White House official sees need for 'constraints' on NSA spying
The
White House on Monday said that some constraints are needed in United States surveillance practices in the wake of
embarrassing revelations about the sweeping nature of U.S. spying.
The
comment came a week after President Barack Obama drew heavy criticism over
accusations that the National Security Agency had tapped the mobile phone of
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and conducted widespread electronic snooping in
France and Italy.
The
White House spokesman, Jay Carney, said that with new intelligence-gathering
capabilities, ``We recognise there needs to be additional constraints on how we
gather and use intelligence.’’
Carney's
comment, along with a tweet from National Security Adviser Susan Rice that a
"proper balance" is needed, suggested some changes might be in the
offing on the scale of U.S. electronic spying as part of a review of the
collection activities of the National Security Agency and other U.S.
intelligence agencies.
The
review is to be completed by year's end.
Obama
has full confidence in the director of the National Security Agency, Keith
Alexander, and other NSA officials but that there needs to be a balance between
the need to gather intelligence and the need to protect the privacy of people,
Carney said.
A
European delegation took the concerns about the issue to Capitol Hill, where
members of the European Parliament met U.S. lawmakers and spoke of the need to
rebuild trust.
``Confidence
is vanished," said Elmar Brok, a German member of the European Parliament.
"We have to work hard that confidence is re-established between the
leaders, between our people."
After
Obama and Merkel spoke by phone, the White House said the U.S. was not currently
tapping her phone and would not in the future, begging the question of whether
it had been done in the past.
The
Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday that the NSA ended the programme that
involved Merkel after the operation was uncovered in a review that began during
the summer.
The
programme also involved as many as 35 other world leaders, some of whom were
still being monitored, the report said.
The
U.S. and many lawmakers have defended the NSA programmes as crucial to
protecting U.S. national security and helping thwart militant plots.
They
insist the programmes are carefully overseen by Congress and the U.S. legal
system.
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