Israel got real-time leaks from EU security talks
PSC talks are streamed on the Council's internal IT network (Photo: consilium.europa.eu)
By Andrew Rettman
BRUSSELS, Today, 09:21
When
EU ambassadors met in the Political and Security Committee (PSC) to
discuss Middle East policy on 15 January, some of them didn't know there
was in effect a 29th delegation in the room - Israel.
They were finalising a statement to be endorsed by EU foreign ministers a few days later.
The EU has strict protocols for circulating classified papers (Photo: tedeytan)
But Israeli diplomats appeared to be reading EU draft texts and amendments in real time.
Some
EU sources said Israeli contacts sent text messages to them with
requests to alter wording shortly after each new draft went round.
At
the end of the meeting, Greece stuck its neck out by vetoing a line
that the Israelis hated, but which had been approved by the other 27 EU
states.
The line said: “The EU will continue to unequivocally and
explicitly make the distinction between Israel and all territories
occupied by Israel in 1967.”
By the time the foreign ministers met three days later, Bulgaria, Cyprus, and Poland had joined Greece.
The
final text agreed by ministers was softer. It said, among other
changes: “All agreements between the state of Israel and the EU must
unequivocally and explicitly indicate their inapplicability to the
territories occupied by Israel.”
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Israel
is not the only country that appears to get inside information from
time to time. “Turkish and US diplomacy can be equally efficient,” an EU
source said.
But the level of intrusion on 15 January prompted a debate on PSC security.
In a follow-up meeting, some EU diplomats suggested Israel had bugged the talks.
At
a second meeting, diplomats said more PSC events should be held in a
secure room where ambassadors would not be allowed mobile phones.
They also said more PSC documents should be classified.
Draft EU ministers’ statements are normally marked “limited” - the lowest security level.
But
the EU has strict protocols for documents marked “restricted” or
higher. Fewer people are permitted to read them. Some are encrypted and
circulated on secure networks.
Spy theory
It is not the first time EU diplomats have suggested Israel could be snooping on them.
Security services in 2003 found listening devices in the EU Council building, where member states meet.
Belgian
investigators said the suspects who planted the bugs had links to
Israeli firm Comverse, which in turn had links to an Israeli spy agency -
the Mossad.
Peter de Smet, a Belgian MP involved in the inquiry,
told EUobserver at the time: “It could be Israel … but it’ll never blow
up who did these things. It’ll remain a game inside the intelligence
services.”
An EU source said the PSC talks could also have been
hacked from the outside. He said the meetings are streamed on the
Council’s IT network, so that senior officials can watch them from their
office.
“The talks are really boring. If you intercepted them, at least you could fast forward to the good bits,” the source said.
No one seriously believes Israel spied on the 15 January meeting, however.
After
the Greek veto, some suspected that Greece had leaked the texts. An EU
source said the spy theory was mentioned in order to avoid
confrontation.
“There was a follow-up discussion at Coreper
[another EU committee] where an element of espionage was raised. But
this was just to save face and to prevent someone from having to turn to
the suspects and say: ‘You fuckers did it’,” the source said.
The
source said that if a foreign intelligence service was bugging the
council, they wouldn’t have acted on the PSC information because it
would “reveal their hand”.
Capitals
Another theory was that a
friendly PSC ambassador phoned their Israeli contact and placed the
phone next to their mike, live-broadcasting the talks.
But EU sources said there are more discreet ways to share information.
“The phone idea beggars belief,” one source said.
“It’s much easier to do it [leaking] via the capital itself, whether it’s Athens, Paris, or Berlin.
“Capitals
stay in contact with their PSC ambassadors during meetings to give
instructions. If someone in the capital leaks information to a third
country, then the capital can phone back their ambassador and say: ‘I
want this or that out of the text’.
“The leaking isn’t necessarily coming via the perm reps [permanent representations, the EU embassies in Brussels].”
Sardines
However it happened, the PSC incident is unlikely to prompt much change.
An
EU diplomat said ambassadors don't like to hand in their phones because
it makes life harder in terms of getting instructions.
They also
dislike the secure room. “It’s one of the most uncomfortable rooms in
the whole building … you’re squeezed in like sardines,” an EU source
said.
A third source said diplomats find encryption and decryption of texts “cumbersome”.
The
EU diplomat added: “Most diplomats are lackadaisical about security,
unless they have a military background. There’s a very different culture
at Nato.”
Adverse effect
In EU classification, files are
marked “restricted” or higher because their contents could “adversely
affect” diplomatic relations if they got out.
The PSC draft
statement was, in any case, designed to be published after the foreign
ministers meeting. But the leaks did harm relations.
Nabeel
Shaath, a former Palestinian foreign minister, wrote in an op-ed for
EUobserver on 26 January that Greece and Cyprus’ “precious friendships”
with Palestine “have begun to change”.
He specifically mentioned
“the apparently total change in the position of Greece and Cyprus in
terms of voting and lobbying in the EU Council”.
An EU source said the leaks also damaged EU-Israel diplomacy, but in a different way.
“Be
careful who’s boasting of the leaking. It could serve the interests of
this country to spread information about leaks because it divides and
demoralises EU states,” the source said.
“There’s nothing more fun
than being able to dangle a leaked paper in front of the EU high
representative [for foreign affairs], for instance. It destroys the
self-confidence of the EU interlocutor, because it indicates that this
country has some kind of secret control over EU policy.”
The Greek
EU mission, on Monday (8 February), told EUobserver it wasn't
responsible for the leaks. "It's a matter of principle," a senior Greek
diplomat said.
The Israeli EU mission declined to comment.
Monday, February 8, 2016
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