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Eram
17th June 2013, 04:38
It seems, more practices of monitoring and eavesdropping are surfacing.

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GCHQ intercepted foreign politicians' communications at G20 summits (http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2013/jun/16/gchq-intercepted-communications-g20-summits)


Foreign politicians and officials who took part in two G20 summit meetings in London in 2009 had their computers monitored and their phone calls intercepted on the instructions of their British government hosts, according to documents seen by the Guardian. Some delegates were tricked into using internet cafes which had been set up by British intelligence agencies to read their email traffic.

The revelation comes as Britain prepares to host another summit on Monday – for the G8 nations, all of whom attended the 2009 meetings which were the object of the systematic spying. It is likely to lead to some tension among visiting delegates who will want the prime minister to explain whether they were targets in 2009 and whether the exercise is to be repeated this week.

The disclosure raises new questions about the boundaries of surveillance by GCHQ and its American sister organisation, the National Security Agency, whose access to phone records and internet data has been defended as necessary in the fight against terrorism and serious crime. The G20 spying appears to have been organised for the more mundane purpose of securing an advantage in meetings. Named targets include long-standing allies such as South Africa and Turkey.

There have often been rumours of this kind of espionage at international conferences, but it is highly unusual for hard evidence to confirm it and spell out the detail. The evidence is contained in documents – classified as top secret – which were uncovered by the NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden and seen by the Guardian. They reveal that during G20 meetings in April and September 2009 GCHQ used what one document calls "ground-breaking intelligence capabilities" to intercept the communications of visiting delegations.

This included:

• Setting up internet cafes where they used an email interception programme and key-logging software to spy on delegates' use of computers;

• Penetrating the security on delegates' BlackBerrys to monitor their email messages and phone calls;

• Supplying 45 analysts with a live round-the-clock summary of who was phoning who at the summit;

• Targeting the Turkish finance minister and possibly 15 others in his party;

• Receiving reports from an NSA attempt to eavesdrop on the Russian leader, Dmitry Medvedev, as his phone calls passed through satellite links to Moscow.

The documents suggest that the operation was sanctioned in principle at a senior level in the government of the then prime minister, Gordon Brown, and that intelligence, including briefings for visiting delegates, was passed to British ministers.

A briefing paper dated 20 January 2009 records advice given by GCHQ officials to their director, Sir Iain Lobban, who was planning to meet the then foreign secretary, David Miliband. The officials summarised Brown's aims for the meeting of G20 heads of state due to begin on 2 April, which was attempting to deal with the economic aftermath of the 2008 banking crisis. The briefing paper added: "The GCHQ intent is to ensure that intelligence relevant to HMG's desired outcomes for its presidency of the G20 reaches customers at the right time and in a form which allows them to make full use of it." Two documents explicitly refer to the intelligence product being passed to "ministers".
GCHQ ragout 1 One of the GCHQ documents. Photograph: Guardian

According to the material seen by the Guardian, GCHQ generated this product by attacking both the computers and the telephones of delegates.

One document refers to a tactic which was "used a lot in recent UK conference, eg G20". The tactic, which is identified by an internal codeword which the Guardian is not revealing, is defined in an internal glossary as "active collection against an email account that acquires mail messages without removing them from the remote server". A PowerPoint slide explains that this means "reading people's email before/as they do".

The same document also refers to GCHQ, MI6 and others setting up internet cafes which "were able to extract key logging info, providing creds for delegates, meaning we have sustained intelligence options against them even after conference has finished". This appears to be a reference to acquiring delegates' online login details.

Another document summarises a sustained campaign to penetrate South African computers, recording that they gained access to the network of their foreign ministry, "investigated phone lines used by High Commission in London" and "retrieved documents including briefings for South African delegates to G20 and G8 meetings". (South Africa is a member of the G20 group and has observer status at G8 meetings.)
GCHQ Ragout 2 Another excerpt from the GCHQ documents. Photograph: Guardian

A detailed report records the efforts of the NSA's intercept specialists at Menwith Hill in North Yorkshire to target and decode encrypted phone calls from London to Moscow which were made by the Russian president, Dmitry Medvedev, and other Russian delegates.

Other documents record apparently successful efforts to penetrate the security of BlackBerry smartphones: "New converged events capabilities against BlackBerry provided advance copies of G20 briefings to ministers … Diplomatic targets from all nations have an MO of using smartphones. Exploited this use at the G20 meetings last year."

