Italy presses Kerry over US surveillance -source

Secretary of state questioned on whether US intercepted Italian telecoms data

US secretary of state John Kerry  met Italian prime minister Enrico Letta during a visit to Rome. Photograph: Claudio Peri/Pool/Reuters
US secretary of state John Kerry met Italian prime minister Enrico Letta during a visit to Rome. Photograph: Claudio Peri/Pool/Reuters

US secretary of state John Kerry today promised that US authorities would look into whether their intelligence services may have illegally intercepted Italian telecoms data, an Italian government source said.

Mr Kerry met Italian prime minister Enrico Letta during a visit to Rome, where he faced fresh questions about mass spying on European allies after revelations by Edward Snowden, the former US intelligence operative granted asylum in Russia.

“The question was brought up to verify reports about possible violations of privacy rules,” a source in the Italian prime minister’s office said following the meeting.

“We encountered a cooperative attitude and were assured that the US administration has put the issue under review.”

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A US official said Mr Kerry had briefly discussed the recent reports of US intelligence gathering with Mr Letta.

"Secretary Kerry made clear that our goal is to find the right balance between protecting the security and the privacy of our citizens and that this work will continue, as will our close consultations with our friends, including Italy, " he said.

The French government has called for the issue to be put on the agenda of the next European Union summit this week in Brussels. French daily Le Monde reported this week that the US National Security Agency had conducted mass surveillance of French citizens.

“Italians must have clarity on this issue,” interior minister Angelino Alfano said today in Rome. Italians must know and be told if they were spied on “without being intimidated by anyone”, he said.

Italy’s main privacy watchdog has written to Mr Letta to request that the government look into whether Italy may also have been targeted by US surveillance programmes.

The director of the US National Security Agency, Army General Keith Alexander, has vigorously defended the NSA’s activities as lawful and necessary to detect and disrupt terrorist plots.

Reuters