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November 6, 2013

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Kerry says US will get surveillance ‘right’

US Secretary of State John Kerry is vowing that a review into NSA surveillance activities will ultimately result in the “right” balance between security and privacy and says outrage over alleged espionage and eavesdropping should not disrupt key trade talks between Europe and the United States.

Speaking in Warsaw after talks with Poland’s foreign minister, Kerry said yesterday that Europeans and others have legitimate questions about the surveillance and that those would be answered in private diplomatic discussions.

“We need to understand that we are all in this together,” Kerry said. “We are all in the effort to be able to provide protection to our citizens. And we have to strike the right balance between protecting our citizens and obviously the privacy of all our citizens. That is a balance that we do try to strike.”

Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said he had spoken with Kerry and “we have agreed on closer cooperation between our services on combatting common threats.”

Kerry said President Barack Obama had ordered a complete review of NSA’s activities.

But he said it was important that concerns over NSA and other activities did not affect discussions about the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership. Some European officials have said the surveillance issue may have a negative impact on the negotiations.

The European Commission said on Monday that the talks will go ahead and that next week’s round in Brussels is set to focus on services, investment, energy and regulatory issues.

A broad EU-US trade deal could provide a boost to growth and jobs on both sides of the Atlantic by eliminating tariffs and regulatory barriers that are hampering business. The trade volume in goods and services between the two economies, representing almost half of global output, totaled US$1.08 trillion last year.

But trade discussions are taking place under a cloud following revelations over the NSA’s alleged spying activities including eavesdropping on German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s phone. Some top European lawmakers have called for the talks to be suspended.

Kerry said it was important to keep the trade talks separate from “legitimate questions” about NSA and other activities.

“This is about jobs, it’s about the economy, it is about economic competition in a global community that competes, sometimes by rules that are very questionable and shaky,” Kerry said.

Kerry emphasized the US understood its allies’ concerns.

“We want to hear from our allies, we want to have this conversation,” Kerry said.

 




 

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