|
"美, 김성한 기밀대화도 엿들었다"...동맹국 무차별 도청 파장
8일(현지시간) 미 뉴욕타임스(NYT)는 우크라이나 전쟁은 물론 중국 등 민감한 지역과 관련한 정보가 담긴 기밀문건이 온라인에 퍼져 미 당국이 조사에 나섰다며, 이로 인해 미 정부가 러시아뿐 아니라 동맹국들에 대해서도 감청을 했단 사실이 드러나 파장이 일고 있다고 보도했다. 그러면서 한국과 관련된 문건을 비중있게 다뤘다.
야단났다 . 곧 무슨 난리가 날 거 같다.
나는 평소에
전화질을 한다거나, 이메일을 주고 받으면서 그 내용이 감청(도청)되고 있으리라 생각하면서도 무감각하다.
그 내용이 아무런 정보의 가치가 없으니 세상, 특히 '5Eyes'가 신경도 쓰지 않을 것이라 ...
암호화된 이메일이나 정보마저도 비밀이 보장될 것이라 믿지도 아니한다.
이런 사실은 전혀 놀랄 일도 아닌 것이 이미 아는 사람은 다 안다.
모르는 사람은 물론 모르고...ㅋ
주요 인사들의 일거수 일투족 눈에 보이지 않는 감시망이 따라다니지 않을 거 같은가???
김정은이나 푸틴등의 24시간은 훤히 들여다 보아지고 있을 것이고....
이런 문제로 ㅎ~
도청당한 독일의 메르켈은 입도 벙끗 하지 않았다.
김성한 쯤 가지고....
파장은 무슨 ㅎ~
맨날 방구석에 들어앉아서
진보좌파니 자유우파니....
좌파는 왼손만 사용하는가?
우물안에 너무 오래 있을 일은 아니다.ㅋ
.
********************************************************************************************************************************
출처 <위키 백과>
파이브 아이즈는 1956년 결성된 영어권 5개국 기밀정보 동맹체로서 상호 첩보 동맹을 맺고 있는 미국, 영국, 오스트레일리아, 뉴질랜드, 캐나다 등 5개국을 이르는 말이다. 이들 국가는 모두 영미법을 따르기 때문에 법률상 공조가 용이하며, 신호 정보체계에 관한 상호협조 조약인 UKUSA 안보협정 조인국이다.
파이브 아이즈(영어: Five Eyes; FVEY) 또는 5개의 눈은 상호 첩보 동맹을 맺고 있는 영국, 미국, 캐나다, 오스트레일리아, 뉴질랜드 5개국을 이르는 말이다. 이들 국가는 모두 영국, 미국 법률인 영미법을 따르기 때문에 법률상 공조가 용이하며, 신호 정보에 관한 상호 협조 조약인 UKUSA 협정 조인국이다.
파이브 아이즈의 기원은 제2차 세계 대전 종전 직후부터 서방 연합국이 전후 세계의 밑그림을 그리기 위해 대서양 헌장을 발표한 것까지 거슬러 올라갈 수 있다. 냉전을 거치면서 소련과 동구권의 통신을 도감청하기 위한 목적으로 파이브 아이즈 5개국이 에셜론을 개발했고, 이때 개발된 장비와 기술들은 오늘날까지 계속 사용되며 전세계의 사적 통신망 수십억 개를 감시하고 있다.
1990년대 말, 에셜론의 존재가 대중에 알려지게 되었고, 이는 유럽 의회에서 주요한 쟁점으로 부각되었다. 한편 미국 의회에서는 유럽보다 관심의 정도가 덜했다. 2001년 이래로 테러와의 전쟁이 계속됨에 따라 파이브 아이즈는 대중감시 능력을 더욱 강화시켰으며, 특히 월드와이드웹의 감시에 집중하고 있다.
