'Follow
the Money': NSA Spies on International Payments
The
United States' NSA intelligence agency is interested in international
payments processed by companies including Visa, SPIEGEL has learned.
It has even set up its own financial database to track money flows
through a "tailored access operations" division.
26
January, 2013
The
National Security Agency (NSA) widely monitors international
payments, banking and credit card transactions, according to
documents seen by SPIEGEL.
The
information from the American foreign intelligence agency, acquired
by former NSA contractor and whistleblower Edward
Snowden,
show that the spying is conducted by a branch called "Follow the
Money" (FTM). The collected information then flows into the
NSA's own financial databank, called "Tracfin," which in
2011 contained 180 million records. Some 84 percent of the data is
from credit card transactions.
Further
NSA documents from 2010 show that the NSA also targets the
transactions of customers of large credit card companies like VISA
for surveillance. NSA analysts at an internal conference that year
described in detail how they had apparently successfully searched
through the US company's complex transaction network for tapping
possibilities.
Their
aim was to gain access to transactions by VISA customers in Europe,
the Middle East and Africa, according to one presentation. The goal
was to "collect, parse and ingest transactional data for
priority credit card associations, focusing on priority geographic
regions." In response to a SPIEGEL inquiry, however, a VISA
spokeswoman ruled out the possibility that data could be taken from
company-run networks.
The
NSA's Tracfin data bank also contained data from the Brussels-based
Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT),
a network used by thousands of banks to send transaction information
securely. SWIFT was named as a "target," according to the
documents, which also show that the NSA spied on the organization on
several levels, involving, among others, the agency's "tailored
access operations" division. One of the ways the agency accessed
the data included reading "SWIFT printer traffic from numerous
banks," the documents show.
But
even intelligence agency employees are somewhat concerned about
spying on the world finance system, according to one document from
the UK's intelligence agency GCHQ concerning the legal perspectives
on "financial data" and the agency's own cooperations with
the NSA in this area. The collection, storage and sharing of
politically sensitive data is a deep invasion of privacy, and
involved "bulk data" full of "rich personal
information," much of which "is not about our targets,"
the document says.
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