Secretary of State John Kerry sharply rebuked the NSA surveillance program that monitored the communications of 35 world leaders, many of whom hailed from governments friendly to the U.S., becoming the highest-ranking Obama administration official to do so since the news broke last week.
According to a classified document leaked by fugitive former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, the NSA urged officials inside the White House, State Department, and Pentagon to turn over phone numbers of foreign leaders. The document said that one official reported 200 phone numbers, including those of 35 world leaders.
In a conference call, Kerry said the NSA “reached too far” and “inappropriately” spied on U.S. allies. He said that the Obama administration is conducting a “thorough review.”
“We have actually prevented airplanes from going down, buildings from being blown up, and people from being assassinated because we’ve been able to learn ahead of time of the plans,” Mr Kerry said, according to the BBC. “I assure you, innocent people are not being abused in this process, but there’s an effort to try to gather information. And yes, in some cases, it has reached too far inappropriately.”









