NSA
considered ‘unilateral spying’ on Australia, Canada, NZ citizens
The
NSA was prepared to secretly collect data on citizens of Australia,
Canada and New Zealand – without the knowledge or consent of their
governments, and despite the ‘Five Eyes’ joint spying program
with those countries, a Snowden leak reveals
RT,
5
December, 2013
The
draft directive, classified as “NF” for No Foreign, reveals how
the US intelligence agency floated the possibility of "unilaterally"
snooping on citizens of Australia, Canada and New Zealand, members of
the so-called "Five Eyes" part of the UK-US partnership
agreement on global snooping.
"Under
certain circumstances, it may be advisable and allowable to target
second-party persons and second-party communications systems
unilaterally when it is in the best interests of the US and necessary
for US national security,” says the 2005 directive, titled
Collection, Processing and Dissemination of Allied Communications.
“Such
targeting must be performed exclusively within the direction,
procedures and decision processes outlined in this directive."
The
latest revelation comes as The Guardian publishes yet another
document leaked to the British newspaper by NSA former contractor
Edward Snowden.
The
UK-US data-collecting alliance allowed the five members (Australia,
Canada, the US, the UK and New Zealand – collectively referred to
as “Five Eyes”) to share intelligence and carry out surveillance
operations without worrying that member states were spying on each
other.
However,
it seems that some member states may have been more open to the
possibility of sharing metadata on each other’s citizens than some
countries in the alliance.
Guardian
Australia on Monday revealed that the Defense Signals Directorate
(DSD), which is now the Australian Signals Directorate, had offered
to share citizens’ personal data in a 2009 meeting. This
demonstrated different attitudes between the Five Eye partners when
it came to protecting the privacy of citizens.
The
Canadians, for example, demanded that any data that revealed private
information about its citizens was first "minimized.”
However,
despite the objections to any intrusions into the privacy of the
citizens, the United States seemed initially intent on ignoring such
requests.
The
leaked draft directive goes on to state that the US could conduct the
targeting without the knowledge of Australian, Canadian or New
Zealand authorities, and even if their government officials had
rejected a "collaboration proposal" for the operation.
"When
sharing the planned targeting information with a second party would
be contrary to US interests, or when the second party declines a
collaboration proposal, the proposed targeting must be presented to
the signals intelligence director for approval with justification for
the criticality of the proposed collection," said the document,
released by the Guardian.
The
document does not reveal how the NSA would select Australian targets
for unilateral surveillance, nor to what ends. However, the NSA’s
surveillance procedures are extensive and open the door to the
collection of internet, telephone and social media information.
Meanwhile,
the draft directive appears to show that the original 1946 UK-US
agreement, previously specified for "foreign intelligence"
operations, has acquired new dimensions.
"The
agreement has evolved to include a common understanding that both
governments will not target each other's citizens/persons. However,
when it is in the best interest of each nation, each reserved the
right to conduct unilateral Comint [communications intelligence]
action against each other's citizens/persons," it states.
However,
later changes to the document suggest that Australia, Canada and New
Zealand should be prepared to cooperate with the US to target their
citizens.
“There
are circumstances when targeting of second party persons and
communications systems, with the full knowledge and co-operation of
one or more second parties, is allowed when it is in the best
interests of both nations,” the document says. “This targeting
will conform to guidelines set forth in this directive.”
The
directive pointed to targets believed to be affiliated with “weapons
proliferation, terrorism, drug trafficking or organized crime
activities".
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