Jerry Mooney:
Nothing of Substance
-- in fact --
Nothing
Summary. Former USAF Master Sergeant Jerry Mooney is a hero of
the MIA activist cult. Mooney was an Air Force Security Service analyst who analyzed
intercepted radio communications. He has made numerous claims, most of them
revolving around his claim that he saw intercepted communications proving that US POWs
were taken to the Soviet Union -- "MB - Moscow Bound" as he put it. The
facts are quite the opposite. When given a chance to show what he knew to the Senate
Select Committee on POW-MIA Affairs, Mooney had nothing -- which is exactly what he has
always had -- nothing. Jerry Mooney is just another charlatan and liar, making a
name for himself at the expense of MIA families.
SIGINT -- Signal Intelligence
When people began communicating by electronic means, other people began listening in.
The practice of intercepting other people's communications and learning about their
plans and activities is known by the general name of signal intelligence -- SIGINT.
SIGINT has two divisions: COMINT (communication intelligence) and ELINT (electronic
intelligence).
COMINT
Communications intelligence is the practice of listening to what is being transmitted
and extracting intelligence from the information being transmitted. COMINT focuses
on reading the other guy's mail -- what is he saying in his messages.
ELINT
Electronic intelligence is the practice of learning from the technical characteristics
of the signal. For example, we may determine that the radar on a certain enemy
vessel has a unique electronic "signature." Thus, whenever we intercept
that specific signal, we know it is from that vessel.
I will not spend a lot of time discussing the world of signal intelligence, except to
say that it's a fascinating business. I recommend you track down books on the
following topics:
- ENIGMA -- the Germans developed a mechanical encoding machine that they thought made
their communications completely secure. Not so. We were reading the German's
mail before and during WW II. Search for books and articles on ENIGMA
- Read either or both of Jim Bamford's books about the National Security Agency. His
first is The Puzzle Palace and his most recent is Body of Secrets.
- Search the net for anything on SIGINT, COMINT, ELINT, the Japanese Naval Code,
codebreaking, and encryption.
Signals analysis
Merely intercepting enemy communications does us no good. The intercepted
material must be translated, de-crypted, collated, analyzed, and compared to what we
know from other sources. SIGINT analysis does NOT consist of listening to what the
enemy says and believing it.
A historical example from WW II illustrates what can happen when one believes
everything that is transmitted. We knew the Germans held General George Patton in
high regard, so, a special communications group was established in the north of England.
This organization consisted of a few hundred personnel and lots of radio
transmitters. They exchanged radio messages just as though they were an army in
training. Patton made himself very visible in the same area. The Germans
intercepted these communications and decided that Patton was forming an army in the north
of England. When the Normandy invasion occurred, the Germans did not believe -- for
several days -- that this was the main attack. They were waiting for Patton's
phantom army to cross the English Channel.
Over-reliance on signals intelligence is as deadly as not having any signals
intelligence -- smart people strike a balance.
Jerry Mooney
Mooney was a career SIGINT analyst. He was a traffic analyst -- that is, he
looked at who was sending messages to whom, the nature of those messages, the structure of
the communications nets, and he tried to make determinations as to enemy capabilities from
these studies. Mooney WAS NOT A VIETNAMESE LINGUIST AND HE DID NOT SERVE IN VIETNAM.
Mooney's fame -- such as it is -- comes from three activities and events.
The BARON 52 shootdown
In February 1973, after the Paris Peace Accords were signed, we continued to collect
signals intelligence because the North Vietnamese maintained substantial forces in Laos,
Cambodia, and South Vietnam. Under the terms of the Paris Accords, they were to
withdraw and we used signal intelligence to monitor their activities and to determine if
they really were withdrawing.
One of the best ways to intercept communications is to put antennas and receivers and a
trained intercept crew on board aircraft and fly them over areas of interest.
Because radio waves travel in straight lines, if you are flying over or alongside an area
of interest, you can suck up a lot of information by monitoring the radio traffic coming
out of that area because you are in "line of sight" of most of the transmitters
-- BARON 52 was doing just that, flying over Laos, monitoring PAVN communications.
BARON 52 was the radio callsign of an EC-47Q aircraft. The EC-47Q was an old WW
II C-47, modified with the addition of antennas, receiving equipment, tape recorders,
equipment racks, and intercept positions. In the front of the aircraft was
the flight crew -- pilot, co-pilot, and navigator. In the rear, seated at cramped
equipment tables and racks, were the intercept crew who operated the receivers and other
equipment, intercepting enemy communications. BARON 52 was one aircraft of a unit
that was flying intercept missions over Laos to monitor PAVN troop movements, trying to
determine if they really were withdrawing.
