London - The Guardian newspaper says the British
eavesdropping agency GCHQ repeatedly hacked into foreign diplomats’ phones and
emails when the U.K. hosted international conferences, even going so far as to
set up a bugged Internet café in an effort to get an edge in high-stakes
negotiations.
The report — the latest in a series of revelations which
have ignited a worldwide debate over the scope of Western intelligence
gathering — came just hours before Britain was due to open the G-8 summit
Monday, a meeting of the seven biggest economies plus Russia, in Northern
Ireland.
The allegation that the United Kingdom has previously used its
position as host to spy on its allies and other attendees could make for
awkward conversation as the delegates arrive for talks.
“The diplomatic fallout from this could be considerable,”
said British academic Richard J. Aldrich, whose book “GCHQ” charts the agency’s
history.
GCHQ declined to comment on the report.
The Guardian cites more than half a dozen internal
government documents provided by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden as the
basis for its reporting on GCHQ’s intelligence operations, which it says
involved, among other things, hacking into the South African foreign ministry’s
computer network and targeting the Turkish delegation at the 2009 G-20 summit
in London.
The source material — whose authenticity could not
immediately be determined — appears to be a mixed bag. The Guardian describes
one as “a PowerPoint slide,” another as “a briefing paper” and others simply as
“documents.”
Some of the leaked material was posted to the Guardian’s
website with heavy redactions. A spokesman for the newspaper said that the
redactions were made at the newspaper’s initiative, but declined to elaborate.
It wasn’t completely clear how Snowden would have had access
to the British intelligence documents, although in one article the Guardian
mentions that source material was drawn from a top-secret internal network
shared by GCHQ and the NSA.
Aldrich said he wouldn’t be surprised if the GCHQ
material came from a shared network accessed by Snowden, explaining that the
NSA and GCHQ collaborated so closely that in some areas the two agencies
effectively operated as one.
One document cited by the Guardian — but not posted to its
website — appeared to boast of GCHQ’s tapping into smartphones.
The Guardian
quoted the document as saying that “capabilities against BlackBerry provided
advance copies of G20 briefings to ministers.” It went on to say that
“Diplomatic targets from all nations have an MO (a habit) of using
smartphones,” adding that spies “exploited this use at the G-20 meetings last
year.”
Another document cited — but also not posted — concerned
GCHQ’s use of a customized Internet cafe which was “able to extract key logging
info, providing creds for delegates, meaning we have sustained intelligence
options against them even after conference has finished.”
No further details
were given, but the reference to key logging suggested that computers at the
café would have been pre-installed with malicious software designed to spy on
key strokes, steal passwords, and eavesdrop on emails.
Aldrich said that revelation stuck out as particularly
ingenious.
“It’s a bit ‘Mission Impossible,’” he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment