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- THE DAY THE SPOOKS STEPPED ON MA BELL
- By: Donald E. Kimberlin
-
- There's nothing in Bell advertising to dissuage the public
- of its common notion that Bell runs the entire realm of
- telecommunications worldwide. The extent of this misapprehension
- shows in items like the widespread news report that bombing of
- the telephone building in Baghdad was "the AT&T building" proves
- our press knows no better than to continue to mislead the public.
- AT&T isn't about to help, either, when it publicizes its
- placement of earth stations in the Gulf War zone, never telling
- the public it rented them from Alascom, a firm with no ownership
- by AT&T.
- But people in other nations know AT&T doesn't rule the roost
- of telecommunications. Sometimes they just have to let yet
- another stubborn Yank learn the hard way, one more lesson at a
- time. Sometimes that stubborn Yank is one like me.
- My lesson occurred in 1963, while employed by AT&T in one of
- the three shortwave radio operations they ever built. It was in
- Fort Lauderdale, Florida, the plant operation providing the
- communications channels they public used to Central America and
- the Caribbean.
- Few today even give a thought to how they got telephone
- connections to other countries in a time before there were
- satellites and underseas telephone cables. To the outside world,
- no one knew a crew of us was on the scene behind what they heard
- was the "Miami Overseas Operator." That operator just pushed
- plug into a jack on a switchboard and spoke to an operator in the
- other country. That jack was just wired to us at Fort Lauderdale,
- where we launched the voices off to bounce from the ionosphere
- via high-powered transmitters and rhombic antennas to other
- nations. In the other nation, the operation and people all
- belonged to the telephone company of that nation ... independent
- and soveriegn in their domain as Bell is within its domain.
- The independent other nation in this story was Costa Rica,
- and its international operation was Compania Radiografica
- Costarricense, a nationalized descendant of the "banana republic"
- era operations started there by Tropical Fruit Company of Boston
- before World War I. Radiografica was one of the best, most
- stable points we worked, and even if one had the notion of
- talking via "shortwave radio," their operations with us were so
- good that most of the time, you'd never know it.
- For many years, we had only two channels to San Jose from
- the U.S., and Radiografica also operated links to other Latin
- American nations such as Mexico. These were, of course, multiple-
- channel independent sideband radios, so two channels meant we
- were interested only in having clear radio spectrum "space" only
- three kiloHertz above and below the carrier frequency. We would
- have to change carrier frequency two or three times a day, to
- higher frequencies in the daytime and lower frequencies at night.
- One of the best frequencies we enjoyed with San Jose was 15580
- kHz, a spot now used by international shortwave broadcasters. It
- was assigned the call letters TIW 55 to Radiografica by the Costa
- Rican government.
- In that summer of 1963, Radiografica opened up two
- additional channels with us. This meant that the added channels
- would occupy radio spectrum "space" out to 6 kHz either side of
- 15580 when TIW 55 was on the air. by and large, this was clear
- space and we had two added channels all day free of any noise or
- interference.
- Except ... the day we started using the additional space, a
- Morse code transmission popped up low into the new Channel Four.
- It just called somewhere else over and over, sending, "JW de IQ,"
- or something of the sort. It was about 1 kHz inside our channel,
- producing very clear Morse code in the telephone circuit between
- San Jose toward Miami. Every afternoon, for a couple of hours,
- it continued on and on. It never sent anything else; it never
- seemed to make contact with whoever was on its other end.
- I often was assigned to the group of channels that included
- Costa Rica, and we enjoyed excellent relations with our
- coordinates there. They spoke perfect English for our benefit,
- and it seemed there were things they knew that we didn't know, at
- least in this case. We of course, could not use the interfered-
- with channel for a public telephone circuit, so we would cut it
- off, waiting for the interference to clear, leaving the other
- three for the Miami operators to use. But, since the traffic was
- so heavy, Miami wanted the circuit. Our alternative, to shut
- down all four momentarily and use some other frequency that might
- produce four channels, but noisier, was not attractive.
- Whenever there was interference, we performed an
- "observation" of who it was. We had all the good tools - elegant
- receivers, radio direction finder, spectrum analyzers and
- demodulators for every kind of telegraph and facsimile. There
- wasn't much we couldn't identify and pin down to its source.
- And, there's a whole system of rationalization for settling
- territorial disputes on radio between countries. It's called the
- International Frequency Registration Board, a function of the
- Comite Consultatif Internationale des Radio (obviously not a French
- name for our francophone readers - it's a modern Swiss
- bastardization of French), an arm of the International
- Telecommunications Union. Drawing its authority from treaties
- all United Nations members sign, the IFRB is the repository of
- registrations each nation sends to Geneva, with seniority claims
- of use, so interference complaints between nations can be
- arbitrated when they occur. Our "tool" was a copy of the multi-
- volume International Frequency Register, IFRB's computer printout
- of every radio transmitter licensed by every nation in the world
- ... except for military, intelligence and clandestine operations.
- The source of my problem, even though it could be clearly
- heard, was of course not listed in the IFRB books. I made out a
- report each day, and it didn't go away. I asked our San Jose
- colleagues, and they immediately showed signs of knowing it was
- there, but offered no information about who it was. I asked if
- they could contact it, as my direction finder had showed it was
- coming from somewhere near their direction, and all San Jose
- would say was they "would try." Nothing happened, and we
- continued to lose a couple of hours on that channel each day. I
- suggested to the San Jose staff that if they knew who it was, if
- they would just slide down the band about a kilohertz, they would
- fall in between our channels and we could co-exist with them.
- San Jose said they "would try." Nothing changed, and we kept
- losing channel time.
- Finally, my Yankee sense of fairness and my short temper
- combined to make decide to take some definitive action. That was
- to make a complaint via official channels, in this case the FCC
- Field Monitoring station (then) at Fort Lauderdale. Because AT&T
- is not in charge of the world, any officially-registered
- complaint through IFRB channels has to be observed by them, and
- forwarded by them. We talked to the FCC monitoring station with
- fair regularity, so it only took a local phone call.
- Again, somebody else knew more about the interloper than did
- I or Ma Bell. As soon as I mentioned the frequency and the call
- signs, the FCC duty officer replied, "Oh them? Are you really
- certain you want to file a complaint?" I asked what was wrong
- with doing so, and he said, "Oh....nothing, I guess. But maybe
- you don't really want to make a complaint." He certainly knew
- who it was, but he wasn't going to tell me, nor would he advise me
- there was any adverse result to doing so. I insisted, so pressed
- on to file a complaint.
- Nothing happened for a couple of days. We used TIW 55 daily
- for many hours, except for the couple of hours interference to
- that one channel each afternoon. Then, on the third day, at
- about 9 or 10 AM, I asked San Jose to change frequency to TIW 55,
- I found out what had happened.
- Just 48 hours after my going on record with the FCC, my
- colleague in San Jose said, "I'm sorry to tell you the Costa
- Rican government has cancelled our license to operate on TIW 55.
- You'll have to choose another channel, Old Man."
- The spooks indeed stepped on Ma Bell that day.
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