The report is potentially embarrassing for
governments, especially in Germany and France which have been the most
vocal in protesting about US mass surveillance of European communication
networks revealed by Edward Snowden since June. Photo: AP/The Guardian
London: Spy agencies across Western Europe are
working together on mass surveillance of Internet and phone traffic
comparable to programmes run by their US counterpart denounced by
European governments, reported Britain’s The Guardian newspaper on Saturday.
Citing documents leaked by fugitive former US National Security Agency (NSA) contractor Edward Snowden, The Guardian said methods included tapping into fibre optic cables and working covertly with private telecommunications companies.
The Guardian named Germany, France, Spain, Sweden
and the Netherlands as countries where intelligence agencies had been
developing such methods in cooperation with counterparts including
Britain’s surveillance agency GCHQ.
The report is potentially embarrassing for governments,
especially in Germany and France which have been the most vocal in
protesting about US mass surveillance of European communication networks
revealed by Snowden since June.
Germany, jointly with Brazil, circulated a draft
resolution to a United Nations General Assembly committee on Friday that
called for an end to excessive electronic surveillance, data collection
and other gross invasions of privacy. There has been particular anger
in Germany over revelation that the NSA monitored the cellphone of
Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Snowden has written an open letter to Merkel and other German
authorities to say he is counting on international support to stop
Washington’s “persecution” of him.
The Guardian reported that GCHQ files leaked by
Snowden showed the British agency taking credit for advising European
counterparts on how to get around domestic laws intended to restrict
their surveillance powers. Citing a 2008 GCHQ country-by-country report,
The Guardian said the British spies were particularly impressed
with Germany’s BND agency, which they said had “huge technological
potential and good access to the heart of the Internet”.
“We have been assisting the BND...in making the case for
reform or reinterpretation of the very restrictive interception
legislation in Germany,” said the GCHQ document. The British agency also
praised France’s DGSE agency and, in particular, its close ties with an
unnamed telecommunications company, a relationship from which GCHQ
hoped to benefit. “We have made contact with the DGSE’s main industry
partner, who has some innovative approaches to some Internet challenges,
raising the potential for GCHQ to make use of this company in the
protocol development arena,” said the report.
There was similar analysis of the intelligence agencies
in Spain, Sweden and the Netherlands, with Spain’s CNI praised for its
ties with an unnamed British telecommunications firm and Sweden’s FRA
congratulated over a law passed in 2008 that widened surveillance
powers. Only Italy dissatisfied the British spies, who noted friction
between competing agencies and legal limits on their activities, said The Guardian. Reuters
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