Obama Weighs Ban on Spying on Heads of Allied States
By MARK LANDLER and DAVID E. SANGER
President Obama was poised to order the ban in response to a diplomatic
crisis over reports that the United States had targeted the cellphone of
Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany.
Sean Gallup/Getty Images
By MARK LANDLER and DAVID E. SANGER
Published: October 28, 2013
WASHINGTON — President Obama is poised to order the National Security Agency
to stop eavesdropping on the leaders of American allies, administration
and congressional officials said Monday, responding to a deepening
diplomatic crisis over reports that the agency had for years targeted
the cellphone of Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany.
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Data Suggests Push to Spy on Merkel Dates to ’02 (October 28, 2013)
The White House informed a leading Democratic lawmaker, Senator Dianne Feinstein
of California, of its plans, which grew out of a broader internal
review of intelligence-gathering methods, prompted by the leak of N.S.A.
documents by a former contractor, Edward J. Snowden.
In a statement
on Monday, Ms. Feinstein, chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence
Committee, said, “I do not believe the United States should be
collecting phone calls or emails of friendly presidents and prime
ministers.” Ms. Feinstein, who has been a stalwart defender of the
administration’s surveillance policies, said her committee would begin a
“major review of all intelligence collection programs.”
The White House said Monday evening that no final decision had been made
on the monitoring of friendly foreign leaders. But the disclosure that
it is moving to prohibit it signals a landmark shift for the N.S.A.,
which has had nearly unfettered powers to collect data on tens of
millions of people around the world, from ordinary citizens to heads of
state, including the leaders of Brazil and Mexico.
It is also likely to prompt a fierce debate on what constitutes an
American ally. Prohibiting eavesdropping on Ms. Merkel’s phone is an
easier judgment than, for example, collecting intelligence on the
military-backed leaders in Egypt.
“We have already made some decisions through this process and expect to
make more,” said a spokeswoman for the National Security Council,
Caitlin M. Hayden, adding that the review would be completed in
December.
Disclosure of the White House’s proposed action came after the release
on Monday afternoon of Ms. Feinstein’s statement, in which she asserted
that the White House had told her it would cease all intelligence
collection in friendly countries. That statement, senior administration
officials said, was “not accurate,” but they acknowledged that they had
already made unspecified changes in surveillance policy and planned
further changes, particularly in the monitoring of government leaders.
The administration will reserve the right to continue collecting
intelligence in friendly countries that pertains to criminal activity,
potential terrorist threats and the proliferation of unconventional
weapons, according to several officials. It also appeared to be leaving
itself room in the case of a foreign leader of an ally who turned
hostile or whose actions posed a threat to the United States.
The crossed wires between the White House and Ms. Feinstein were an
indication of how the furor over the N.S.A.’s methods is testing even
the administration staunchest defenders.
Aides said the senator’s six-paragraph statement reflected exasperation
at the N.S.A. for failing to keep the Intelligence Committee fully
apprised of such politically delicate operations as eavesdropping on the
conversations of friendly foreign leaders.
“She believes the committee was not adequately briefed on the details of
these programs, and she’s frustrated,” said a committee staff member,
who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “In her mind, there were
salient omissions.”
The review that Ms. Feinstein announced would be “a major undertaking,” the staff member said.
The White House has faced growing outrage in Germany and among other
European allies over its surveillance policies. Senior officials from
Ms. Merkel’s office and the heads of Germany’s domestic and foreign
intelligence agencies plan to travel to Washington in the coming days to
register their anger.
They are expected to ask for a no-spying agreement similar to what the
United States has with Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, which
are known as the Five Eyes.
The United States has historically resisted such agreements, even with
friendly governments, though it explored a similar arrangement with
France early in the Obama administration. But officials said they would
give the Germans, in particular, a careful hearing.
“We have intel relationships that are already very close,” said a senior
official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the
delicacy of the subject. “There are other types of agreements you could
have: cooperation, limits on intelligence, greater transparency. The
countries on the top of the list for those are close European allies.”
The National Security Agency has said it did not inform Mr. Obama of its
reported monitoring of Ms. Merkel, which appears to have started in
2002 and was not suspended until sometime last summer after the theft of
the N.S.A. data by Mr. Snowden was discovered.
“At that point it was clear that lists of targeted foreign officials may
well become public,” said one official, “so many of the interceptions
were suspended.”
The N.S.A.’s documentation on Ms. Merkel’s case authorized the agency’s
operatives in Germany not only to collect data about the numbers she was
calling, but also to listen in on her conversations, according to
current and former administration officials.
It was unclear whether excerpts from Ms. Merkel’s conversations appeared
in intelligence reports that were circulated in Washington or shared
with the White House. Officials said they had never seen information
attributed to an intercept of Ms. Merkel’s conversations. But they said
it was likely that some conversations had been recorded simply because
the N.S.A. had focused on her for so long.
In both public comments and private interchanges with German officials,
the Obama administration has refused to confirm that Ms. Merkel’s phone
was targeted, though it has said that it is not the subject of N.S.A.
action now, and will not be in the future.
The refusal to talk about the past has further angered German officials,
who have said the surveillance has broken trust between two close
allies. The Germans were particularly angry that the operation appears
to have been run from inside the American Embassy or somewhere near it,
in the heart of Berlin, steps from the Brandenburg Gate.
None of the officials and former officials who were interviewed would
speak directly about the decision to target Ms. Merkel, saying that
information was classified. But they said the legal distinction between
tapping a conversation and simply collecting telephone “metadata” —
essentially the kind of information about a telephone call that would be
found on a telephone bill — existed only for domestic telephone calls,
or calls involving United States citizens.
To record the conversation of a “U.S. Person,” the intelligence agencies
would need a warrant. But no such distinction applies to intercepting
the calls of foreigners, on foreign soil — though those intercepts may
be a violation of local law.
That means that the intercepts of other world leaders could have also
involved both information about the calls and the conversations
themselves.
Dennis C. Blair, Mr. Obama’s first director of national intelligence,
declined to speak specifically about the Merkel case. But he noted that
“in our intelligence relationship with countries like France and
Germany, 90 to 95 percent of our activity is cooperative and sharing,
and a small proportion is about gaining intelligence we can’t obtain in
other ways.”
He said he had little patience for the complaints of foreign leaders.
“If any foreign leader is talking on a cellphone or communicating on
unclassified email, what the U.S. might learn is the least of their
problems.”
In addition to the Germans, European Union officials and members of the
European Parliament are descending on Washington to deliver a tough
message: The N.S.A.’s surveillance is unacceptable and has eroded trust
between the United States and Europe.
“The key message is there is a problem,” said Silvia Kofler, a
spokeswoman for the European Union. “We need to re-establish the trust
between partners. You don’t spy on partners.”
One potential threat, Ms. Kofler said, was to the negotiation of the
Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, one of Mr. Obama’s
major trade initiatives. European Union officials, she said, were
anxious to keep those talks on track but would require unspecified
“confidence-building measures” to restore trust between the two sides.
An administration official said the White House would take these visits
seriously, having senior officials from several government agencies and
the White House meet with the Germans, though no meetings have yet been
scheduled.
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