Patrick Gower interviews The Intercept's Ryan Gallagher
Patrick Gower interviews The Intercept's Ryan
Gallagher Headlines: Gallagher says it’s “very
dubious” whether it’s lawful for GCSB to be sweeping up
information on New Zealanders as it spies in the
Pacific. He says politicians “play the terrorism
card” when “that’s not at all borne out in these
documents, and what you in fact see is that they’re doing
a lot of spying just for political reasons, to do political
espionage, to gather economic intelligence” Says
it’s not about China, but New Zealand spying on our
“area of responsibility” so Five Eyes has global
coverage Gallagher states New Zealand’s Pacific
spying is a “dragnet operation”. “You have to
understand that what you’re actually doing here is
sweeping up data across the region indiscriminately.
They’re not going after particular individuals.” Says it’s difficult to protect your privacy online
now, but privacy is not dead
Patrick
Gower: Good morning, Ryan.
Ryan Gallagher:
Good morning. Thanks for having me on.
Yes.
Thank you for coming. I want to start with the most crucial
question in all of this spying on our friends. I want to
look at the legality of it, because it is illegal for the
GCSB to spy on New Zealanders. To your mind, if it is
effectively vacuuming up the information of New Zealanders
in the Pacific on holiday for work, whatever, are the GCSB
breaking the law by doing that, Ryan?
Well,
I mean, I’m not a lawyer, but certainly people that
we’ve spoken to— And I know that some prominent
politicians in New Zealand are right now questioning, you
know, whether this is illegal, and certainly we know that
this kind of capability is going to be, by definition,
sweeping in information on New Zealanders. So, you know, I
would think this certainly is very dubious at the very least
whether this is actually lawful or not.
Yeah,
so for someone who is on holiday in the Pacific and may have
been using their phone or whatever up there, they could well
have been spied on, to your mind, having looked at these
documents?
Well, absolutely, yeah. I think
that that’s quite clear from the— You have to understand
that what you’re actually doing here is sweeping up data
across the region indiscriminately. They’re not going
after particular individuals. It’s grabbing what they can.
And so when you do that, by extension you are going to
automatically be sweeping in information on anyone, and that
includes New Zealanders. And we’ve also heard from, you
know, Edward Snowden himself on this issue, who said that
while he was actually at the US National Security Agency, he
saw data on New Zealand citizens in these mass surveillance
systems, getting swept up from bases in New Zealand. So
that’s what we’ve been trying to shine a light on this
week.
So there may be some legal issues, but
is there a moral issue here as well, to your mind, in terms
of this mass surveillance up there?
Well,
yeah. I mean, I think, again, this is one of the core issues
at stake here, and we’ve seen going back, you know, some
18 months with the Snowden revelations that lots of
countries round the world, citizens are very up in arms
about what’s being done for the moral reasons that they
believe it has gone too far. Again, what we’re not talking
about is just individual surveillance of bad people, of
politicians or even just, you know, ordinary political
espionage. This is a kind of bulk surveillance of ordinary
citizens, and clearly that does raise a lot of moral and
ethical issues that people are not too happy
about.
So, when you’re online, is everything
available to governments now? Is privacy dead online,
Ryan?
I don’t think privacy’s dead. I
mean… I think that’s a bad way to think about it.
Certainly, online it’s very difficult to preserve one’s
privacy when these mass surveillance programmes are going
on, as we’ve seen. But there are ways that people can
protect their privacy. You can use encryption and methods to
protect your emails and phone calls. So it isn’t something
that we just have to accept – you know, that privacy’s
dead. It’s far from it. But certainly it’s difficult to
protect your privacy in this environment, and that’s why I
think it’s important that these revelations come out, so
people can see what the government’s doing in the first
place and then can respond to that, you know, whether it’s
by using encryption or by encouraging reforms to change
what’s happening. So I wouldn’t say privacy’s
dead.
Ok. I want to look at the reasons for
this spying on our friends. I want to look at the reasons
for New Zealand spying on the Pacific. And one thing we do
know is that the United States is very worried about the
growing power and influence of China in the Pacific.
That’s what this is all about, isn’t it? It’s about
New Zealand spying, in some senses, on what China is doing
up in the Pacific, Ryan?
Well, actually, I
think that’s kind of misunderstanding what’s happening
here. This isn’t just about China at all, and if it were
just about that, it probably wouldn’t be as controversial
a topic. What’s going on here is, you know, the agency,
the GCSB, has been designated what they call an ‘area of
responsibility’ within the secret Five Eyes surveillance
alliance, which includes New Zealand as well as Canada and
Australia, the US. And, you know, the point is that what
they’re doing in this alliance is they’ve been
designated an area to spy on across that region – not just
China; it’s across the region. And this is part of, you
know— The aim being to maintain coverage globally in terms
of surveillance.
Yeah, sure. So you don’t
think there’s an issue there with New Zealand essentially
siding with America and keeping an eye on China? You don’t
think that is the reason for us completely upping the ante
and sucking up all that information out of the
Pacific?
Pardon? Sorry. You just broke off
there.
Yeah, I was just asking, do you think
that’s—? You don’t think the influence of China is the
reason for New Zealand doing this up in the
Pacific?
Well, I can’t speak to what the
motivations of what the agency is for doing what it’s
doing. I mean, what I can see from the documents that
we’ve reported on is that they are doing a dragnet
operation across the region, and the aim of that is about
maintaining this global surveillance capability to be
included in this Five Eyes club.
And, Ryan,
looking at that dragnet, what are the reasons for that? Is
it just security or are there other reasons for it? For
instance, is it for commercial reasons? Is it for economic
reasons? Is it for diplomatic reasons? Is it for more than
security?
Well, it’s definitely for more
than security. I mean, the government often likes to come
out when these stories are revealed, and they, you know,
play the terrorism card and say that it’s all about some
kind of apocalyptic threat that’s on the horizon. But
actually, you know, that’s not at all borne out in these
documents, and what you in fact see is that they’re doing
a lot of spying just for political reasons, to do political
espionage, to gather economic intelligence on what other
countries are doing. But again, also coming back to—
It’s about this Five Eyes alliance, and it’s about
maintaining a capability that is global in scope, to be able
to spy on any country at any time, you know, to maintain a
sort of— I suppose it’s a kind of power stranglehold on
world affairs, you know, to be able to maintain that
capability.
In previous Snowden leaks, we’ve
seen evidence that the United States has spied on leaders of
other countries. Will we see that in these coming documents
that you have seen? Has New Zealand been involved in direct
spying on other leaders?
Well, you know,
I’m not going to be revealing what we’re going to
report, but we have a lot of great stories in the pipeline,
and, you know, we’re going to be bringing those out in the
coming days with the New Zealand Herald and also with the
Sunday Star Times. I mean, but I’m not going to talk about
what we are going to report. We’re still working on a lot
of stuff. We’re still finalising the details. We’re
still looking through a lot of documents. And you know what,
I think the people are going to be surprised by some of the
stuff we still have coming.
Thank you very
much, Ryan.
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