TECHINT The US Spy Satellite Industry

Bogeyman 

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Secret partners: the national reconnaissance office and the intelligence-industrial-academic complex​


Satellite reconnaissance emerged as an irreplaceable source of U.S. intelligence during the Cold War. The vast resources required to build intelligence satellites quickly transformed space reconnaissance into an industrial-scale activity. Though satellite reconnaissance primarily served policymakers in Washington, two of its critical nodes for research, development, and operations were in Sunnyvale, California and Rochester, New York. In both places, a coalition of scientists and engineers in corporations, universities, and intelligence agencies collaborated to create satellites designed to penetrate the Iron Curtain. These technical experts were critical not only for the development of satellite reconnaissance systems, but also for their operation.

On 18 August, 1960, a Thor-Agena rocket roared off of its launch pad at Vandenberg Air Force Base on the Pacific Coast to deliver a satellite into space.Footnote1 Officially the Air Force had launched Discoverer-14, a scientific research satellite.Footnote2 In reality, this was the cover story for America’s first photographic reconnaissance satellite system called Corona. This satellite project inaugurated a new era in technical intelligence gathering. Most significantly, Corona provided evidence that the Soviet Union was not ahead of the United States in advanced military technologies. Due to its success, Corona paved the way for the establishment of the National Reconnaissance Program (NRP), managed by the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), that included all covert U.S. satellite reconnaissance efforts and quickly became the largest source of U.S. intelligence on the Soviet Union.Footnote3

Reconnaissance satellites provided U.S. policymakers critical intelligence about unfolding geopolitical events affecting American interests across the world. The NRP’s primary customers were in Washington, but two of its lesser known strategic nodes were in Sunnyvale, California and Rochester, New York. Sunnyvale was home to spacecraft construction and operation and Rochester was a locus of innovation in cameras, film, and photographic science.Footnote4 Academic, government, and industrial organizations worked hand-in-hand in both cities to cultivate the technical expertise required to build satellite systems in secrecy. The partnership between Lockheed and Stanford in greater Sunnyvale and the relationship between Eastman Kodak and the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) in upstate New York served as two pillars of technological innovation for the NRP.Footnote5

While there has been growing focus in recent years on the significance of satellite-derived intelligence for U.S. national security during the Cold War, comparatively little attention has been devoted to the NRP’s industrial and academic partnerships.Footnote6 Although historians have identified the importance of industrial firms, and academic institutions to a lesser extent, for the construction of NRP satellites, this analysis goes further and details how academic and industrial organizations became an intrinsic part of the NRP’s operational infrastructure. Consequently, this article shifts the focus away from the intelligence gathered by reconnaissance satellites and towards the ‘geography of the NRP’, i.e., the networks of people in universities, industrial organizations, and intelligence agencies working on satellite reconnaissance projects. Special attention is given to the NRP’s ‘west wing’ in Sunnyvale and its ‘east wing’ in Rochester.Footnote7 Moreover, this article elucidates the NRP’s contribution to what scholars of intelligence have termed the U.S. ‘intelligence-industrial complex’.Footnote8 Overlap can be found between the latter and its military-industrial complex sibling.Footnote9 Nevertheless, NRP requirements shaped the emergence of specific cooperative arrangements among industrial, intelligence, and academic institutions that significantly influenced the evolution of U.S. satellite reconnaissance activities.

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