A lot of what the nazis did was 'legal' – remember the Enabling Law?
PM insists intelligence sharing with US is legal
21
May, 2014
The
Prime Minister says he can assure New Zealanders that any
information-sharing activity carried out by intelligence agencies is
done within the law.
John Key has confirmed information gathered by the Government Communications Security Bureau could have been used in identifying targets for American attacks using unmanned aircraft.
John Key has confirmed information gathered by the Government Communications Security Bureau could have been used in identifying targets for American attacks using unmanned aircraft.
However,
he said the GCSB did not supply information leading to the death of
New Zealander Daryl Jones in a drone strike in Yemen last year.
Mr
Key said New Zealand has shared information with the International
Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan, but he cannot be sure
exactly what use it was put to.
He
said it's possible it was used to pursue people seen as a threat.
The
Green Party says it is not just a matter of whether agencies are
acting within the law.
Co-leader
Russel Norman said there are serious ethical questions about New
Zealand's supplying information that may lead to extra-judicial
killings.
He
said New Zealand should shut the Waihopai facility, as it is a
crucial part of the intelligence-gathering system.
Defence
analyst Terence O'Brien said New Zealand's membership of the Five
Eyes intelligence network needs to be more widely debated.
Mr
O'Brien, a senior fellow at Victoria University's Centre for
Strategic Studies, said Five Eyes is being used to help the pursuit
of the war on terror.
He
said there is a question as to whether New Zealand should continue to
be involved in that.
However,
Lance Beath, another senior fellow at the Centre for Strategic
Studies, said he has no qualms about information being used in that
way.
He
said intelligence-sharing is standard procedure and is part of New
Zealand's work with the International Security Assistance Force in
Afghanistan.
Other
comment
A
human rights group in Britain says the New Zealand Government is
complicit in drone killings, which it says are the death penalty
without trial.
Reprieve
legal director Kat Craig told Morning Report there is no transperancy
over America's drone programme and New Zealand should not be
providing intelligence which could assist it.
And
security researcher Nicky Hager said New Zealand's intelligence work
for the United States is pulling it into wars that it has no place
in.
He
told Morning Report that New Zealand is turning its back on its
principles by aiding unjustified attacks in countries like
Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Yemen.
Mr
Hager said Mr Key is being flippant about New Zealand's role in
foreign wars and is not taking it seriously enough.
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