A week after it broadcast a report that the US National
Security Agency spied on the presidents of Brazil and Mexico, Globo, Brazil's
biggest television network, said the agency had also spied on major
companies.
The US
government tapped into computer networks of companies including Google and
Brazilian state-run oil firm Petroleo Brasileiro, according to leaked
US documents aired by Globo, Brazil's biggest television network.
A week after it broadcast a report that the US National Security Agency spied
on the presidents of Brazil and Mexico, Globo said the agency had also spied on
major companies.
It showed slides from an NSA presentation, dated May 2012, that it said was
used to show new agents how to spy on private computer networks.
In addition to Google and Petrobras the presentation suggested the NSA had
tapped into systems operated by France's foreign ministry and the Society for
Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, an international bank
cooperative known as Swift, through which many international financial
transactions take place.
The report did not say when the alleged spying took place, what data might
have been gathered or what exactly the agency may have been seeking.
As with its previous report, Globo disclosed the information in coordination
with Glenn Greenwald, an American blogger and journalist for the Guardian
newspaper, who has worked with former NSA analyst Edward Snowden to expose the
extent of US spying at home and abroad.
During an interview in the Globo broadcast, Greenwald said the documents he
obtained from Snowden contain "much more information on spying on innocents,
against people who have nothing to do with terrorism, or on industrial issues,
which need to be made public."
In an email exchange with Reuters, Greenwald declined to discuss the report
further.
Petrobras, which has made some of the world's biggest oil finds in recent
years, did not respond to requests for comment on Sunday. Spokespeople for Swift
and Google couldn't be reached for comment. Officials at the French embassy in
Brazil also could not be reached.
Trade Secrets
James Clapper, the US Director of National Intelligence, said US agencies do
collect information about economic and financial matters and that it is used to
combat terrorist financing and predict problems that could lead to financial
crises or disrupt financial markets.
"What we do not do," Clapper said in a statement, "is use our foreign
intelligence capabilities to steal the trade secrets of foreign companies on
behalf of - or give intelligence we collect to - US companies to enhance their
international competitiveness or increase their bottom line."
Especially before the Snowden revelations began three months ago, US
officials regularly accused China of stealing trade secrets from Western
countries, including oil and gas firms.
At the very least, revelations of US spying on Petrobras are likely to
further complicate the tension between the United States and Brazil over
allegations that the NSA spied on the private phone calls and emails of
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff.
Brazil has demanded a formal apology and Rousseff aides have said the issue
could derail a state visit she is due to make to the United States in
October.
The tensions led to an impromptu meeting between Rousseff and US President
Barack Obama last week at the G20 meeting in Russia. Obama said he would
investigate the allegations.
Any spying on Petrobras is sure to raise hackles in Brazil, which has long
been suspicious of foreign designs on its abundant natural resources.
US officials, including Obama on a 2011 trip to Brazil and Vice President Joe
Biden during a visit in June, have cited the importance of Brazil's big new oil
finds and flagged intentions to work closely with the country for future energy
needs.
Brazil's so-called sub-salt polygon, where many of the new finds have been
discovered, may contain as much as 100 billion barrels of oil, according to Rio
de Janeiro State University. One find alone, the giant Libra field, has
estimated reserves of up to 12 billion barrels of oil, or enough to supply all
US oil needs for nearly two years.
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