The operation appears to have run for at least six months. One document records that in March 2009 – the month before the heads of state meeting – GCHQ was working on an official requirement to "deliver a live dynamically updating graph of telephony call records for target G20 delegates … and continuing until G20 (2 April)."

Another document records that when G20 finance ministers met in London in September, GCHQ again took advantage of the occasion to spy on delegates, identifying the Turkish finance minister, Mehmet Simsek, as a target and listing 15 other junior ministers and officials in his delegation as "possible targets". As with the other G20 spying, there is no suggestion that Simsek and his party were involved in any kind of criminal offence. The document explicitly records a political objective – "to establish Turkey's position on agreements from the April London summit" and their "willingness (or not) to co-operate with the rest of the G20 nations".

The September meeting of finance ministers was also the subject of a new technique to provide a live report on any telephone call made by delegates and to display all of the activity on a graphic which was projected on to the 15-sq-metre video wall of GCHQ's operations centre as well as on to the screens of 45 specialist analysts who were monitoring the delegates.

"For the first time, analysts had a live picture of who was talking to who that updated constantly and automatically," according to an internal review.

A second review implies that the analysts' findings were being relayed rapidly to British representatives in the G20 meetings, a negotiating advantage of which their allies and opposite numbers may not have been aware: "In a live situation such as this, intelligence received may be used to influence events on the ground taking place just minutes or hours later. This means that it is not sufficient to mine call records afterwards – real-time tip-off is essential."

In the week after the September meeting, a group of analysts sent an internal message to the GCHQ section which had organised this live monitoring: "Thank you very much for getting the application ready for the G20 finance meeting last weekend … The call records activity pilot was very successful and was well received as a current indicator of delegate activity …

"It proved useful to note which nation delegation was active during the moments before, during and after the summit. All in all, a very successful weekend with the delegation telephony plot."

naste.de.lumina
17th June 2013, 04:46
Hey buddy.
This news is explosive. International crisis of relationship can be expected.
Every day a complicating news. It takes a lot of attention and insight to evaluate this information.
Thank you.

Eram
17th June 2013, 05:10
Explosive indeed.

This just might turn out to be much more shocking than PRISM revealings.
spying on civilians is one thing, but on governments....
Those governments involved will not be amused.

imo.... The world needs revealings like this as nothing else.
This will be the means bye which humanity will overcome the grip of dark forces that have hold on us now.
Darkness can not exist, were light (exposure, whistleblowing, etc) shines.

mosquito
17th June 2013, 05:11
Perfidious Albion ...

Tesla_WTC_Solution
17th June 2013, 05:15
I wonder if there would be equal outrage if it came to light that the USA also spies on the UK, lol.

Every time a wall is erected in our society you can count on it growing some ears...

"I see London, I see France, I see G20 underpants!"

naste.de.lumina
17th June 2013, 05:28
I wonder if there would be equal outrage if it came to light that the USA also spies on the UK, lol.

Every time a wall is erected in our society you can count on it growing some ears...

"I see London, I see France, I see G20 underpants!"

Open up all the Pandora boxes.

Ernie Nemeth
17th June 2013, 06:57
Strikes me as odd that a distinction should be drawn between spying illegally on citizens or their government representatives. It is the same mentality.

The cell phone and tablet apps all spy on their users. Ever read the conditions you must agree to? I have no apps on any of my devices for this reason. When I got my new tablet I thought things would be different. They are not. I wanted an app to tell me how much battery life I had left. These are the permissions they wished me to agree to:

intercept email messages, send email messages, terminate messages
try to decode/decipher my passwords
erase my memory, tamper with the USB storage
share pertinernt data with other third party company's
and more...

all for a battery charge indicator???
I do not use my tablet anymore. It is useless without programs. And I am not good with giving them as much power as my government has over me. So no tablet. And I do not use a smart phone now for over a year for the same reason.

I think this world has a bit of cognitive dissonance when it comes to the true state of reality they find themselves a part of.

Where's the big surprise? Of course the host government spies on other government delegates. Duh. It is the act of uncovering the secret surveillance and making it public that suddenly galvanizes the ordinary citizen, as if some giant revelation of monumental proportions has just been revealed. Yet all they are doing is verifying what the most practical and pragmatic already knew. They spy on friend and foe alike - because they do not trust anyone, including, most especially including, those in the same racket jostling and competing for positions of prestige and power.

bogeyman
17th June 2013, 10:21
This kind of activity has been on going for years, it is only now they cannot deny it, yet they will manipulate the situation for their own ends.

