France believed the United States attempted to hack into its
president's communications network, a leaked US intelligence document published
on Friday suggests.
US agents denied having anything to do with the May 2012
cyber attack on the Elysee Palace, the official residence of French presidents,
and appeared to hint at the possible involvement of Mossad, Israel's
intelligence agency, a classified internal note from the US National Security
Agency suggests.
Extracts from the document, the latest to emerge from the
NSA via former contractor Edward Snowden, were published by Le Monde newspaper
alongside an article jointly authored by Glenn Greenwald, the US journalist who
has been principally responsible for a still-unraveling scandal over
large-scale US snooping on individuals and political leaders all over the
world.
The document is a briefing note prepared in April this year
for NSA officials who were due to meet two senior figures from France's
external intelligence agency, the DGSE.
The French agents had travelled to Washington to demand
explanations over their discovery in May 2012 of attempts to compromise the
Elysee's communications systems.
The note says that the branch of the NSA which handles cyber
attacks, Tailored Access Operations (TAO), had confirmed that it had not carried
out the attack and says that most of its closest allies (Australia, Britain,
Canada and New Zealand) had also denied involvement.
It goes on to note: "TAO intentionally did not ask
either Mossad or (Israel's cyber intelligence unit) ISNU whether they were
involved as France is not an approved target for joint discussions."
Le Monde interpreted this sentence as being an ironic
reference to a strong likelihood that Mossad had been behind the attack.
The cyber attacks on the Elysee took place in the final
weeks of Nicolas Sarkozy's term, between the two rounds of the presidential
election which he ended up losing to Francois Hollande.
The attacks had been previously reported by French media,
who have described them as an attempt to insert monitoring devices into the
system but it remains unclear whether the presidential networks were
compromised for any time.
Hollande: 'Several leads' for attacks
Sarkozy enjoyed warmer relations with the United States than
any French president of recent times, to the extent that the media sometimes
referred to him as "Sarko the American".
Hollande said Friday that French intelligence services had
identified "several leads" for the attacks, speaking in Brussels
after EU summit talks.
He did not elaborate further, but his comments came after he
and German Chancellor Angela Merkel pushed for Washington to agree on new rules
on the conduct of intelligence gathering among allies.
Merkel herself has also reportedly been the target of US
espionage, with claims emerging this week the US tapped her mobile phone and
spied on other allies.
"Spying between friends, that's just not done," an
angry Merkel said Thursday at the start of the summit of European Union
leaders, which was overshadowed by the issue.
The latest Le Monde report follows revelations published
earlier this week that the NSA collected more than 70 million recordings of
French citizens' telephone data – a claim contested by the top US intelligence
chief.
On a lighter note, the leaked document published by Le Monde
on Friday underlines NSA officials were anxious not to cause any further
offence to their angry French counterparts.
Along with the technical details, the briefing note contains
a phonetic guide to the pronunciation of the names of the French visitors.
They included DGSE technical director Bernard Barbier and
Patrick Pailloux, head of the National Agency for the Security of Information
Systems (ANSSI).
No comments:
Post a Comment