Followed by a sly suggestion that someone of her experience and stature should have known better. Kurt Volker, former US ambassador to Nato 2008-2009, told the
BBC Radio 4 Today programme "every country spies" and he could not
believe that the revelations were a surprise to anyone.
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The most common reaction to news that German Chancellor Angela Merkel's
phone
was bugged by the US National Security Agency appears to be world-weary resignation
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was bugged by the US National Security Agency appears to be world-weary resignation
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Lord West, a security minister under Gordon Brown, said he had "always worked on the assumption" that people were listening to his phone calls.
"I know they jolly well were," he told Today.
"I don't think it's surprising that people try and listen. If
you are a head of state there are lots of people, not just other
states, who are listening.
"There are companies, all sorts of people, who want to hear what you are saying and I think you have to be extremely careful."
'Shocked'
A former senior British diplomat, who did not want to be
named, told the BBC News website he always worked on the assumption that
his phone calls were being listened to.
This could sometimes be turned to the British
delegation's advantage, he explained, by reinforcing the message that
they were trying to get across in negotiations in supposedly private
phone conversations, knowing full well that they would be intercepted.
Former Home Secretary David Blunkett recently revealed that
Nicolas Sarkozy, the then French interior minister, tried to save time
in negotiations over the closure of the Sangatte transit camp by saying
he already knew the British position because the French secret service
had intercepted unencrypted Home Office emails.
But not everyone is quite so sanguine.
Clare Short, who made headlines and provoked fury in Downing
Street in 2004 when she revealed that the British secret service had
bugged the office and telephone of then UN Secretary General Kofi Annan,
says she was genuinely "shocked" by the Merkel revelations.
The former international development secretary also rejects
the argument that Mrs Merkel's anger is for the benefit of the German
public, many of whom are still haunted by the memory of the Stasi.
"I am sure she was very angry and upset. These were her friends and now [she finds] they don't trust her," says Ms Short.
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Clare Short says she told MI6 chiefs she did not need their services in Africa
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Blair myth
Ms Short said she was regularly given intelligence reports
about what Mr Annan was saying in the supposed privacy of his office but
she became increasingly uncomfortable about this in the run-up to the
Iraq war.
She recalls the surreal and disturbing experience of chatting to Kofi
Annan on her mobile phone and realising that someone would probably be
listening in and transcribing every word.
She says she can not recall any examples of being handed
intelligence reports about what friendly powers were saying to each
other on the phone during her time in office, from 1997 to 2003.
But she says she was approached by "successive Cs" - the code
name for the head of MI6 - offering to spy on the leaders of friendly
nations in Africa.
"I told them, 'No of course not. We don't want to spy on the people we are working with,'" she tells the BBC News website.
She also explodes one popular myth about notorious
technophobe Tony Blair - that he did not carry a mobile phone during his
years in power.
"I don't really believe that," she says, adding that it might
be part of Downing Street myth-making: "It makes him more
emperor-like."
All heads of state, in the Western world at least, will have access to encrypted mobile phones and other secure lines.
White House 'bubble'
The problem, for security staff, is convincing world leaders to take the espionage threat seriously.
Shortly after taking office in 2008, Barack Obama managed to
convince the secret service to let him keep his own Blackberry, despite
fears it would broadcast his location and make him vulnerable to
hacking.
Mr Obama is said to be frustrated about having to live in the
White House "bubble", cut off from the outside world and unable to
communicate with normal people.
The President's Blackberry is often seen on his belt and he
is sometimes pictured scrolling through his messages as he travels in
his limousine.
In France, senior officials have access to a secure intranet
and phone network - but the country's leaders are reported to be
reluctant to use the slow and restrictive system, which can take up to
30 seconds to place a call.
President Francois Hollande is said to have followed predecessor Nicolas Sarkozy by holding on to his personal smartphone.
Mobile phones are banned in No 10 - you have to hand them in at the door - over fears foreign powers are listening in.
All calls in and out are routed through a secure switchboard
staffed by officials - a system which continues when the prime minister
is travelling.
Downing Street is remaining tight-lipped about the latest bugging revelations.
Phone tapping allies is not new
- Evidence Britain tapped the phone calls of American diplomats in the interwar years has been uncovered by Dr Antony Best, a historian at the London School of Economics
- Dr Best discovered the transcript of a telephone call between an American official in London and the Secretary of State in Washington, in the National Archives
- The official, Norman Davis, was the leader of the American delegation to a 1934 conference on limiting UK, US and Japanese naval forces
- Dr Best said the transcript had clearly been made without the individuals' knowledge
- "Britain was clearly tapping the phones of the American embassy in peacetime, says Dr Best.
- "And it's highly likely that we would have been treating other foreign embassies in the same way. So while the current furore over the claims that the US has been spying on its friends is understandable, it's really nothing new."
#Πηγή:
How do world leaders cope with being bugged?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-24668908#TWEET935458
25 October 2013 Last updated at 17:17 GMT
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