NSA leaks: Years of spying on Mexico govt gave US investment benefits
by alethoRT | October 20, 2013
US
electronic surveillance in Mexico reportedly targeted top officials,
including both current and previous presidents. Intelligence produced by
the NSA helped Americans get an upper hand in diplomatic talks and find
good investment opportunities.
The
US National Security Agency was apparently very happy with its
successes in America’s southern neighbor, according to classified
documents leaked by Edwards Snowden and analyzed by the German magazine,
Der Spiegel. It reports on new details of the spying on the Mexican government, which dates back at least several years.
The
fact that Mexican President Peña Nieto is of interest to the NSA was
revealed earlier by Brazilian TV Globo, which also had access to the
documents provided by Snowden. Spiegel says his predecessor Felipe Calderon was a target too, and the Americans hacked into his public email back in May 2010.
The
access to Calderon electronic exchanges gave the US spies "diplomatic,
economic and leadership communications which continue to provide insight
into Mexico's political system and internal stability," the magazine
cites an NSA top secret internal report as saying. The operation to hack
into presidential email account was dubbed “Flatliquid” by the American
e-spooks.
The
bitter irony of the situation is that Calderon during his term in
office worked more closely with Washington than any other Mexican
president before him. In 2007 he even authorized the creation of a
secret facility for electronic surveillance, according to a July
publication in the Mexican newspaper, Excelsior.
The
surveillance on President Nieto started when he was campaigning for
office in the early summer of 2012, the report goes on. The NSA targeted
his phone and the phones of nine of his close associates to build a map
of their regular contacts. From then it closely monitored those
individuals’ phones as well, intercepting 85,489 text messages,
including those sent by Nieto.
After
the Globo TV report, which mentioned spying on Mexico only in passing,
Nieto stated that US President Barack Obama had promised him that he
would investigate the accusations and punish those responsible of any
misconduct. The reaction was far milder than that from Brazilian
President Dilma Rouseff, another target of NSA’s intensive interest, who
has since canceled a planned trip to the US and delivered a withering
speech at the UN General Assembly, which condemned American electronic
surveillance.
Another
NSA operation in Mexico dubbed “Whitetamale” allowed the agency to gain
access to emails of high-ranking officials in country’s Public Security
Secretariat, a law enforcement body that combats drug cartels and human
trafficking rings. The hacking, which happened in August 2009, gave the
US information about Mexican crime fighting, but also provided access
to "diplomatic talking-points," an internal NSA document says.
In
a single year, this operation produced 260 classified reports that
facilitated talks on political issues and helped the Americans plan
international investments.
"These
TAO [Tailored Access Operations – an NSA division that handles missions
like hacking presidential emails] accesses into several Mexican
government agencies are just the beginning - we intend to go much
further against this important target," the document reads. It praises
the operation as a "tremendous success" and states that the divisions
responsible for this surveillance are "poised for future successes."
Economic
espionage is a motive for NSA spying, which the agency vocally denied,
but which appears in the previous leaks. The agency had spied on the
Brazilian oil giant, Petrobras, according to earlier revelations. This
combined with reports that the NSA hacked into the email of Brazilian
President Dilma Rouseff, triggered a serious deterioration of relations
between the two countries.
While
the NSA declined comment to the German magazine, the Mexican Foreign
Ministry replied with an email, which condemned any form of espionage on
Mexican citizens. The NSA presumably could read that email at the same
time as the journalists, Der Spiegel joked.
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