Everyday communications of Italians are also on the watch list of the US National Security Agency, a new report has revealed. While an Italian parliamentary committee seeks clarification of NSA activities, local security sources defend the snooping.
Italy’s spy watchdog COPASIR has recently learned details of
large-scale monitoring of Italians by the US intelligence agency
NSA, according to a report published by Corriere della Sera.
COPASIR stands for Parliamentary Committee for the Intelligence and Security Services and for State Secret Control, and is tasked with overseeing the activities of Italy’s own spy agencies. The body has free access to intelligence agencies' offices and documents and has the authority to overcome judicial and banking secrecy.
In order to confirm the snooping on Italians, the committee
members had to go to the United States and meet with US
intelligence agency directors, as well as with congressional
committee chairs.
A delegation of parliamentarians from the COPASIR confirmed their
concerns regarding the extent of the NSA’s PRISM surveillance
program during an official visit to the US three weeks ago, the
media said. As part of the program, phone calls and computer
communications of “millions of Italians” are reportedly being
gathered.
Moreover, Corriere della Sera added that the implications
extended to “a monitoring network that started years ago and
is still active,” of which the Italian government and spy
agencies might have been well aware of.
Such discoveries have prompted uneasy questions to officials,
with leading members of COPASIR now seeking clarification from
the government, and reportedly awaiting the junior minister for
the intelligence services, Marco Minniti, to visit the
committee’s offices on Wednesday afternoon.
Meanwhile, Italian intelligence sources quoted in the report
rushed to justify the surveillance activities of their partners.
The acquisition of the sensitive private information “has as
its sole aim the fight against terrorism,” one source was
quoted as saying, while another denied that the NSA’s spying ever
breached Italy’s sovereignty.
“We have never had any evidence that this kind of monitoring
might have involved political spying on Italian public figures.
All our investigations into any such eventuality have proved
negative,” the source maintained.
However, such explanations did not satisfy COPASIR, nor did the
NSA deputy director’s promise of “a complete overview of
communications to and from the United States.”
According to the Italian media, the committee member Claudio Fava
from Left Ecology Freedom (SEL) party, was “openly
perplexed” as he commented on such statements.
“It’s a data trawling system based on various sensors. US
intelligence experts explained that their main concern was to
comply with American data protection laws and intervene to
safeguard national security. Whether this conflicts with other
countries’ laws is of no concern to them but it should be to
us,” Fava was quoted as saying.
Another COPASIR member, Felice Casson of the Democratic Party
(PD), said that the replies the committee received from top
Italian intelligence officials were “far from reassuring.”
“It is clear that the United States has acquired information on
individuals and institutions across Europe. What concrete
elements exist to rule out that this has happened to politicians
and institutions in Italy?” Casson questioned.
Leading Democratic Party (PD) politician Ettore Rosato also
demanded an explanation from the government, saying that “a
few months ago, when the first [NSA whistleblower Edward
Snowden’s] revelations emerged, both the prime minister, Enrico
Letta, and the foreign minister, Emma Bonino, professed
astonishment at what came out.”
So far, the documents obtained by various world media from the
former NSA contractor Snowden have revealed that the Italian
embassy in Washington was subject to spying along with the
diplomatic missions of other countries. Italian intelligence
sources have been careful to deny the claims only “off the
record,” Corriere della Sera says.
Right before the NSA scandal emerged, the collaboration between
Italian and American intelligence services was “at its
peak,” and, according to the media, included sharing of
communications through the SIGINT interception system. However,
such cooperation appeared to have been justified by the ongoing
allied wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the search for western
hostages there, the media adds.
But in the wake of recent revelations on the US spying activities in France,
which triggered a media frenzy and public outrage, the media
speculates Italy may find it difficult to maintain the same
“stance” towards the NSA programs.