On 5 February 1973, BARON 52 was shot down over Laos with the loss of all on
board. Approximately five hours after BARON 52 went down, another aircraft --
operating off the coast of North Vietnam several hundred miles away from the area of Laos
where BARON 52 went down -- intercepted a report from a Vietnamese unit that the unit had
"four bandits" in its possession and was having trouble moving them along a road
because of road conditions.
Mooney jumped on this report and claimed that the "four bandits" were four
crewmembers from BARON 52 who had been captured. In fact, the message had nothing to
do with Americans. Instead of re-telling the BARON 52 story here, I recommend you
read my article about BARON 52.
"Moscow Bound"
Mooney claimed that he analyzed a large volume of intercepts that led him to conclude
that US POWs were taken to Moscow -- he claims to have kept a list called his
"MB" list (for "Moscow Bound") containing the names of men whom he
concluded were taken to the USSR.
In short, these claims by Mooney are fiction. He tells a great tale and, to the
novice, he is quite convincing. When the Senate Select Committee on POW-MIA
Affairs called him to testify, the MIA activists could hardly wait. Here was their
hero, Jerry Mooney, who was going to lay waste to the cover up and conspiracy going on
involving live US POWs who were never released. He was going to tell all.
Mooney testified before the SSC -- a copy of his testimony
can be found here. He then went into closed session with the committee and later
spoke at length with the committee staff. To understand what Mooney had to offer, I
think it best to quote from the final report of the Senate Select
Committee:
The Committee benefited from the insights of a
retired NSA SIGINT analyst, Senior Master Sergeant Jerry Mooney (USAF-retired). During the
war, SMSgt. Mooney maintained detailed personal files concerning losses of aircraft and
downed airmen. Unfortunately, those personal files did not become part of the archived
files maintained by the NSA and have been lost. Although SmSgt. Mooney has sought to
reconstruct some of that information from personal memory, the loss of the files makes it
impossible to check those recollections against the contemporaneous information.
The Committee found no evidence to substantiate
claims that signals intelligence gathered during the war constitute evidence that U.S.
POWs were transferred to the Soviet Union from Vietnam.
. . .
Under questioning by one Committee Member during the
January hearing, Mooney admitted that he never had "direct information" that
American POW's were taken to the Soviet Union. In response to another Committee member's
question, he said that he "saw no evidence that they [prisoners] went to the Soviet
Union." On several occasions during his testimony he said that he believed that
American prisoners had been taken there, but he was unable to provide any conclusive proof
to the Committee to support his judgment.
Lying to families
Mooney has, over the past decade, put a lot of effort into lying to and misleading the
families of missing men. Here's how it works: If a member of your family is
missing in SEAsia, ask Mooney if he knows anything about the missing man.
Mooney thinks about it then, in serious, studious tones, he tells about the intercepted
communications he heard indicating that your missing father was taken to the USSR.
Recently -- June 2001 -- he was at a gathering where the daughters of an individual lost
in the shootdown of SPECTRE 17 asked about their father.
Mooney told these two women that he had information that their father was captured.
His claims to family members are lies and they serve no purpose except to rip the
hearts out of MIA families. Mooney is, in this regard, typical of the rest of the
charlatans who surround the MIA issue and who make up what I call the "MIA cult"
-- they have no scruples, no honesty, no decency -- they lie to aggrandize themselves and
they care not a whit about the emotional damage they cause. By the way, Mooney will
be the featured speaker at the National Alliance annual meeting in June 2001. Spit.
Mooney and the analytic process
In all of his claims, Mooney states that he analyzed communications intercepts and
concluded the US POWs were being taken to the Soviet Union. All this sounds fine
until one considers the way signals intelligence is analyzed -- one person does not sit
off in a room breaking codes and reading other people's mail. Signals intelligence
-- actually, the raw information from which intelligence is derived -- is subjected to a
lengthy process of analysis and evaluation, including many checks and balances among
analysts and analytic elements.
What this means, simply stated, is that lots of eyes look at every piece of information
before any conclusions are reached.
Communications are intercepted in a variety of means. In the case in which people
are actually listening to enemy voice communications, the intercept operator is a linguist
of some capability and he/she is listening for certain items. Depending on the
situation, if the operator hears certain information, he/she can issue a high precedence
message calling the attention of other analysts to this intercept.
