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Britain Spied on UN Allies Over War Vote
Guardian Unlimited ^ | 02/08/04 | Martin Bright and Peter Beaumont

Posted on 02/08/2004 8:03:59 AM PST by jim35

Britain helped America to conduct a secret and potentially illegal spying operation at the United Nations in the run-up to the Iraq war, The Observer can reveal. The operation, which targeted at least one permanent member of the UN Security Council, was almost certainly in breach of the Vienna conventions on diplomatic relations, which strictly outlaw espionage at the UN missions in New York.

Translators and analysts at the Government's top-secret surveillance centre GCHQ were ordered to co-operate with an American espionage 'surge' on Security Council delegations after a request from the US National Security Agency at the end of January 2003. This was designed to help smooth the way for a second UN resolution authorising war in Iraq.

The information was intended for US Secretary of State Colin Powell before his presentation on weapons of mass destruction to the Security Council on 5 February.

Sources close to the intelligence services have now confirmed that the request from the security agency was 'acted on' by the British authorities. It is also known that the operation caused significant disquiet in the intelligence community on both sides of the Atlantic.

An operation of this kind would almost certainly have been authorised by the director-general of GCHQ, David Pepper. But the revelation also raises serious questions for Jack Straw, the Foreign Secretary, who has overall responsibility for GCHQ.

Details of the operation were first revealed in The Observer on the eve of war last year, after the leaking of a top-secret memo from the NSA requesting British help.

But until today it was not known whether British spy chiefs had agreed to participate. The operation was ordered before deliberations over a second UN resolution and targeted the so-called 'swing nations' on the Security Council - Chile, Bulgaria, Cameroon, Angola, Guinea and Pakistan - whose votes were needed to proceed to war.

The first evidence has also emerged that China, a perma nentmember of the Security Council, was a likely target of the operation.

The Observer has discovered that a GCHQ translator, Katherine Gun, 29, who faces trial after leaking details of the US request, was hired by the surveillance centre as a Chinese language specialist. Documents of this level of secrecy are circulated on a strict 'need-to-know' basis. Security experts have said that it is highly unlikely that someone as junior as Gun would have seen the memo had she not been expected to use her language expertise in the operation.

She is thought to be an expert translator of Mandarin, the language of Chinese officialdom.

The memo, dated 31 January, 2003, stated that the security agency wanted to gather 'the whole gamut of information that could give US policymakers an edge in obtaining results favourable to US goals or to head off surprises'.

It was sent out four days after the UN's chief weapons inspector, Hans Blix, produced his interim response on Iraqi compliance with UN resolutions.

In the wake of the Hutton report and the establishment of inquiries into intelligence failures on both sides of the Atlantic, the Gun case represents a further risk to government credibility over the Iraq war, showing how far the US and Britain were prepared to go in their ultimately unsuccessful attempts to persuade the world of the case for UN support for war against Iraq.

The Gun trial will reopen embarrassing questions for the Government over the conflicting views on the legality of war which were debated in the run-up to the conflict. At the time when the memo was received at GCHQ, officials at the Foreign Office, Ministry of Defence and in the intelligence services - including senior legal advisers - were expressing serious doubts over the legality of any invasion.

At the time, The Observer was told by Foreign Office officials of serious doubts that the war was legal.

When the GCHQ revelations were first published in The Observer last March, the Attorney-General, Lord Goldsmith, had still not publicly announced his final advice to Downing Street.

At the time, it was expected that he would agree with most experts in international law that intervention would be unlawful without a second resolution.

The legality of the war was a highly sensitive issue for senior military officers on the eve of war, who were wary of being accused of war crimes in the aftermath of the conflict.

The former assistant chief of defence staff Sir Timothy Garden said that the legal basis of the war is all the more important now that Britain has signed up to the International Criminal Court.

'We did it on the best advice that was available in a democratic country. But following an order is not an excuse in the end.'

martin.bright@observer.co.uk

Read the memo (pdf) http://image.guardian.co.uk/sys-files/Observer/documents/2004/02/07/memo.pdf

Observer article of March 2003


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: espionage; gchq; katherinegun; leak; memo
Another spy who will probably get a slap on the wrist.
1 posted on 02/08/2004 8:04:00 AM PST by jim35
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To: jim35
What happened to the stories that the French had a conference between Blair and the Italian Prime Minister secretly taped?
2 posted on 02/08/2004 8:10:37 AM PST by xJones
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To: jim35
Good for Britain. Make mine shaken, not stirred.
3 posted on 02/08/2004 8:10:37 AM PST by DeepDish (This space for rent.)
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To: DeepDish
Hehehehe...

I say BULLY for them.

"illegal spying": An Oxymoron, Yes?
4 posted on 02/08/2004 8:12:32 AM PST by Frank_Discussion (May the wings of Liberty never lose a feather!)
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To: Frank_Discussion
-"illegal spying"

...as opposed to "legal spying". What hypocrites, I would like for them to spell out what would be "legal spying"!

5 posted on 02/08/2004 8:27:19 AM PST by The Bronze Titan
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To: Frank_Discussion
All nations do this stuff, its just good business to know your opponents business
6 posted on 02/08/2004 9:15:57 AM PST by mylife
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To: mylife
You're right. Everyone does it.

It's also good business to know your allies' business. Remember Jonathan Pollard?

7 posted on 02/08/2004 9:27:34 AM PST by LurkedLongEnough
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To: jim35
What? The RATS are invading England too? Geez, these votes have always been known ahead of time because they have meetings, phone conversations, and deal making. If there's any spying you can bet it's being done by each and every country at the table. Spies, and bugs, and UNgate, oh my! I was once bumped from my hotel room in Moscow because Kissinger was needing it. We'd been warned not to answer the phone because, get this, the ringing was the ON button for the bug. Sure enough, moments after bringing in our luggage the phone rang - how cheezy.
8 posted on 02/08/2004 9:29:21 AM PST by mtbopfuyn
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To: LurkedLongEnough
It's also good business to know your allies' business. Remember Jonathan Pollard?

That is common practice as well

9 posted on 02/08/2004 9:32:35 AM PST by mylife
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To: jim35
What...Spies at the UN????? It has to be some sort of urban myth.
quick,check urbanmyths.com
10 posted on 02/08/2004 9:38:55 AM PST by HP8753 (My cat doesn't find humor in static electricity.I, on the other hand, find it quite amusing.)
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To: HP8753
"The first evidence has also emerged that China, a perma nentmember of the Security Council, was a likely target of the operation."

What goes around comes around! I'm glad were collecting info on the Chi-coms.
11 posted on 02/08/2004 5:31:44 PM PST by ConservativeMan55 (You...You sit down! You've had your say and now I'll have mine!!!!)
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To: Fedora

An old article with a familiar flavor...

UK’s Katherine Gun... also associated with the VIPS folks.


12 posted on 03/18/2017 10:28:24 PM PDT by piasa
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