US spy satellite agency declassified high-flying Cold War listening post, revealing secrets of Soviet communications.
In a move that sheds new light on the US's early efforts to eavesdrop on the Soviet Union's military communication signals, the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) has declassified information about its decades-old "Jumpseat" program. This previously classified initiative was first revealed in 1986 through leaks and media reports, but the NRO has now provided more detailed details about its purpose, development, and capabilities.
According to the NRO, Jumpseat was a highly elliptical orbit (HEO) signals-collection satellite designed by Hughes Aircraft Company, with a core mission of monitoring adversarial offensive and defensive weapon system development. The satellites operated from 1971 through 1987, until they were retired in 2006.
The program's satellites flew at altitudes ranging from a few hundred miles up to 24,000 miles above the Earth, and their flight paths were angled such that they reached apogee over the far Northern Hemisphere. This trajectory allowed them to provide persistent coverage of the Arctic and the Soviet Union, where the Soviet government had begun launching its own communication satellites into similar orbits.
The Jumpseat satellites carried a 13-foot antenna to intercept foreign radio transmissions, as well as smaller antennas for downlinking data back to US ground stations. Unofficial estimates suggest that these satellites could potentially eavesdrop on Soviet radar systems and missile tests.
According to the NRO, Jumpseat was "perhaps the most mysterious" of the agency's high-altitude surveillance satellites in its era, with capabilities that were considered state-of-the-art at the time of their launch. However, more recent commercial ventures have developed signals intelligence (SIGINT) satellites with capabilities comparable or superior to those of the Jumpseat program.
The declassification of the Jumpseat program follows other recent disclosures about Cold War-era spy satellites, including the CIA's Corona series and two optical spy satellite programs, Gambit and Hexagon.
In a move that sheds new light on the US's early efforts to eavesdrop on the Soviet Union's military communication signals, the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) has declassified information about its decades-old "Jumpseat" program. This previously classified initiative was first revealed in 1986 through leaks and media reports, but the NRO has now provided more detailed details about its purpose, development, and capabilities.
According to the NRO, Jumpseat was a highly elliptical orbit (HEO) signals-collection satellite designed by Hughes Aircraft Company, with a core mission of monitoring adversarial offensive and defensive weapon system development. The satellites operated from 1971 through 1987, until they were retired in 2006.
The program's satellites flew at altitudes ranging from a few hundred miles up to 24,000 miles above the Earth, and their flight paths were angled such that they reached apogee over the far Northern Hemisphere. This trajectory allowed them to provide persistent coverage of the Arctic and the Soviet Union, where the Soviet government had begun launching its own communication satellites into similar orbits.
The Jumpseat satellites carried a 13-foot antenna to intercept foreign radio transmissions, as well as smaller antennas for downlinking data back to US ground stations. Unofficial estimates suggest that these satellites could potentially eavesdrop on Soviet radar systems and missile tests.
According to the NRO, Jumpseat was "perhaps the most mysterious" of the agency's high-altitude surveillance satellites in its era, with capabilities that were considered state-of-the-art at the time of their launch. However, more recent commercial ventures have developed signals intelligence (SIGINT) satellites with capabilities comparable or superior to those of the Jumpseat program.
The declassification of the Jumpseat program follows other recent disclosures about Cold War-era spy satellites, including the CIA's Corona series and two optical spy satellite programs, Gambit and Hexagon.