Intercepts are then reviewed, translated, re-reviewed, re-translated and studied at the
next level above the intercept operator. This process continues up the chain with
different analysts reviewing the intercepts, re-translating, going back to the original
intercept and listening to it in the native language. As a result of this review and
continuing analysis, a comprehensive picture emerges. And it is this process of
analyzing signals intelligence that makes Mooney's claims so silly. NOT ONE OTHER
SIGNALS ANALYST AGREES WITH MOONEY. Not one single analyst, not a team of analysts,
no one has reached the same conclusions as Mooney -- many other people and groups of a
people looked at the same information Mooney saw -- and they looked at it in depth.
Mooney's claims are simply not supported by the evidence or by the analysis of the
evidence. It's not that other analysts disagree with Mooney, it is that
the entire body of signals evidence refutes Mooney's assertions.
Not who he claims to be
Mooney is not the hot-shot, premier analyst that he claims to be. The comments by
the SSC should be sufficient to show that he is just another clown. I spoke with
several people from the National Security Agency -- NSA -- who knew Mooney. They
moved him from job to job, trying to find something he would not screw up. Finally,
they made him an administrative sergeant, pushing paper. Mooney tells quite a
different tale -- don't believe it.
Needles in the shag carpet
My favorite Mooneyisms come from the 1986 Smith-McIntyre lawsuit. Retired Army
Major Mark Smith and his colleague Sergeant Melvin McIntyre
filed suit against the President, past presidents, Secretaries of State and Defense
(current and past), and various other government officials. They claimed that they
had evidence of US POWs remaining in SEAsia and the evidence was disregarded by the
government. They were suing to be brought back onto active duty and to require the
government to search for these POWs, proof of which they had. Read the linked
article about Smith -- he had no information and his suit was dismissed.
Jerry Mooney came out of the woodwork and filed an affidavit in support of Smith.
In his affidavit, Mooney made his claims about having analyzed SIGINT showing that
US POWs were taken to the Soviet Union. The best part of his affidavit, however, was
when Mooney claimed that "government agents" were attempting to stop him from
testifying. A big part of his affidavit is a melodramatic recounting of how these
bad old government agents did the following to stop him from testifying:
- They sneaked into his home and put itching powder in clothes hanging in his closets.
- The sneaked into his home and buried needles in his shag carpet -- the needles stuck his
feet when he walked barefooted on the carpet.
- They also sneaked into his yard and put steel pipes in the ground that protruded just
enough to hit the blade on his lawn mower -- causing him to ruin two mowers.
Stop laughing. I am not making this up
-- it's all there in his affidavit -- and it gets better, read on.
The Mooney Cartoons
Finally, there is the matter of what I call the "Jerry Mooney cartoons."
When Mooney testified before the Senate Select Committee, he was asked to
produce documents, notes, anything. Finally, he produced what he called his own
analytic work. Mooney handed over a stack of approximately 150 sheets of 8-1/2 x 11
paper on which he had used colored markers and colored pencils to draw
"cartoons."
These pages were covered with stick-figure drawings of mountains, trees, rivers,
aircraft, weapons, parachutes, and people. When laid end to end, these pieces of
paper made a continuous drawing. The drawings depicted, for example, a stick figure
airplane flying over a stick figure jungle. The next sheet would show stick figure
men on the ground around a big machine gun, firing a stream of bullets that struck the
aircraft. Then, stick figure men in parachutes wee depitced bailing out of the
stricken aircraft. Across the tops of the pages were the names of missing men and
repeated over and over were the words from the song "Where Have All the Flowers
Gone."
The Defense Intelligence Agency asked the SSC to provide Mooney's notes to us so we
could review them. The Committee staff refused. I learned later that Senator
Bob Smith directed that the "cartoons" not be turned over because he was
embarassed. It seems that Smith had championed Mooney only to discover that Mooney
had nothing to offer; now Smith did not want these silly "cartoons" in anyone
else's hands. DIA finally obtained the whole stack of cartoons from the SSC and
copied them. In June 2001 I submitted a FOIA request for the whole stack and when
they arrive, I'll post a few of them so everyone can see Jerry Mooney's analytic talent at
work.
Enough
This could go on and on but it makes me angry and the point is made: Jerry
Mooney has nothing to offer on the MIA issue. He never saw any SIGINT indicating the
US POWs were "MB," he never collected any information as to the fates of missing
men. He is a liar and a charlatan.
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