US intercepts tens of millions of phone calls in Spain – report
During a single month last year the US National Security Agency intercepted some 60 million phone calls in Spain, newly leaked documents from Edward Snowden reveal, according to a report to be published in Spanish daily The World.
According to the information, reportedly provided to the
publication by the former NSA contractor, in December 2012, the
NSA collected data on roughly 60 million phone calls.
The revelation is part of the unraveling scandal over America’s
vast spying program. Which was given a new twist last week when
an article in Germany’s Der Spiegel revealed that Washington was
directly snooping on least 35 world leaders.
The German Chancellor Angela Merkel has reportedly been on the spy-list since 2002. And investigating
further, the German media have revealed that Obama was aware of
the particular operation since at least 2010 and even ordered the
NSA to prepare a comprehensive dossier on Merkel.
The NSA was quick to reject the reports, claiming that a
discussion of such an operation never took place. President Obama
himself personally assured Merkel he didn’t know anything about
the spying on her – and that he would have stopped it if he had.
Although Obama has assured some of the targets of Washington
spying that he has ordered a review of the US intelligence
gathering operations, a coalition of over 20 countries led by
Brazil and Germany are now pushing for a UN resolution condemning the US over
“indiscriminate” wiretapping and
“extra-territorial” surveillance, and calling for
“independent oversight” of electronic monitoring.