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IP: Echelon Reporter answers Ex-CIA Chief


From: David Farber <farber () cis upenn edu>
Date: Mon, 20 Mar 2000 20:05:11 -0500



Date: Mon, 20 Mar 2000 17:01:10 -0800 (PST)
From: "Kevin L. Poulsen" <klp () securityfocus com>
X-Sender: >X-Sender: klp@mail
To: farber () cis upenn edu
Subject: Echelon Reporter answers Ex-CIA Chief


Echelon Reporter answers Ex-CIA Chief

http://www.securityfocus.com/news/6

NSA spying benefits American execs, says the author of the key European
Parliament report.

By Kevin Poulsen, SecurityFocus.com News

The British reporter who brought the word "Echelon" into the vernacular
responded to a former CIA director's claim that the US doesn't commit
industrial espionage on Monday.

...

The commentary comes as the European Parliament moves toward convening a
rare "special inquiry" into NSA spying, based on a recent report it
commissioned from British journalist Duncan Campbell.  On Monday, Campbell
told SecurityFocus News that Woolsey "is not wrong" in claiming that
intelligence agencies do not steal corporate secrets for American
companies... but he's not exactly right either.

"US intelligence collection is not tasked -- that is to say, instructed
-- by US corporations," says Campbell.  "It's tasked by the
government.  However, communications intelligence is passed through
channels to agencies, including the Department of Commerce and the White
House, among others."

"It is these politicians and civil servants who decide as to whether
economic intelligence should be communicated outside the
government," Campbell says. "There is a formal channel for passing
communications intelligence data to companies, but only as result of
political decisions which can be taken on a case by case basis."

Another scholar of the United States' largest spy agency disagrees.

"That's nonsense," says James Bamford, the author of the "The Puzzle
Palace," the 1982 book that first brought the NSA to public attention. "I
think there's been an enormous overreaction to this in Europe, and most of
what's come out of it is nonsense."

...


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