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USA has been bugging EU premises

The head of the European Parliament has demanded "full clarification" from the US over a report that key EU premises in America have been bugged.

Martin Schulz said that if this was true, it would have a "severe impact" on ties between the EU and the US.

The report, carried by Germany's Der Spiegel magazine, cites a secret 2010 document alleging that the US spied on EU offices in New York and Washington.

Fugitive ex-CIA analyst Edward Snowden leaked the paper, Der Spiegel says.

Mr Snowden - a former contractor for the CIA and also the National Security Agency (NSA) - has since requested asylum in Ecuador.

According to the document - which Der Spiegel says comes from the NSA - the agency spied on EU internal computer networks in Washington and at the 27-member bloc's UN office in New York.

The document also allegedly referring to the EU as a "target".

It is not known what information US spies might have got, but details of European positions on to trade and military matters would have been useful to those involved in negotiations between Washington and European governments, the BBC's Stephen Evans says.

'Polite request'
In a statement on Saturday, Mr Schulz said: "On behalf of the European Parliament, I demand full clarification and require further information speedily from the US authorities with regard to these allegations."

Der Spiegel also quotes Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn as saying: "If these reports are true, it's disgusting. The United States would be better off monitoring its secret services rather than its allies."

The US government has so far made no public comments on the Spiegel's report.

Mr Snowden is believed to be currently staying at Moscow's airport. He arrived there last weekend from Hong Kong, where he had been staying since he revealed details of top secret US surveillance programmes.

The US has charged him with theft of government property, unauthorised communication of national defence information and wilful communication of classified communications intelligence.

Each charge carries a maximum 10-year prison sentence.

On Saturday, US Vice-President Joe Biden and Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa held a telephone conversation about Mr Snowden's asylum request.

According to Mr Correa, Mr Biden had "passed on a polite request from the United States to reject the request".

The left-wing Ecuadorian leader said his answer was: "Mr vice-president, thanks for calling. We hold the United States in high regard. We did not seek to be in this situation."

If Mr Snowden ever came to "Ecuadoran soil" with his request, he added, "the first people whose opinion we will seek is that of the United States".

Quito earlier said it was willing to consider Mr Snowden's request but only when he was physically in the Latin American country.

Meanwhile, White House spokeswoman Bernadette Meehan said only that Mr Biden and Mr Correa had held a wide-ranging conversation.]


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-23116517
(edited 10 years ago)
Reply 1
Mexico is appalled that our neighbour has gone beyond the hacking of individual foreign citizens and has stepped over the line into industrial espionage against an organisation, we also raise the question that if the US is bugging EU premises, what about Chinese and Russian and potentially even British premises?
Reply 2
China calls upon other nations to see the hypocrisy reveal itself! We have long been branded as the hackers of the world, and now the truth is finally coming to light. We, like everyone else, are mere victims of this aggressive bullying by a nation which believes it cannot be touched.
Reply 3
Malaysia feels the time has been right to call upon the USA to admit the truth behind its alleged spying systems. We feel that the invasion of privacy, if true to the extent it has been reported to, is a serious case that should not be taken lightly by the international community.
Reply 4
The Netherlands is also disgusted at the United States, and as said in the article, there will be repercussions within the EU-US relationship.
Myanmar is deeply concerned about these latest allegations especially as these latest allegations have occurred between two supposed allies. While we recognise that espionage has some uses, these allegations nonetheless are of some concern to us.
Iran is appalled. Completely.
The European Union is angered by the behaviour of the US and demands full clarification by the American representative into how deep, and to what extent, bugging took place in our premises. If the allegations are true, make no mistake, we believe this will inevitably impact the relationship between ourselves and the US authorities.
Iceland agrees with the comments made by the Netherlands. This could potentially damage EU-US relationships in the future.
Reply 9
Libya finds this behaviour from the US towards its allies ridiculous and disgusting. This is laughable.
Reply 10
ooc: who's negging everyone :confused:
Please avoid negging in the MUN please guys, the opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the poster but that of the nation they represent.
Spain agrees with the comments of our European allies. We are appalled at the possibility of such an intrusion and also demand clarification from the US. This matter could indeed affect US-Spain relations.
OOC: I've repped everybody who's been negged. :yy:

Original post by JD95
ooc: who's negging everyone :confused:


It's a user who isn't part of the MUN; being a subscriber, I can see.
Reply 14
Original post by Aek-94
OOC: I've repped everybody who's been negged. :yy:



It's a user who isn't part of the MUN; being a subscriber, I can see.


:smile:Will rep you when I get the chance
Reply 15
Russia is not especially surprised by this...
Reply 16
The US can only comment lightly on this due to matters of security, but we assure the EU that this was not in the spirit of hostility or suspicion, rather we feel that there has been security holes in the EU's structure with the possibility of infiltration. We have only been doing this in the interest of Europe's safety as a frequent target for terrorist attacks.

The UK feels let down by these reports but we respect that the US's motives were probably in the best interest of safety and in the spirit of aid to Europe.


Original post by Aek-94
OOC: I've repped everybody who's been negged. :yy:



It's a user who isn't part of the MUN; being a subscriber, I can see.


OOC: Who was it?
Reply 17
Original post by Kiss
The US can only comment lightly on this due to matters of security, but we assure the EU that this was not in the spirit of hostility or suspicion, rather we feel that there has been security holes in the EU's structure with the possibility of infiltration. We have only been doing this in the interest of Europe's safety as a frequent target for terrorist attacks.

The UK feels let down by these reports but we respect that the US's motives were probably in the best interest of safety and in the spirit of aid to Europe.




OOC: Who was it?


Russia would point out this little nugget to the UK
The document also allegedly referring to the EU as a "target".

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