NSA 요원 출신의 내부고발자 에드워드 스노든은 파이브 아이즈를 "각 국가의 양지의 법률에 일절 응답하지 않는 초국가적 첩보조직"이라고 묘사했다. 2013년 스노든이 유출시킨 문서들에 따르면 파이브 아이즈는 서로 상대방 국가의 국민을 감시하고 그렇게 수집한 정보를 공유하는 식으로 움직였는데, 국민에 대한 감시에 부정적인 현지 헌법들을 회피하기 위한 목적이었다.
스노든의 폭로에도 불구하고 전문가들은 국제 사회가 이 건에 관하여 무슨 관심을 갖거나 또는 어떠한 분노를 표출한들 유의미한 영향은 끼치지 못할 것이며, 파이브 아이즈 당사국 5국의 상호 관계는 굳건할 것이라고 전망한다. 공교롭게도 대중 감시에 관한 소설 《1984년》의 배경이 되는 국가 "오세아니아"의 작중 영역과 얼추 일치한다.
2021년 9월 1일(현지시간) 미국 하원 군사위원회가 파이브 아이즈에 한국, 인도, 독일, 일본을 추가하는 국방수권법을 통과시켰다.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Five Eyes
Working language English | |
Type Intelligence alliance | |
Contributors | |
Establishment | |
• Atlantic Charte 14 August 1941 | |
• BRUSA Agreement 17 May 1943 |
NSA Headquarters, Fort Meade, Maryland, United States
ASIO central office, Canberra, Australia
GCHQ, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, United Kingdom
CSE Headquarters, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
NZSIS Headquarters, Wellington, New Zealand
The Five Eyes (FVEY) is an intelligence alliance comprising Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States. These countries are parties to the multilateral UKUSA Agreement, a treaty for joint cooperation in signals intelligence. Informally, Five Eyes can also refer to the group of intelligence agencies of these countries.
The origins of the FVEY can be traced to informal secret meetings during World War II between British and American code-breakers, which started before the U.S. formally entered the war, followed by the Allies' 1941 Atlantic Charter that established their vision of the post-war world. Canadian academic Srdjan Vucetic argues the alliance emerged from Winston Churchill's Iron Curtain speech in 1946, which warned of open conflict with the Soviet bloc unless the English-speaking democracies learned to cooperate:
"Neither the sure prevention of war, nor the continuous rise of world organisation will be gained without what I have called the fraternal association of the English-speaking peoples. This means a special relationship between the British Commonwealth and Empire and the United States... the continuance of the intimate relationship between our military advisers, leading to common study of potential dangers..."
As the Cold War deepened, the intelligence sharing arrangement became formalised under the ECHELON surveillance system in the 1960s. This was initially developed by the FVEY to monitor the communications of the former Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc, although it is now used to monitor communications worldwide.
In the late 1990s, the existence of ECHELON was disclosed to the public, triggering a major debate in the European Parliament and, to a lesser extent, the United States Congress. The FVEY further expanded their surveillance capabilities during the course of the "war on terror", with much emphasis placed on monitoring the World Wide Web.
Former NSA contractor Edward Snowden described the Five Eyes as a "supra-national intelligence organisation that does not answer to the known laws of its own countries". Documents leaked by Snowden in 2013 revealed that the FVEY has been spying on one another's citizens and sharing the collected information with each other, although the FVEY nations maintain that this was done legally. It has been claimed that FVEY nations have been sharing intelligence in order to circumvent domestic laws, but only one court case in Canada has found any FVEY nation breaking domestic laws when sharing intelligence with a FVEYs partner.
In spite of continued controversy over its methods, the Five Eyes relationship remains one of the most comprehensive known espionage alliances in human history.
Since processed intelligence is gathered from multiple sources, the intelligence shared is not restricted to signals intelligence (SIGINT) and often involves defence intelligence as well as human intelligence (HUMINT) and geospatial intelligence (GEOINT).
