, if you do not manually stop it, it resumes
scanning. In the first few seconds of any transmission you will
be able to determine if its police, fire, taxi-cabs or whatever.
Also, many new radios, HF, VHF and some scanners have a panoramic
visual display of band activity. This capability could prove to
be very handy around the Amateur Radio bands if set to about 100
kHz bandwidth on the HF bands. On VHF and UHF you would want a wider
display bandwidth. Either way you will soon get to know the regular
signals in a given band and know to ignore them.
WR: In contrast to HF, what would you listen for on VHF?
W9JUV: People coordinating a terrorist attack would probably
be communicating in the native language just from the standpoint
that all of those in the plot understand it and those who might
be listening in and are not in on the plot will not understand it
at all. I cannot imagine, for example, a group of Middle Eastern
terrorists whose native language might be an Afghan dialect communicating
with one another in some form of broken English.
WR: How important is it for Hams, SWLs, CB operators,
etc., to be alert for outgoing or incoming clandestine transmissions?
W9JUV: I think it is pretty important. I characterize it
in the same way I do SETI, the Search For Extraterrestrial Intelligence.
Literally, hundreds of thousands of hours have been invested in
listening for signals from outer space. Those of us who truly believe
that we are not alone in the universe do not consider it a waste
of time its invested time.
I think that the probability of one of us actually intercepting
a terrorists message that leads to thwarting of some future
terrorists act is relatively small. But its absolutely
not zero percent. I think that it behooves those of us who have
the time, equipment and the opportunity, to invest some of that
time 100,000 radio amateurs listening just a few hours a
week adds up to monitoring a sizable portion of the spectrum that
our government might not have the time to look at. Bottom line
anyone who would like to try it, should.
How to record audio transmissions
One thing suggested by law enforcement is to tape any suspicious
communications. Doing so eliminates the problem of relating second
hand what you may have heard and accidentally adding your own interpretation.
If you do record, we would suggest using fresh tape and also using
a direct connection to your recorder from your station receiver.
This will eliminate the chance of room noise obscuring what you
are trying to record.
Also, use simple cassette recorders and good quality normal bias
cassettes.
Stay away from exotic recording modes like Mini-Disc, DAT, CD,
.wav files and the like. The reason is simple. There are millions
of cassette tape recorders in the hands of all mankind but not every
investigatory agency has the latest home entertainment type gear.
Keeping it simple will deliver the message with the greatest speed.
How and where to report suspect activities
If you do happen across something that needs to be reported, the
best place to forward it is directly to the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
The FBI has set up a toll free number for leads or other information
on the terrorist attack. Its at area code 866/483-5137. Leads
can also be sent via a special website at:
www.ifccfbi.gov.
Some final thoughts
On Sunday, 30 September, Attorney General John Ashcroft appeared
on the CBS news program Face The Nation. During that
broadcast, he warned the American public that additional attacks
were likely and the risk of such strikes could increase following
any military action taken by the United States and its allies in
the War on Terrorism.
There is one thing that we as amateurs (or SWLs or CB, GMRS, FRS
operators) should remember as we listen for possible terrorist communications.
Though these are pretty bright people, many from well-to-do backgrounds
and holding college degrees, they are not likely to be at all sophisticated
about radio. Consider how little your sharpest non-Ham friends understand
about radio communications!
So its well within reason that, needing some form of wireless
communications, theyve simply walked into a local two-way
radio provider or retailer and bought equipment off the shelf. The
manuals provide enough information to make it work, but where? I
wouldnt be surprised to learn that terrorists were caught
using FM on 144.000 MHz, since thats the default frequency
on some 2-meter rigs! Or find them on SSB on 14.080 MHz because
there is less voice QRM there!
They may well have been provided with professional advice, but
that doesnt mean theyll be as crafty as we might be
and always follow it. This is especially true now that the FBI is
hot on their trail.
Lets keep our ears open. It might be one of us who
foils the next terrorist plot!
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