Most of the documents are dated back to 2009. There are also materials, which date back to 2011, the Agency says.
The
documents state that the US Department of Justice authorized gathering
of data about conversations on mobile phones, starting with 2010.
Other
materials report that the NSA, FBI and the Ministry of Justice informed
congressmen of their intention to increase the collection of metadata
of phone calls, including phone numbers and time of calls, but not their
contents.
By
publishing these documents, James Clapper tries to convince US citizens
that the NSA's programs of surveillance do not violate their right to
privacy.
As
it was reported, the materials published by former employee of the CIA
Edward Snowden stated that the NSA had conducted surveillance over the
governments of a number of European countries, including Germany, Spain
and France, as well as over ordinary citizens.
US mass surveillance of European Union citizens is genuine concern - European MP
British
Member of European Parliament of Labour Party, Claude Moraes, a member
of the delegation, told reporters that "this mass surveillance of
European Union citizens is genuine concern." He also said he and his
fellow delegates were unsatisfied with the responses from US officials
on the issue.
"They’re giving us answers, but not the answers we want," Mr. Moraes said.
Spain,
which is, reportedly, one of the latest targets of the NSA snooping
activities, has urged the United States to give details of any
eavesdropping. One
the latest allegations published by El Mundo newspaper is that the NSA
tracked 60 million Spanish telephone calls in a month.
Spain’s Minister for European Affairs, Inigo Mendez de Vigo, described such practices as "inappropriate and unacceptable."
Additionally, the NSA has tracked more than 46 phone calls in Italy. That’s according to the US website Cryptome.
That prompted Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta to question US Secretary of State John Kerry about the alleged snooping. Despite all that, Italian intelligence agency failed to confirm the information.
Cryptome
also revealed information that during the same month the NSA monitored
360 million phone calls in Germany, 70 million in France, and near two
million in the Netherlands.
Meanwhile,
Senator Diane Feinstein, who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee,
has been quoted as saying that she was "totally opposed" to the National
Security Agency’s intelligence gathering on leaders of US allies. Senator Feinstein pledged that her committee will undertake a major review into all intelligence collection programs.
White House says US intelligence gathering may require 'additional constraints'
Washington
has acknowledged the need for additional constraints on US intelligence
gathering. Spokesman Jay Carney has said an ongoing White House
intelligence policy review would take into consideration 'privacy
concerns'.
President
Barack Obama has full confidence in the director of the National
Security Agency, General Keith Alexander, and other NSA officials, said
White House spokesman Jay Carney. He added that there should be a
balance between the need to gather intelligence and the need for
privacy.
"We recognize there needs to be additional constraints on how we gather and use intelligence," Carney said.
A
White House review of US surveillance capabilities is well under way
and should be completed by the end of the year, Carney said.
US spying on allies is 'inappropriate and unacceptable' - Spain's minister
Outrage
in Europe over US surveillance operations widened Monday after a report
that the National Security Agency (NSA) tracked 60 million Spanish
phone calls in one month.
The
US spy agency intercepted the calls between December 10 and January 8
and mined data from internet searches, email and social networking sites
such as Facebook and Twitter, El Mundo newspaper reported.
The
documents have shown the US engaging in large-scale surveillance of
foreign governments and citizens, from rivals such as China and Russia
to allies in Europe and South America.
Spain's minister for European affairs, Inigo Mendez de Vigo, questioned the US ambassador to Spain, James Costos, for some 40 minutes Monday over the latest snooping claim, the government said.
Such spying among friends was "inappropriate and unacceptable," Mendez de Vigo said.
The
US embassy in Madrid said after the meeting that the surveillance
programmes have aided the security interests of both countries.
The
uproar to Italy, where the Wikileaks-style website Cryptome claimed the
NSA spied on 46 million calls in that country in a one-month period in
December and January.
The
embarrassing disclosures come on the heels of a report last week that
the NSA had tapped German Chancellor Angela Merkel's mobile phone. The
German Foreign Ministry summoned the US ambassador for the first time
since World War II.
