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Spy Investigators Leave In A
Huff
http://cbsnews.com/now/story/0,1597,290586-412,00.shtml
- U.S. Government Accused Of Industrial Spying
- Bush Administration Seen As Uncooperative
- So European Members Of Parliament Give Up And Go Home
WASHINGTON,
May 10, 2001
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| AP
/ CBS |
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(CBS) European Parliament members investigating a suspected
U.S.-led global electronic eavesdropping system abruptly cut short their
fact-finding mission to Washington Thursday.
They were in town to meet with various officials about reported U.S.
spying on the European Echelon surveillance network for the benefit of
U.S. companies, but left in protest over the Bush administration's
apparent unwillingness to meet with them.
Carlos Coelho of Portugal, chairman of a temporary committee
investigating the issue, said his team was "concerned and
dismayed" that scheduled meetings at the U.S. State and Commerce
departments "were canceled at the last minute without a
satisfactory explanation."
He also said the committee was "very disappointed' that the CIA and
National Security Agency refused to meet with it "in spite of the
advanced preparations that had been made."
The snub is likely to add to strains on already tense relations between
President Bush and his European allies.
Coehho, who team arrived Monday, said they met with former CIA director
James Woolsey, as well as officials at the Justice Department, members
of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence and civil rights
and privacy groups.
Echelon is reputedly run by the NSA and its equivalent agencies in
Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Set up at the beginning of
the Cold War for intelligence-gathering, it is now capable of
intercepting billions of telephone calls, fax transmissions and e-mails
throughout the world.
U.S. officials have never publicly confirmed that Echelon exists. They
also deny that the government engages in industrial espionage.
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