Five Eyes
The Five Eyes (FVEY) is an intelligence alliance
comprising Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
Canada and the Five Eyes Intelligence Community
RAF Menwith Hill, a large site in the United Kingdom, part of ECHELON and the UKUSA Agreement, 2005
The domes covering satellite dishes at Waihopai Station in New Zealand, a part of a network of facilities used by the Five Eyes intelligence alliance, made up of agencies in the US, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.
'Five Eyes' spy network
The Five Eyes (FVEY) is an intelligence alliance comprising Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States. These countries are parties to the multilateral UKUSA Agreement, a treaty for joint cooperation in signals intelligence.
The origins of the FVEY can be traced back to informal secret meetings during World War II between British and US code-breakers that started before the US entry into the war, followed by the Atlantic Charter agreed by the Allies to lay out their goals for a post-war world. Canadian academic Srdjan Vucetic argues that the alliance emerged from Winston Churchill's Iron Curtain speech, given at Westminster College, Missouri, in 1946, in particular Churchill's belief the conflict with the Soviet sphere of influence would become a hot war unless the English-speaking democracies learned to cooperate:
The Five Eyes nations say they may force tech firms to allow them access to encrypted communications and information.
If you've ever sent someone encrypted messages that you didn't want anyone else to read,
listen up: Five Eyes wants to be able to access encrypted emails, text messages and voice communications.
The Five Eyes intelligence network has warned tech companies they'll be demanding "lawful access" to all encrypted communications. If they don't play ball, the network may consider "other measures".
An exclusive club: The 5 countries that don’t spy on each other
World Oct 25, 2013 5:45 PM EDT
It was born out of American and British intelligence collaboration in World War II, a long-private club nicknamed the “Five Eyes.” The members are five English-speaking countries who share virtually all intelligence — and pledge not to practice their craft on one another. A former top U.S. counter-terrorism official called it “the inner circle of our very closest allies, who don’t need to spy on each other.”
This is the club that German chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande say they want to join — or at least, win a similar “no-spying” pact with the U.S. themselves.
It all began with a secret 7-page agreement struck in 1946 between the U.S. and the U.K., the “British-US Communication Agreement,” later renamed UKUSA. At first their focus was the Soviet Union and its Eastern European satellites. But after Canada joined in 1948, and Australia and New Zealand in 1956, the “Five Eyes” was born, and it had global reach. They pledged to share intelligence — especially the results of electronic surveillance of communications — and not to conduct such surveillance on each other. Whiffs of the club’s existence appeared occasionally in the press, but it wasn’t officially acknowledged and declassified until 2010, when Britain’s General Communications Headquarters, or GCHQ, released some of the founding documents. The benefits of membership are immense, say intelligence experts. While the U.S. has worldwide satellite surveillance abilities, the club benefits from each member’s regional specialty, like Australia and New Zealand’s in the Far East. “We practice intelligence burden sharing,” said one former U.S. official. “We can say, ‘that’s hard for us cover, so can you?'” The ease and rapidity of information-sharing among the five “makes it quicker to connect the dots,” said another intelligence veteran. “You can’t underestimate the importance of the common language, legal system and culture,” said another. “Above all, there is total trust.”
That trust extends to not tapping the phones of one another’s leaders and officials. That’s rooted in the belief that when their leaders talk to one another, they do so in full candor. “There is very little we need to know about these countries and their leadership’s views that the leaders wouldn’t tell us themselves, with all honesty,” said a retired official familiar with the program.
A murkier question is whether they’ve also agreed never to spy on each other’s citizens. U.S. officials say that’s part of the deal. Yet there have been reports in the British press — amplified most recently by former NSA contractor and leaker Edward Snowden — that that’s not the case, that the Five Eyes spy on one another’s citizens and share the information to get around laws preventing agencies from spying on their own citizens. Former CIA deputy director John McLaughlin insisted to me that this isn’t so. “I’ve never heard of that,” he said. “You would think I would know if that were the case.”
But can we say for sure that unlike Merkel, British Prime Minister David Cameron doesn’t have to worry that his cell phone is bugged?
Said a longtime spymaster, “Not by us.”
By —
PBS NewsHour
|