



In the case of Germany, France, and others, they are both partners and targets and leaders like German Chancellor Angela Merkel is well aware that the German intelligence agencies assist NSA in spying on Germans and others in the same manner as the UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, the so-called "Five Eyes [FVEY]" English-speaking club of signals intelligence partners.



The second declassified document, a formerly



In its later article, The Guardian put it in the following way, this time without naming the source:

On June 30, The Guardian published an additional story referring to the declassified NSA and other intelligence documents I sent them about Third Parties and the code names used to exchange signals intelligence with Third and Fourth Parties. The declassified formerly Top Secret-S-CCO document is titled "Third Party Nations: Partners and Targets." In the case of Germany, France, and others, they are both partners and targets and leaders like German Chancellor Angela Merkel is well aware that the German intelligence agencies assist NSA in spying on Germans and others in the same manner as the UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, the so-called "Five Eyes [FVEY]" English-speaking club of signals intelligence partners.The second declassified document, a formerly Top Secret National Reconnaissance Office declassification guideline , refers to Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) Exchange descriptors. I explained to The Observer that code words found on Page 9 of the document like DIKTER and SETTEE, stood for Third Party SIGINT exchanges with Norway and the Republic of Korea, respectively. I also impressed on The Observer that these agreements, like the Second Party arrangements, are truly one-way streets, whereby NSA grabs all of the SIGINT from partner countries with the partners, especially the Third and Fourth Parties -- the latter include China, Sweden, Finland, Austria, and Switzerland -- receiving relatively little in return.In its later article, The Guardian put it in the following way, this time without naming the source:

"Meanwhile, it has emerged that at least six European member states have shared personal communications data with the NSA, according to declassified US intelligence reports and EU parliamentary documents.

The documents, seen by the Observer, show that – in addition to the UK – Denmark, the Netherlands, France, Germany, Spain, and Italy have all had formal agreements to provide communications data to the US. They state that the EU countries have had "second and third party status" under decades-old signal intelligence (Sigint) agreements that compel them to hand over data which, in later years, experts believe, has come to include mobile phone and internet data.

Under the international intelligence agreements, nations are categorised by the US according to their trust level. The US is defined as 'first party' while the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand enjoy 'second party' trusted relationships. Countries such as Germany and France have 'third party', or less trusted, relationships."



None of the campaign at character assassination comes as a surprise. Ever since Snowden's revelations to Greenwald, both have come under incessant attack from the "sock puppet" army crafted by President Obama's former "information policy czar" cass Sunstein, whose wife, Samantha Power, is due to replace Susan Rice as UN ambassador.



Sunstein's machinations are nothing new. They merely build upon the methods of Nazi propaganda chief Joseph Goebbels to adapt to new media technology.



One thing that is certain after four and a half years of the Obama administration. The president's team of propagandists, is, indeed, the gang that can't shoot straight.



The pressure exerted on The Observer and The Guardian to pull its stories quoting me backfired badly. The Observer's first print edition hit the news stands and for some, it became an instant collector's item.

















Before and after (The Observer before spiking and after)



But lo and behold, there is yet a third edition of The Observer, with Mick Jagger and the NSA spying story both on the front page!







Die Welt of Germany also took down their own story but after a few days restored it in its original:



The .pdf of the story in Die Welt.



Snide articles by columnists in Forbes and The Daily Telegraph only brought unwanted attention to WMR's past stories, including Obama and his Chicago bath house forays (during a time after Obama lectured anti-gay African leaders on gay rights), the Tsarnaev family having CIA links, and Obama's history with the CIA (There's an old saying that there is no such thing as bad publicity, just publicity -- so I even have to thank the "Daily Torygraph" for helping to increase sales of The Manufacturing of a President; I owe you a pint on Fleet Street chaps). By the way, some of the comments below The Telegraph story are interesting to say the least, for example:



From outofEUnow:







From Tom_mcewen:



I am interested in the word ''Fruitloop''. As far as I know every person who ever changed the world can claim the title ''Fruitloop'' from someone. Some won, and some were pulled to pieces by the mob.

"Fruitloop'' comes in two favors as I see it, one is a ''Politically Correct Fruitloop and an Unpolitically Correct Fruitloop.

This guy is part of the branch called Unpolitically Correct. Is he right? Who will ever know, he is damned automatically.

Who needs free speech or a free press when you have a word like ''Fruitloop''. Who can argue with that.





From selfevidenttruth:







Nice hit piece on truth speaking alternative media. Wayne Madsen has told the truth and will be attacked by the Zionist controlled media, the same controllers who run the US and UK governments.







From richard_de_lacy:







A slight correction, Damian: the Guardian pulled the story because it was embarrassing, not because it was untrue. The Guardian is happy to print stories which are merely demonstrably untrue but politically-correct.







Voice of Russia (with interview with Wayne Madsen)



Hindu Business Line (India)

------------



The Examiner reported that the entire episode was a case of censorship.



Had the neocon sock puppets not launched their campaign of defamation, the story about EU nations helping NSA spy would have added to the NSA news peg and in a few days died out. However, by attacking this editor, people all over the world are talking about Obama's homosexuality, CIA links, the Tsarnaev false flag, and the list goes on. Neocons are radical fascists and they seldom think before they leap. That is why there is still some hope that these creatures will one day shout themselves into oblivion. ------------Had the neocon sock puppets not launched their campaign of defamation, the story about EU nations helping NSA spy would have added to the NSA news peg and in a few days died out. However, by attacking this editor, people all over the world are talking about Obama's homosexuality, CIA links, the Tsarnaev false flag, and the list goes on. Neocons are radical fascists and they seldom think before they leap. That is why there is still some hope that these creatures will one day shout themselves into oblivion.

And as can be seen above, the legitimate media outlets, not obscure blogs funded by Soros and the neocons, outnumbered those that believed the NSA story was more important than attacking Wayne Madsen. In two words, the neocon attack machine's results: EPIC FAIL.





