Updated 2:05 p.m.:
The White House will meet with German officials in the coming weeks to discuss allegations that the U.S. spied on world leaders, NCS Spokesperson Caitlin Hayden said Friday.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel accused the U.S. this week of tapping her cell phone after she saw the number written on U.S. documents.
Days earlier, the French newspaper Le Monde reported that the National Security Agency culled more than 70 million phone records of French citizens over 30 days.
And a classified document from 2006 leaked by fugitive former NSA contractor Edward Snowden revealed that the NSA tracked the phone conversations of 35 world leaders and solicited the phone numbers from officials inside the White House, State Department, and Pentagon. One unnamed U.S. official shared 200 numbers, including those of 35 world leaders, according to the document.
The diplomatic fallout from yet another Snowden disclosure rocked day one of the European Council summit in Brussels Thursday, where the leaders ally nations voiced outrage over the spying allegations.
“We need to have trust in our allies and partners, and this must now be established once again. I repeat that spying among friends is not at all acceptable against anyone, and that goes for every citizen in Germany,” Merkel said.
Hollande and Merkel announced in a joint appearance that “we will start discussing the matter with the Americans in order to agree upon a common framework, that will be done by the end of the year, and the other Europeans who would like to join us will be welcome.”
“To be more specific, we will make sure that between the various services, we can not only clarify what happened in the past, but we can agree upon rules for the future,” Hollande said.









