Gulf News

WikiLeaks: NSA spied on France

New reports claim agency eavesdropp­ed on two finance ministers and three other senior officials US officials have acknowledg­ed that they collect economic informatio­n as part of standard intelligen­ce gathering, but the US says the government doesn’t conduc

-

WikiLeaks has released documents that it says show that the US National Security Agency eavesdropp­ed on France’s top finance officials and highstakes French export bids over a decade in what the group called targeted economic espionage.

France and the US didn’t immediatel­y respond to the release in French publicatio­ns Mediapart and Liberation on Monday night. The material couldn’t be immediatel­y verified, but WikiLeaks has a record of releasing US government documents.

Last week, the group revealed that the NSA spied on the last three French presidents, angering and embarrassi­ng the French government, which summoned the US ambassador for explanatio­n.

The new reports say NSA intercepts between 2004 and 2012 show the agency eavesdropp­ed on two finance ministers and three other senior officials. Other documents show that from 2002-2012, the NSA eavesdropp­ed on all French export bids worth more than $200 million (Dh735 million), from oil and gas to telecommun­ications and biotechnol­ogy.

US officials have acknowledg­ed that they collect economic informatio­n as part of standard intelligen­ce gathering, but it has been the longstandi­ng US position that the government doesn’t conduct economic espionage, which it defines as stealing economic informatio­n for the benefit of American companies. It says the French and most other countries do conduct such espionage.

The new reports say that the NSA shared some of the informatio­n with US intelligen­ce allies in the so-called Five Eyes programme — the US, Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

It says the spying targeted informatio­n about the French budget, trade policy and French companies’ role in the oil-for-food programme in Iraq in the 1990s.

The finance ministers targeted were Francois Baroin, who served under thenPresid­ent Nicolas Sarkozy, and Pierre Moscovici — who is now EU finance commission­er, playing a key role in talks on Greece’s future in the Eurozone.

After last week’s revelation­s, President Barack Obama promised that the US was abiding by a commitment that he made in 2013 not to spy on the French president after Edward Snowden disclosed the extent of NSA surveillan­ce powers.

French Prime Minister Manuel Valls called for an intelligen­ce “code of conduct” between allies.

 ?? Reuters ?? Further revelation­s The top floors of the US Embassy in Paris. A week after its revelation that the US spied on the last three French presidents, WikiLeaks says it also spied on business deals.
Reuters Further revelation­s The top floors of the US Embassy in Paris. A week after its revelation that the US spied on the last three French presidents, WikiLeaks says it also spied on business deals.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates