UNITED NATIONS (IPS) - The United Nations has long been a veritable playground for spooks of all political stripes to spy on each other -- going back to the days of the US-Soviet Cold War in the 1960s and '70s.
A 1975 US Congressional Committee, led by Senator Frank Church, charged with investigating the activities of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) laid bare some of the diplomatic shenanigans at the world body.
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UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon pose with Russia's President Dmitry Medvedev (extreme right), German Chancellor Angela Merkel (R) and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (L) during the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Summit in Astana on Wednesday against the backdrop of the WikiLeaks exposure of highly embarrassing US diplomatic cables. Reuters |
The evidence given before the Church Committee revealed the CIA had planted one of its lip-reading experts -- specifically a Russian-speaking lip-reading expert -- in the Security Council chamber so he could monitor the lip movements of Soviet delegates as they consulted each other in low whispers.
The revelations by WikiLeaks of US espionage -- particularly the gathering of information on foreign diplomats and senior UN staffers based in New York -- have only reinforced the long-held view that US intelligence operations inside and outside the world body are the norm.
According to some of the confidential State Department cables released by WikiLeaks, a July 2009 "classified directive" to US diplomats assigned to the United Nations sought "biographic and biometric information" on the permanent representatives of the Security Council.
The directive also called for credit card details and frequent flyer numbers of UN personnel and technical details of the UN communication system, including passwords and personal encryption keys.
But these are being interpreted as violations of international conventions to which all, or most, of the 192 member states, including the United States, are signatories.
Asked about the US efforts to collect information, including classified information, Secretary-General Ban Ki- moon told reporters on Tuesday that "all member states of the United Nations should adhere to existing conventions and treaties respecting and protecting the immunities and privileges of the United Nations."
An Asian diplomat told IPS that any spying on the United Nations is a violation of three international treaties: the 1946 Convention on the Privileges and Immunities of the United Nations; the 1947 Headquarters Agreement between the United Nations and the United States; and the 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations.
Ban said: "Basically, I do not believe that anybody would be happy when somebody knows he or she is under watch by somebody."
However, he pointed out that "as secretary-general of the United Nations, I know my job and my performance is transparent and under constant scrutiny by the international community."
"The United Nations' activities are transparent and we are doing our best efforts to meet the expectations of the international community," he said.
U.N. spokesman Farhan Haq told reporters the secretary-general was informed by the US ambassador to the United Nations, Susan Rice, about the documents before they became public.
Defending her staff, Rice told reporters Monday, "Our diplomats are doing what diplomats do around the world every day, which is build relationships, negotiate, advance our interests, and work to find common solutions to complex problems."
"That's what they do. And they do it extremely well, with great integrity, with hard work," she said. "And I want to just underscore that in the complex world in which we live, the work that US diplomats do here in the United Nations and around the world is indispensible to our national security and substantially advance our shared interests in international peace and security," she said.
Samir Sanbar, a former UN assistant secretary-general and head of Public Information, told IPS that at one time a senior US official at the United Nations had a Soviet apparatchik planted in his department while a senior Soviet official had, in turn, an American trailing him.
Not to be outdone, he said, other countries also played the same game, to the point of being a tragicomedy in the corridors of the secretariat. "It turned out to be a farce," said Sanbar, "as some almost specialised in talking to plants in the Delegates Lounge while others addressed the windows of the Delegates Dining Room on the assumption there were Soviet and US listening outposts across the East River."
Perhaps the question about WikLeaks, he said, is what did the US expect to find out that the current secretary- general's office would not readily provide? |