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Top of the Agenda: France Reacts to Latest NSA Revelations
The French government summoned the U.S. ambassador to explain a report in Le Monde that revealed the U.S. National Security Agency swept up 70.3 million French telephone records in a thirty-day period (AP). Prosecutors in Paris opened a preliminary inquiry into a different NSA program in July and may expand their investigation to include the latest revelations (Guardian). German magazine Der Spiegel reported over the weekend that the NSA has intercepted communications of the Mexican government for years, including the text messages and phone calls of its current president (Spiegel).
Analysis
"It
used to be that 'checks and balances' referred to one branch of the
government checking and balancing the other branches—like the Supreme
Court deciding whether laws are constitutional. Now the NSA, the CIA and
the White House use the term to refer to a secret organization
reviewing the actions it has taken and deciding in secret by itself whether they were legal and constitutional," writes Andrew Rosenthal in the New York Times.
"The French already know the power of these surveillance programs—because according to Le Monde they've been running a similar surveillance program themselves; though perhaps only focused on its own nationals," writes Christian Fraser for the BBC.
"'Journalist
changes jobs' is not usually the kind of headline that merits much
attention. But the news that Glenn Greenwald is moving from The Guardian to a new media venture, funded by a Hawaii-based billionaire with libertarian views, is something that the British and American governments have reason to worry about," writes Gideon Rachman in the Financial Times.
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