Germany most-spied-on EU country by US - leaked NSA report
Germany
appears to be the most snooped on EU country by the US, a map of
secret surveillance activities by the National Security Agency (NSA)
shows. EU officials are to question their US counterparts on data
snooping in Europe
11
June, 2013
.
The
color-coded map of secret surveillance activities by the NSA ranks
countries according to how much surveillance they are currently
undergoing - green for the least and red for the most watched.
While
all EU member states boast variant shades of green, Germany stands
out, color-coded orange.
The
source behind the revelation of the top-secret NSA surveillance
program, already referred to as one of the most significant
intelligence leaks in US history, was uncovered late last week.
29-year-old Snowden asked The Guardian to reveal his identity, having
fled to Hong Kong to escape retaliation by the US authorities.
"The
NSA has built an infrastructure that allows it to intercept almost
everything. With this capability, the vast majority of human
communications are automatically ingested without targeting,” he
told The Guardian.
“I,
sitting at my desk, certainly had the authority to wire-tap anyone …
even if you are not doing anything wrong, you are being watched and
recorded,” he added.
The
‘Boundless Informant’ documents show NSA collecting up to 3
billion pieces of intelligence from US computer networks over a
30-day period ending in March 2013, according to The Guardian. The
tool reportedly allows users to select a country on a map, view the
metadata volume and select details about the collections against this
or that state.
Iran
is on top of the surveillance list, with more than 14 billion data
reports in March, while Pakistan came in a close second at 13.5
billion reports. Jordan, a close US ally, as well as Egypt and India
are also near the top, according to the data.
Germany's
Interior Ministry had already been in contact with US officials to
find out whether there had been any infringement of German citizens'
privacy lately. Chancellor Angela Merkel is due to raise the issue of
the NSA's eavesdropping on Germany with President Barack Obama, who
said the monitoring program is a means of defense against terrorism.
"We
need to step back here and say clearly: mass surveillance is not what
we want," Reuters quoted Jan Philipp Albrecht, a German Green
lawmaker in charge of overhauling the European Union's outdated data
protection laws as saying.
EU
rattled over US’ PRISM
The
EU Parliament is considering a substantial overhaul of its almost
20-year-old data protection rules, which when were established
without taking the internet into account.
"It
is time we grasped the nettle here and put our minds to ending the
program," Reuters quoted Martin Ehrenhauser, an Austrian
independent member of the European Parliament, who was referring to
the SWIFT and the airline data agreements.
Both
data-sharing deals between the European Union and the United States
were signed after the 9/11 attacks in 2001. The European Parliament
members sought at the time to limit the amount of data that could be
taken from European databases.
European
officials attempted to negotiate an agreement that would limit the US
access to all types of sensitive European data, however, not much
progress was yielded.
Senior
EU officials are expected to discuss the impact of NSA’s programs
on the privacy of EU citizens during a trans-Atlantic ministerial
meeting in Dublin on Thursday.
"This
case shows that a clear legal framework for the protection of
personal data is not a luxury or constraint, but a fundamental
right," European Commissioner for Justice Viviane Reding said.
The
European Parliament said it is always firm on data protection within
the EU, as well as when negotiating with third countries, including
the US.
"It
would be unacceptable and would need swift action from the EU if
indeed the US National Security Agency were processing European data
without permission," Guy Verhofstadt of the parliament's liberal
bloc said.
Reding
said she would raise concerns in a meeting with US Attorney General
Eric Holder on Friday.
"This
case shows why a clear legal framework for the protection of personal
data is not a luxury but a necessity," she tweeted.
Health
Commissioner Tonio Borg said the EU wants a "clear commitment"
from the US to respect data-protection rights.
"The
[Justice] Commission is asking for clear commitments from the United
States as to the respect of the fundamental right of EU citizens to
data protection," he said in a statement.
The
EU wants clarity on whether the US authorized bulk transfers of data,
or only data on specific individuals.
The
NSA's tradition of surveying international communities reportedly
goes back to the Cold War era, when the agency used monitoring sites
in Germany, Britain and other countries to spy on communications
within the Soviet Union and its East European allies.
UK
Foreign Secretary William Hague has meanwhile canceled his trip to
Washington to speak about The Guardian’s latest NSA report.
He
assured parliament that accusations that the UK government allegedly
used information provided by the Americans to circumvent laws were
"baseless."
"Our
agencies practice and uphold UK law at all times," he stated,
"even when dealing with information from outside the UK."
In
an interview with the British newspaper, successful NSA consultant
Snowden leaked top-secret documents that revealed the existence of
the US National Security Agency’s extensive internet spying program
PRISM, which records digital communications and allows for real-time
online surveillance of US citizens. PRISM gives US intelligence
agencies direct access to files stored on the servers of major
internet companies, including Google and Facebook, to identify and
target potential terror suspects.
Meanwhile,
the Swiss Foreign Ministry has requested the US Embassy in Bern to
clarify the role of Edward Snowden while he served as a diplomat in
Geneva.
"Switzerland
expects members of diplomatic missions in Bern and members of
permanent missions in Geneva to respect the laws and regulations of
the state where they reside," it said in an emailed statement.
Snowden,
who leaked classified information to The Guardian about the program,
said he decided to make public his findings related to PRISM after US
intelligence reportedly attempted to recruit a Swiss banker to obtain
secret information.

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