US
intelligence warning allies about sensitive Snowden leaks yet to be
published - report
American
officials have begun advising US allies that the ongoing National
Security Agency disclosures made possible by whistleblower Edward
Snowden include files detailing cooperation between their
international intelligence services.
RT,
25
October,2013
US
officials told The Washington Post that Snowden leaked documents
indicating massive intelligence gathering efforts against sometimes
hostile countries, including China, Russia and Iran. Those files
contain evidence linking other countries, ones that may want to keep
their cooperation with the US quiet, to such data collection.
Other
countries’ military capabilities – details on weapons, missiles,
ships and jets, among others – are included in the information in
question, not surveillance
This
news comes after the NSA was accused of secretly monitoring
sympathetic leaders, among them German Chancellor Angela Merkel,
whose personal phone may have been tapped. As such, US intelligence
has struggled in recent weeks to keep allies happy while keeping
operations that rely on allies in motion
“It
is certainly a concern, just as much as the US collection [against
European allies] being put in the news, if not more, because not only
does it mean we have the potential of losing collection, but also of
harming relationships,” an unnamed congressional aide told the
Post.
The
Office of the Director of National Intelligence is undertaking the
task of informing international foreign services how they could have
been inadvertently compromised. The already unenviable job is further
complicated by the fact that, in many countries, one government
agency is responsible for cooperating with the US while other
departments are likely in the dark.
Among
the difficulties in question is an operation against Russia overseen
by a NATO country which then supplies the data collected to the US
Air Force, Army, Navy and Marines, according to the Post report.
“If
the Russians knew about it, it wouldn’t be hard for them to take
appropriate measures to put a stop to it,” one official admitted.
Officials
estimate that Snowden took approximately 30,000 documents from the
Defense Intelligence Agency, which is frequently used by different
branches of the armed services. And while US authorities have been
investigating under the assumption that Snowden provided material to
hostile governments, the former NSA contractor has denied that
assertion and said more than once that he wishes to do no harm to the
US.
“There’s
a zero percent chance the Russians or Chinese have received any
documents,” Snowden told The New York Times.
Thomas
Drake, a former NSA executive turned whistleblower, was among a small
group of civil liberty advocates who met with Snowden in Moscow this
month.
“He’s
made it quite clear that he was not going to compromise legitimate
national intelligence and national security operations,” Drake
said. “It’s telling that he did not give anything to WikiLeaks.”
Drake
added that none of the documents the US is currently warning other
nations about have been published yet.
Strains
developed as a result of Snowden’s leaks were already on display
Thursday as Brazil and Germany announced a joint effort to pass a
United Nations General Resolution that would be the first notable
international effort to rein in the NSA’s monitoring of foreign
online communications. Like Germany’s claim that Merkel was the
subject of surveillance, Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff has spent
months condemning NSA intrusions into Brazil as “a breach of
international law.”
Diplomats
from both countries sat down in New York Thursday with officials from
Latin American and other European governments to discuss a draft
resolution that would expand the privacy rights outlined in the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights adopted in the
1960s into the internet age. The document did not specifically
mention the NSA, according to Foreign Policy magazine, yet the
insinuation seemed clear.
“This
is an example of the very worst aspects of the Snowden disclosures,”
an anonymous defense official said. “It will be very difficult for
the US to dig out of this, although we will over time. The short term
costs in credibility and trust are enormous.”
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