Sunny-side-up
17th June 2013, 11:15
At the end of the day just who is it spying on who?

Sidney
17th June 2013, 16:08
It seems, more practices of monitoring and eavesdropping are surfacing.

-----------------

GCHQ intercepted foreign politicians' communications at G20 summits (http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2013/jun/16/gchq-intercepted-communications-g20-summits)


Foreign politicians and officials who took part in two G20 summit meetings in London in 2009 had their computers monitored and their phone calls intercepted on the instructions of their British government hosts, according to documents seen by the Guardian. Some delegates were tricked into using internet cafes which had been set up by British intelligence agencies to read their email traffic.

....
In the week after the September meeting, a group of analysts sent an internal message to the GCHQ section which had organised this live monitoring: "Thank you very much for getting the application ready for the G20 finance meeting last weekend … The call records activity pilot was very successful and was well received as a current indicator of delegate activity …

"It proved useful to note which nation delegation was active during the moments before, during and after the summit. All in all, a very successful weekend with the delegation telephony plot."

It seems there are NO BOUNDRIES.

Tesla_WTC_Solution
17th June 2013, 21:21
And people wonder why "insane folks" like me don't like microsoft Government Gateway, hotmail, etc... lol!
When all the poop is in the same pot then it takes fewer spies to watch us crap!
A vulgar way of talking about the digital world..

seehas
17th June 2013, 21:35
it seems like the internet problem was a big agenda at the bilderberg meeting, they realy pushing it into the peoples heads now.

the so called leaks are controlled and planted

Eram
25th June 2013, 13:21
More details are coming out about the spying on foreign Nations by the British GCHQ:

Brit brother' taps Germany-US data cable

British secret services are tapping a fibre-optic cable carrying data from Germany to the US, German media say, in the wake of bombshell revelations that the British are watching Europeans on a larger scale even than the Americans.

The British secret service communications arm GCHQ is watching the TAT-14 fibre-optic internet cable which processes and transmits German users' internet and telephone data to the US via the UK, broadcaster NDR and the Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper reported on Tuesday.

The reports came as Germany was still reeling from last week's shock revelation by former CIA employee Edward Snowden of the existence and scope of Britain's 'Tempora' intelligence operation, with which GCHQ keeps tabs on European communications.

Documents shown by Snowden to British newspaper The Guardian revealed that GCHQ had secret access to more than 200 fibre optic cables across the world, including TAT-14, a 15,000 kilometre-long data highway which connects northern Europe to the US via Denmark, Germany, The Netherlands, France and the UK.

The cable runs from Denmark to a German hub in Norden, East Friesland, before continuing along the seabed surfacing in Katwijk in the Netherlands and St. Valery in France and then crossing the channel.

It hits British soil in the coastal town of Bude-Haven on the south-western tip of Cornwall, where the paper said it was presumably accessed by GCHQ. From there, it crosses the Atlantic, surfacing in two towns in New Jersey, USA.

Snowden's revelations showed that British communications providers Vodafone and British Telecom (BT) were involved in helping with GCHQ's cable taps, which allowed the service to sift through vast amounts of communications data every day.

Vodafone issued a statement emphasising that companies must follow the laws of the country they operated in, but declined to give further details in the interests of “national security.” BT, meanwhile, has so far refused to comment, the paper said.

Both the German government and the German foreign intelligence service appear to have been completely ignorant of the British spying activities, which Snowden described as “worse” in scope than the recently-uncovered US “Prism” program.

Chancellor Angela Merkel's government submitted a list of questions about Tempora to the British embassy in Berlin on Monday, with the aim of "clarifying what is occurring on what legal basis and the scope [of this]," said Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert.

Meanwhile, concern and outrage is growing in Germany as the implications of last week's revelations begin to sink in.

"Great Britain is the data leech of the European Union," Jörg-Uwe Hahn, Hessen's state justice minister told the Handelsblatt newspaper on Tuesday, and added that the revelations raised serious trust issues for the whole of Europe.

"Can we trust the British government for example with matters of trade that they won't deploy their spy network at the expense of their partners?" he asked.

source: http://www.thelocal.de/national/20130625-50501.html