The Scotsman

US spymasters pay £100m to access British intelligen­ce

- Tom peterkin Scottish Political Editor

POLITICIAN­S have expressed concern at revelation­s that the US government has paid at least £100 million to the UK spy agency GCHQ to get access to British intelligen­ce-gathering programmes.

Reports published yesterday suggested the payments were made by America’s equivalent of GCHQ, the National Security Agency (NSA), over the past three years.

Documents obtained by the Guardian newspaper indicated the NSA expected a return on their money, raising concerns over Washington’s relationsh­ip with Britain’s intelligen­ce agency.

A GCHQ strategy briefing said that “GCHQ must pull its weight and must be seen to pull its weight”.

The payments came to light in GCHQ’s annual “investment portfolios”. The papers showed that NSA paid the Cheltenham­based eavesdropp­ing agency £22.9m in 2009.

The next year, NSA handed over £39.9m, which included £4m to support GCHQ’s work for Nato forces in Afghanista­n, and £17.2m for the agency’s “Mastering the Internet” project which gathers online informatio­n.

NSA also paid £15.5m towards redevelopi­ng a GCHQ site in Cornwall. In 2011-12, NSA paid another £34.7m to GCHQ, according to the documents.

The informatio­n was included in the latest papers to emerge from the cache of documents leaked by the American whistleblo­wer Edward Snowden, the former NSA contractor, who disclosed them in protest at intelligen­ce-gathering activities.

Yesterday, shadow home secretary Douglas Alexander said: “The vital work of the intelligen­ce agencies requires effective and thorough oversight by the intelligen­ce and security committee on behalf of parliament and by ministers, and, in the

“People are concerned at their data being accessed” Sandra White, SNP MSP

case of GCHQ, Secretary.

“The latest reports only underline the importance of the Foreign Secretary and the intelligen­ce and security committee being able to assure the public that the legal framework within which our intelligen­ce agencies operate is both being adhered to and is fit for purpose.”

The extent of the online intelligen­ce-gathering undertaken by the US and UK spy agencies has

by

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Foreign triggered alarm from the organisati­ons.

The latest batch of documents revealed that GCHQ is investing more money into collecting informatio­n from mobile phones and apps, and that the amount of personal data available from internet and mobile use has increased by 7,000 per cent in the past five years.

UK ministers have denied that GCHQ is doing the NSA’s “dirty work”, but the latest documents described Britain’s surveillan­ce laws and regulatory regime as a “selling point” for the Americans.

Sandra White, the SNP MSP, said: “People are understand­ably concerned at the reports of vast quantities of their personal data being accessed in this way. People have a right to know what safeguards are in place.”

And a Scottish Government spokeswoma­n said: “The justice secretary has written to William Hague to seek assurances that UK legislatio­n is fully upheld in cases of intercepti­on undertaken by, or on behalf of, GCHQ in Scotland.”

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 ??  ?? GCHQ gathers informatio­n on behalf of the government
GCHQ gathers informatio­n on behalf of the government

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