In
a Wall Street Journal story, NSA officials for the first time admitted
clandestine monitoring of some 35 world leaders. President Barack Obama
was unaware of the spying, and the White House only halted the practice a
few months ago after an internal review, the newspaper reported.
White
House spokesman Jay Carney would not comment on the report that Obama
had been unaware until recently of long-running monitoring of world
leaders. The White House was conducting a review of US intelligence
operations, and Obama believed the US should "not just be collecting
data because we can, but because we should," Carney said.
He defended the broader surveillance measures as necessary in a more technologically interconnected world.
"If we're going to keep our citizens and our allies safe, we have to continue to stay ahead of these changes, and that's what our intelligence community has been doing extraordinarily well," Carney said, while acknowledging the need for a review of US surveillance efforts.
The review ordered by Obama is to be completed by the end of the year. The
Guardian journalist Glenn Greenwald, who has reported many of Snowden's
leaks, rejected White House suggestions that the sprawling data
collection was needed to combat terrorism.
"None of this has anything to do with terrorism," he told broadcaster CNN. "Is Angela Merkel a terrorist?"
Pressure was growing on the administration within Congress, as Dianne Feinstein,
chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, sharply criticized the
NSA, which she has defended in the past, and call for an investigation
into the spying of foreign leaders.
Visiting
EU parliamentarians were in Washington for meetings including White
House national security staff, top intelligence officials, the State
Department and others. German
government spokesman Steffen Seibert said the government had "no new
information" on allegations of wiretapping by American intelligence
services.
"We are in the process of clearing up this serious case," he said, adding that "Germany and the US can solve these problems together."
Berlin
said its intelligence chiefs and representatives of the chancellor's
office would be sent to Washington to demand answers. The timing of the
trip was still unknown, Seibert said, but it is expected to include a
meeting with NSA representatives.
He
declined to say what questions had not been answered by US authorities
following a similar Washington visit in June, after initial revelations
of US spying activities on citizens in Germany and Europe.
Germany
and Brazil are set to introduce a non-binding UN General Assembly
resolution Tuesday against spying on electronic communication, a UN
diplomat said.
Brazilian
media reported in September that the NSA had monitored President Dilma
Rousseff's phone and email communications with her advisers, prompting
her to call off a state visit to Washington.
At
a summit last week dominated by the deepening row, the European Union
appointed Merkel and French President François Hollande to lead an
effort to bring the United States to account in the scandal and restore
trust within the Atlantic alliance.
NSA collected data on 60 mln phone calls in Spain in one month
The
US National Security Agency intercepted and collected data on 60
million phone calls in Spain from December 2012 to January this year
without prior consent of the Spanish authorities. The El Pais newspaper
reports today that the information to that end has been presented by a
British journalist Glenn Greenwald, who is publishing revelations by the
former US special service agent Edward Snowden.
El
Pais adds that the National Security Agency was not interested in the
content of the conversations, it only determined the duration of the
conversations, identified the phone numbers and established the
whereabouts of subscribers.
The
newspaper also reports that the US Ambassador to Spain has been
summoned to the Foreign Ministry of the Kingdom in compliance with an
order from Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy. The move has been prompted by
local press reports about US special service spying on millions of
rank-and-file Spaniards, as well as politicians and government members
of the kingdom.
More that 46 million phone calles tracked by NSA in Italy
New
information is coming out on NSA surveillance. It has been revealed
that the spy agency was tracking phone calls in Italy. More than 46
million calls were checked by the US according to the US website
Cryptome. Previously, was learned that the NSA was tracking phone calls
in Germany, including those of German Counselor Angela Merkel. As it
appears the agency listened to millions of users all across Europe.
Cryptome
reported that in a month's time the phone data of the users has
increased enormously and as well as the duration of calls.
Enrico
Letta, Italian Prime Minister stated last week that this kind of
behavior is "inconceivable and unacceptable." Later on, he questioned
John Kerry, the US Secretary of State about the information revealed.
What was bothering Letta is not the surveillance but hiding the truth
from the Italian officials. "Obviously, all checks should be done, but
we want the whole truth. It's not acceptable or conceivable that there
are activities of this kind.”
Despite
all that, Italian intelligence agency couldn’t confirm the information.
In the statement they released it was stated that one should
differentiate between
“spying” and "monitoring.” In the same statement the government reports: “There is no evidence that the United States is spying on Italian citizens.”
At
the same time, Cryptome also revealed information that during the same
month the NSA monitored 361 million phone calls in Germany, 70 million
in France, 61 million in Spain, and 1.8 million in the Netherlands.
No
matter which way it is, these revelations are deepening the scandal
between the US and its allies. Last week, it was reported that German
Counselor is wishing to hold a meeting with European and the US
representatives to receive an official statement on the US activity.
US halts its surveillance programs of allied heads of state - report
The
US National Security Agency stopped tapping the phones of German
Chancellor Angela Merkel and other world leaders once the White House
learned of its activities. The media has shared more details on the
federal government’s attitude towards massive surveillance.
The
Wall Street Journal reports that the NSA program to bug the phones of
its allies' leaders was scrapped as soon as the Obama administration got
wind of it. However, it did not abort all surveillance programs as many
of them brought intelligence benefits. The only fact that has been
confirmed is the subsequent debugging of Merkel’s cell-phone.
The
Wall Street Journal also claims that Barack Obama was kept in the dark
about the NSA program targeting world leaders during his five-year
presidency. According
to the US paper, the NSA cannot inform the head of state about all of
its numerous projects. Some of them are signed into force by the NSA
chief and don’t need presidential approval.
Last
summer, UK and US media blew the lid off the spy agency’s total
surveillance programs that were exposed in the classified documents
leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden. The ensuing furore
prompted the White House to open an internal investigation into the
agency’s dealings that showed the NSA had monitored the phone calls of
35 foreign leaders.
NSA had tapped the phones of some 35 world leaders - report
The White House ended programs tracking several of the leaders including Merkel, according to the Journal.
Some programs have been scheduled to end but have not yet been terminated, the Journal said.
Officials
told the Journal that there are so many NSA eavesdropping operations
that it would not have been practical to brief the president on all of
them.
Obama was "briefed on and approved of broader intelligence-collection 'priorities," but deputies decided on specific intelligence targets, the Journal said.
"These decisions are made at NSA," the unnamed official told the Journal.
"The president doesn't sign off on this stuff." Ending a surveillance program is complicated because a world leader like Merkel may be communicating with another leader that Washington is monitoring, officials told the newspaper.
Germany's
Bild am Sonntag weekly quoted US intelligence sources on Sunday as
saying that NSA chief General Keith Alexander briefed Obama on the
operation against Merkel in 2010. In Washington, NSA spokeswoman Vanee
Vines denied the claim.
Alexander "did not discuss with President Obama in 2010 an alleged foreign intelligence operation involving German Chancellor Merkel, nor has he ever discussed alleged operations involving Chancellor Merkel," said Vines . "News reports claiming otherwise are not true," she added.
The
snooping allegations, based on documents leaked by fugitive former US
defense contractor Edward Snowden, indicate that US spy agencies
accessed the electronic communications of dozens of world leaders and
likely millions of foreign nationals.
Germany may summon Edward Snowden as witness in Merkel phone tapping case
The
German Federal Prosecutor’s Office may summon former CIA employee
Edward Snowden to be a witness in the case of phone tapping against
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, German Justice Minister Sabine
Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger told the Deutschlandfunk radio on Sunday.
“If our suspicions prove correct and a case is opened, the German Federal Prosecutor’s Office will have to consider the possibility of interrogating Snowden as a witness,” she said, adding that there would be no major obstacles to that effect.
In
that case, if Snowden came to Germany, the German government could defy
Washington’s demand for his extradition, the minister said.
At
the same time, Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger called for the speedy
signing of an agreement with the United States which would rule out
mutual espionage and be open for other countries to join in.
German
Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich said, for his part, that illegal
phone tapping was a crime and that the culprits should be made
accountable.
Sources: RT, AFP, Foreign Policy, Reuters, TASS, Interfax, Voice of Russia,
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