Brazil,
Mexico ask U.S. to explain if NSA spied on presidents
Brazil
assailed the United States on Monday after new allegations that
Washington spied on President Dilma Rousseff, complaining that its
sovereignty may have been violated and suggesting that it could call
off Rousseff's planned state visit to the White House next month.
2
September, 2013
A
Brazilian news program reported on Sunday that the U.S. National
Security Agency spied on emails, phone calls and text messages of
Rousseff and Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, a disclosure that
could strain Washington's relations with Latin America's two biggest
nations.
Mexico
asked the United States to investigate the allegations, saying they
would be a serious violation of its sovereignty if proven true.
Brazil's
government, already smarting from earlier reports that the NSA spied
on the emails and phone calls of Brazilians, called in U.S.
ambassador Thomas Shannon and gave the U.S. government until the end
of the week to provide a written explanation of the new spying
disclosures based on documents leaked by fugitive former NSA
contractor Edward Snowden.
"I
expressed to (Shannon) the Brazilian government's indignation over
the facts revealed in the documents," Foreign Minister Luiz
Alberto Figueiredo said at a news conference.
"From
our point of view, this is an inadmissible and unacceptable violation
of Brazilian sovereignty," he said.
Figueiredo
declined to explicitly say whether the allegations could lead
Rousseff to call off her visit to Washington, the only state visit
offered by President Barack Obama this year. The trip had been
intended to highlight improving U.S.-Brazil ties since Rousseff took
office in 2011.
But,
in response to a question from reporters about the visit, he said
that Brazil's response to the allegations "will depend" on
the U.S. explanation.
The
report by Globo's news program "Fantastico" was based on
documents obtained from Snowden by journalist Glenn Greenwald, who
lives in Rio de Janeiro and was listed as a co-contributor to the
report.
"Fantastico"
showed what it said was an NSA slide dated June 2012 displaying
passages of written messages sent by Pena Nieto, who was still a
Mexican presidential candidate at that time. In the messages, Pena
Nieto discussed who he was considering naming as his ministers once
elected.
A
separate slide displayed communication patterns between Rousseff and
her top advisers, "Fantastico" said, although no specific
written passages were included in the report.
Both
sLides were part of an NSA case study showing how data could be
"intelligently" filtered by the agency's secret internet
surveillance programs that were disclosed in a trove of documents
leaked by Snowden in June, "Fantastico" said.
STATE
VISIT, F-18 JETS
The
Brazilian Senate, where some members have proposed offering Snowden
political asylum in Brazil, launched an inquiry into the secret
surveillance of Brazilian Internet communications by the NSA.
Rousseff
held a Cabinet meeting on Monday that included the country's defense,
justice, communications and foreign ministers to discuss a response
to the new espionage report.
The
White said it would respond to the requests of its "partners and
allies" through diplomatic channels.
"While
we are not going to comment publicly on every specific alleged
intelligence activity, as a matter of policy we have made clear that
the United States gathers foreign intelligence of the type gathered
by all nations," said White House spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden.
Mexico's
Foreign Ministry said that although it could not comment on the
veracity of the report, it "categorically rejects and condemns
any kind of spying against Mexican citizens in breach of
international law."
A
ministry statement added that Mexico had asked the U.S. government
for a thorough investigation of the matter and that, if necessary,
Washington should explain who was responsible.
"Mexico's
foreign ministry has summoned the U.S. ambassador to express its
clear dismay and to demand that the aforementioned investigation be
carried out," it said.
In
July, after initial reports of NSA surveillance of internet
communications in Latin American nations, Mexico's Pena Nieto said it
would be "totally unacceptable" if it were revealed that
the United States had spied on its neighbor and largest business
partner in the region.
The
United States is hoping to sell Brazil 36 F-18 fighter jets, but a
Brazilian government official said manufacturer Boeing's chances of
landing the more than $4 billion deal have been set back by the
espionage scandal.
During
a visit last month, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry urged Brazil
not to let spying revelations derail growing trade, diplomatic and
cultural relations between the two largest economies in the Americas.
But he gave no indication the United States would end the secret
surveillance.
Kerry
said the NSA surveillance was aimed at protecting Americans and
Brazilians from terrorist attacks.
Justice
Minister Jose Eduardo Cardozo said on Monday the latest revelations
based on Snowden's documents show that U.S. electronic surveillance
goes beyond combating terrorism and has political targets and may
even involve commercial espionage.
Cardozo
traveled to Washington last week and met with U.S. Vice President
Joseph Biden and other officials, seeking more details on the
previous, seemingly less serious set of disclosures by Snowden
regarding U.S. spying in Brazil.
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