Spain to US: Mass Phone-Tapping Unacceptable

Local Editor
Spanish officials held an emergency meeting with the US ambassador and warned that the relationship between the two countries will be severely damaged, if newspaper revelations that the NSA tracks 60 million Spanish phone calls a month are confirmed.
"Spain has relayed to the United States the importance of preserving a climate of trust...and its interest in understanding the full reach of practices that, if true, would be considered inappropriate and unacceptable between allies," said a statement from the foreign ministry.
This comes as the US Ambassador James Costos was forced to explain his country's actions to Spain's Secretary of State for the European Union, Inigo Mendez de Vigo.
"We will continue to confer with our allies, such as Spain, through our regular diplomatic channels to address the concerns that they have raised," Costos assured, after the formal summoning, which usually serves as a gesture of reproach in international diplomacy.
The audience was called following Monday's revelations in daily El Mundo that between December 10 last year and January 8, NSA recorded details of over 60.5 million Spanish calls. The information was reportedly obtained from NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden.
The data stored on NSA servers did not include the content of the calls, but did list the numbers of both parties, the time and length of the calls, and the location from which they were made. It is not clear if the so-called metadata was intercepted with surveillance equipment or obtained from phone providers.
The latest leak follows similar revelations about Italy, France and Germany. The latter two are some of a handful countries that have also summoned their respective US ambassadors.
The publication comes at a sensitive time, as European countries are also involved in drafting a United Nations General Resolution that will term "indiscriminate" surveillance of millions of people a violation of human rights.
A European Union delegation was also in Washington to discuss the fallout from the unceasing stream of disclosures about the scale of US electronic surveillance. The EU may seek an official "no-spy" agreement with the United States.
During last week's EU meeting Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said "France and Germany have decided to do one thing and the rest of us may decide to do the same, or something else." The conservative politician also claimed that he had no evidence if the US had spied on Spain at all.
On Monday the daily El Pais reported that former Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar struck a deal with George W Bush, in the wake of 9/11, which allowed the US to freely spy on Spanish territory in exchange for providing high-tech surveillance equipment for Spanish intelligence.
Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team
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