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Celebrating the Past, Present and Future of Navy Cryptology

Honoring CTRC Terence Lee Sadler, USN (Ret.)

Cryptologic Technician Collection Chief (Retired) Terence Lee Sadler enlisted in the United States Naval Reserve on 15 June 1983 under the Delayed Entry Program, following graduation from Good News Academy, St. Landry, Louisiana. He entered active duty on 26 March 1984 at the Military Entrance Processing Station, Shreveport, Louisiana, reporting to Recruit Training Center Orlando, Florida. CTRC Sadler retired from the United States Navy on 31 March 2004 after 20 years of distinguished active service. Following his naval retirement, he continued to serve the nation as a Department of the Army civilian employee for an additional 21 years, retiring on 30 September 2025. His combined military and federal civilian service spans more than 42 years of dedicated service to the United States.

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E1 to O6, CAPT Joseph B. Harrison III, USN Retires!


BY: CTRCM (Ret) Denise Vola

CAPT Joseph B. Harrison III, USN, was honored in Tampa, FL and retired after nearly 40 years of naval service to our beloved nation in a ceremony that was held on June 25, 2026.

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Early History of the National Reconnaissance Office (5 of 5)

SIGINT Data Processing and Exploitation

Just as solid-state electronic technology changed the capabilities of SIGINT satellites dramatically, the computer revolution that began in the 1950s, and that is still underway, changed the capabilities of computer processing, almost day to day. The capability to process SIGINT information was especially powerful and quick to develop, because the SIGINT satellites collected electrical signals that, with proper coding, were in a form that computers could work on directly. From 1960 to 1975 the multiplying effect of improved satellite collectors and improved computer processors would provide a many-fold increase in operational capabilities. Developing the processing methodology was the key.

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Congratulations to ENS Kevin H. Nguyen, Cryptologic Warfare Officer, Winner of U.S. Naval Academy Class of 2026 Capstone Essay Contest – Category: Information Warfare

The Navy’s center of gravity is evolving toward the information domain—not because it replaces ships or aircraft, but because it has become the decisive enabler of lethality, survivability, and decision advantage at sea.

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Early History of the National Reconnaissance Office (4 of 5)

Imaging and Signals Intelligence Space Systems

The major effort within the US satellite reconnaissance program in the 1960s and 1970s featured overhead visual imaging systems, which produced information not obtainable any other way. (CORONA, GAMBIT, and HEXAGON, the early filmbased satellite systems, have already been well documented.) But there were important intelligence questions that could not be answered with pictures alone. The first question involved determining the location and characteristics of Soviet radars that could detect American strategic bombers. The second involved the performance capabilities of Soviet missiles—ICBMs and ABM systems. These two problems led the list of reasons favoring SIGINT satellites that could listen to and record the signals of Soviet radars, radio communications, and telemetry systems.

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Early History of the National Reconnaissance Office (3 of 5)

Mission Requirements

Considering the prospect of a nuclear war with the Soviet Union, United States leaders in the 1950s had to know two things. First, what were the Soviets doing in their strategic missile programs? They had already demonstrated a nuclear capability with an atomic detonation in 1949 and a fusion-weapon test in 1953. Could they launch a nuclear weapon on a rocket over intercontinental distances? Second, how effective might Soviet defenses prove to be against US forces? Could the Soviets detect and shoot down US long-range bombers? And could the Soviets counter the developing US missile capability?

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