Exposed:
Australia's Asia spy network
Australian
embassies are being secretly used to intercept phone calls and data
across Asia as part of a US-led global spying network, according to
whistleblower Edward Snowden and a former Australian intelligence
officer.
SMH,
31
October, 2013
The
top secret Defence Signals Directorate operates the clandestine
surveillance facilities at embassies without the knowledge of most
Australian diplomats.
The
revelations come as the US has been left red-faced by news it has
been eavesdropping on foreign leaders, including German Chancellor
Angela Merkel.
US
President Barack Obama is said to be on the verge of ordering a halt
to spying on the heads of allied governments following the
international outcry.
Fairfax
Media has been told that signals intelligence collection takes place
from embassies in Jakarta, Bangkok, Hanoi, Beijing and Dili, and High
Commissions in Kuala Lumpur and Port Moresby, as well as other
diplomatic posts.
A
secret US National Security Agency document leaked by Mr Snowden and
published by Germany's Der Speigel reveals the existence of a highly
sensitive signals intelligence collection program conducted from
sites at US embassies and consulates and from the diplomatic missions
of other "Five eyes" intelligence partners including
Australia, Britain and Canada.
Codenamed
STATEROOM, the program involves the interception of radio,
telecommunications and internet traffic.
The
document explicitly states that the Australian Defence Signals
Directorate operates STATEROOM facilities "at Australian
diplomatic facilities".
The
document notes that the surveillance facilities "are small in
size and in number of personnel staffing them".
"They
are covert, and their true mission is not known by the majority of
the diplomatic staff at the facility where they are assigned,"
the document says.
The
National Security Agency document also observed the facilities were
carefully concealed: "For example antennas are sometimes hidden
in false architectural features or roof maintenance sheds."
The
Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade declined to comment on the
potential diplomatic implications of the disclosure. A departmental
spokesperson said: "It is the long-standing practice of
Australian governments not to comment on intelligence matters."
The
leaked NSA document does not identify the location of specific
Defence Signals Directorate facilities overseas.
However,
a former Australian Defence Intelligence officer has told Fairfax
Media the directorate conducts surveillance operations from
Australian embassies across Asia and the Pacific.
The
former intelligence officer said the interception facility at the
Australian Embassy in Jakarta played an important role in collecting
intelligence on terrorist threats and people-smuggling, "but the
main focus is political, diplomatic and economic intelligence".
"The
huge growth of mobile phone networks has been a great boon and
Jakarta's political elite are a loquacious bunch; even when they
think their own intelligence services are listening they just keep
talking," the source said.
He
said the Australian Consulate in Denpasar, Bali, has also been used
for signals intelligence collection.
In
June the East Timorese government complained publicly about
Australian spying, including communications interception and bugging
government offices during negotiations on the future of the Timor Gap
oil and gas reserves.
Intelligence
leaks to the media in the 1980s disclosed installation of
''extraordinarily sophisticated'' intercept equipment in Australia's
High Commission in Port Moresby and in the Australian embassies in
Jakarta and Bangkok.
Further
leaks of top secret Defence Intelligence reports on Indonesia and
East Timor in 1999 also indicated that Australia intelligence has
extensive access to sensitive Indonesian military and civilian
communications.
Intelligence
expert Des Ball said the Defence Signals Directorate had long
co-operated with the US in monitoring the Asia-Pacific region,
including using listening posts in embassies and consulates.
"Knowing
what our neighbours are really thinking is important for all sorts of
diplomatic and trade negotiations," Professor Ball told Fairfax
Media.
Uproar
in China and other Asian nations over ‘US spies through embassies’
report
China
and a number of South Asian governments have demanded an explanation
from Washington over allegations that US embassies - as well as
embassies of US allies - were used for NSA surveillance.
RT,
31
October, 2013
The
diplomatic row has been caused by the Sydney Morning Herald’s
report, which said the NSA collected its data in Asian countries by
having its equipment installed inside US embassies and also in the
diplomatic missions of the other ‘Five Eye’ nations, which
includes Australia, Britain and Canada.
Beijing
said it was “extremely concerned” by the news and was seeking
clarification from the US.
"We
also demand that foreign embassies in China and their staff respect
the Vienna Convention ... and other international treaties and not
get involved in any activities which do not accord with their status
or post and harm China's security and interests," Chinese
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Hua Chunying, said on Thursday.
The
news of the data collection facilities operating out of the embassies
in Jakarta, Bangkok, Hanoi, Bejing, and Dili was based on the
documents leaked by NSA whistleblower, Edward Snowden.
The
news that the US agency carried out espionage through foreign
embassies has also provoked outrage in Indonesia, with the country’s
Foreign Minister, Marty Natalegawa, saying the issue had been raised
with the US chargé d'affaires in Jakarta.
"Indonesia
cannot accept it and protests strongly over the report about
wiretapping facilities at the US embassy in Jakarta," said
Natalegawa cited by AP. "If confirmed, such action is not only a
breach of security, but also a serious breach of diplomatic norms and
ethics and certainly not in the spirit of friendly relations between
nations."
Indonesia
said it was summoning the Australian ambassador, Greg Moriarty, to
come to the foreign ministry on Friday. The ministry added that he
will face questions over the "totally unacceptable"
activities reported in the Sydney Morning Herald.
The
uproar was supported by other Asian nations. Malaysia’s government
promised to investigate the allegations, while the opposition party
issued a statement calling for the lodging of a protest with the US
and Australian embassies.
The
government of Thailand informed the US that spying was a crime under
the country’s laws, according to Thai National Security Council
secretary general, Lt.-Gen. Paradorn Pattanathabutr. The official
blamed the US more than Australia, Thailand’s closer neighbor.
“When
it comes to technology and mechanics, the US is more resourceful and
more advanced than Australia,” he said. “So I can say that it is
not true that the Australian Embassy will be used as a communications
hub for spying.”
The
outpour of criticism from Asia comes at a time when the US is already
under severe pressure from European nations, following earlier
reports disclosing the scale of surveillance there.
EU
diplomats recently traveled to Washington to get explanations
concerning NSA spying. The US insisted all the intelligence gathered
in Europe was related to warzones in the Middle East and would
continue.
In
the wake of the NSA scandal, EU leaders have called for the
suspension of a trade pact with the US worth billions of dollars.
Radio NZ reporting
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