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AFP. 4 March 2003. US refuses to comment on report of 'dirty tricks' to
win UN vote on Iraq.

WASHINGTON -- The United States steadfastly refused to comment Monday on
a report it is waging a secret "dirty tricks" campaign against UN
Security Council members to win votes for a resolution opening the way
for war against Iraq.

Neither the White House nor the State Department would be drawn into
making any statement on the report in London's Observer newspaper that
said it had obtained a document detailing US surveillance of the home
and office telephones and e-mails of UN delegates.

"The administration never comments on anything involving any people
involved in intelligence," White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said.
"The administration does not answer questions of that nature."

At the State Department, spokesman Richard Boucher repeatedly declined
to respond to questions about the report and stayed mum even when asked
if he could deny it.

"It doesn't matter what the paper is or whether it's true or not, I
wouldn't have any comment on that kind of allegation," he told
reporters.

"I would not have any comment whatsoever on that kind of question or
allegation because we never comment on intelligence matters, and I'm not
going to do it now," Boucher said.

The paper said the disclosures were made in a memorandum written by a
top official at the National Security Agency (NSA), the US body which
intercepts communications around the world, and circulated to senior
agents in his organization and to a friendly foreign intelligence
agency.

The memo describes orders to staff at the agency to step up surveillance
"particularly directed at ... UN Security Council members" to provide
up-to-the-minute intelligence on the voting intentions of UN members
regarding the issue of Iraq, according to the Observer.

The leaked memorandum, dated January 31, makes clear that the target of
the heightened surveillance efforts are the delegations from Angola,
Cameroon, Chile, Mexico, Guinea and Pakistan at the UN headquarters in
New York, it said.

Chile's foreign minister Soledad Alvear ordered Chile's embassy in
London to look into The Observer's claims after meeting with Chile's UN
Ambassador Juan Gabriel Valdes and Chilean President Ricardo Lagos.

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ProletarianNews
http://www.utopia2000.org

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