NSA
spied on phones of 35 world leaders
The
National Security Agency eavesdropped on hundreds of phone numbers
belonging to dozens of world leaders, newly leaked documents supplied
by former intelligence contractor Edward Snowden reveal.
RT,
24
October, 2013
Britain’s
Guardian newspaper wrote Thursday that a classified memo provided to
them by Mr. Snowden suggests that the NSA encouraged officials within
the United States government and intelligence community to share
among their colleagues contact information pertaining to
international heads of state.
According
to the Guardian, the memo made reference to an unnamed US official
who had reportedly supplied the NSA with over 200 numbers, including
35 belonging to world leaders.
“These
numbers plus several others have been tasked," or monitored,
reads the memo.
The
leaders themselves are not identified in the memorandum, but
classified documents previously disclosed to the media by Mr. Snowden
have suggested that the NSA spied on conversations involving citizens
of France, Germany, Brazil and elsewhere.
Guardian
reporter James Ball writes that senior officials in the NSA’s
“customer” departments — or officials within the White House,
State Department and Pentagon — were asked in the memo to share
their own collection of international contacts, as their unnamed
colleague had, in order for the agency to add the numbers to its list
of intelligence targets.
"This
success leads S2 [signals intelligence] to wonder if there areNSA
liaisons whose supported customers may be willing to share their
'Rolodexes' or phone lists with NSA as potential sources of
intelligence," Ball quotes from the memo. "S2 welcomes such
information!"
“From
time to time, SID [Signals Intelligence Directorate] is offered
access to the personal contact databases of US officials," it
continues. “Such 'Rolodexes' may contain contact information for
foreign political or military leaders, to include direct line, fax,
residence and cellular numbers."
When
asked by the Guardian to comment, White House press secretary Jay
Carney referred to comments made earlier Thursday during a briefing
in which he acknowledged the NSA disclosure and said, "The
revelations have clearly caused tension in our relationships with
some countries, and we are dealing with that through diplomatic
channels.”
Last
month, Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff canceled a scheduled
meeting at the White House after leaked documents showed the NSA
spied on her country’s state oil company. This week it was reported
that officials in both France and Germany summoned the US envoy over
similar allegations in the wake of Mr. Snowden’s leaks.
On
Thursday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel called allegations the NSA
spied on her private communications “not at all acceptable”
during a summit of European leaders in Brussels. Germany’s Der
Spiegel paper reported previously that leaked NSA documents indicated
Merkel’s mobile phone number had been on the radar of American
intelligence.
Carney,
the White House press secretary, said, "The president spoke with
Chancellor Merkel, reassured her that the United States is not and
will not monitor the chancellor's communications."
The
White House has not, however, gone on the record to dismiss
allegations that German leaders were not previously the subject of
US-administered surveillance.
"It's
not just about me but about every German citizen," Merkel said
during Thursday's conference.
"This
is not how you should treat your partners," said Stephanie
Hilebrand, a 38-year-old German woman who spoke to reporters with
Reuters on Thursday from Berlin. "We're not terrorists. Nor is
our chancellor."
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