The NSA will probably spy on foreign leaders like Iranian President Hassan Rouhani during the UN General Assembly in New York this week, applying a “full court press” that includes intercepting cellphone calls and bugging hotel rooms, former intelligence analysts told NBC News.
A top-secret report on a previous NSA operation against Iran’s U.N. delegation illustrates just how extensive this electronic surveillance can be. The document, obtained by NBC News, shows the U.S. bugged the hotel rooms and phones of then-Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his entire 143-member delegation in 2007, listening to thousands of conversations and learning the “social networks” of Iran’s leadership.
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The three-page document, called “Tips for a Successful Quick Reaction Capability,” recounted what happened when the NSA was asked by the Bush administration for blanket surveillance of Ahmadinejad’s September 2007 trip to the UNGA. Ahmadinejad was then in his first term as president but already notorious in the West for questioning the Holocaust and saying Israel should be wiped off the map.
In response to the “Quick Reaction Capability” request, the NSA obtained “authorization for special FISA collection on the Iranian delegation during their stay in New York.” The secret, 11 judge “FISA” court can grant permission for electronic surveillance of foreign powers or agents of foreign powers and can also approve the physical search of the premises or property used by a foreign power.
Although the NSA document makes no specific reference to bugging the rooms of the delegation, which stayed at the Intercontinental Hotel and other hotels in midtown Manhattan, a former senior U.S. government official confirmed to NBC News that the bugging took place.
Once the “ok” for the “special collection” was given, said the report, “we had to ensure that the proper procedures would be in place … to efficiently tackle the anticipated influx of traffic.” The operation, conducted nearly around the clock, used the latest in “Human Language Technology” to gather not just information about what Ahmadinejad was thinking and telling his aides, but to dive deep into the personal and political connections of Iran’s top officials.
An “EXCEL spreadsheet guru” compiled information on all 143 delegates, including names, titles and passport numbers, according to the document, as well as the schedules of Ahmadinejad and Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki, according to the document. “Collection information and identifications of the various hotel rooms and cell phones were also updated as soon as they were discovered.” The spreadsheet was continuously updated and provided to the NSA and the FBI.
Teams of five or six analysts from three different sections then worked from 4 in the morning to 11 at night during the delegation’s visit recording and transcribing conversations. In addition to monitoring phone calls and in-person conversations, a secret technology called “Blarney” allowed them to intercept Skype conversations and video teleconferencing.
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