Cabinet was told nothing about GCHQ spying programmes, says Chris Huhne (Guardian)
"I was also on the national security council, attended by ministers and the heads of the Secret [Intelligence Service, MI6] and Security Service [MI5], GCHQ and the military. If anyone should have been briefed on Prism and Tempora, it should have been the NSC.
"I do not know whether the prime minister or the foreign secretary (who has oversight of GCHQ) were briefed, but the NSC was not. This lack of information, and therefore accountability, is a warning that the supervision of our intelligence services needs as much updating as their bugging techniques."
Huhne said Prism and Tempora "put in the shade Tony Blair's proposed ID cards, 90-day detention without trial and the abolition of jury trials".
He added: "Throughout my time in parliament, the Home Office was trying to persuade politicians to invest in 'upgrading' Britain's capability to recover data showing who is emailing and phoning whom. Yet this seems to be exactly what GCHQ was already doing. Was the Home Office trying to mislead?
From the
Guardian, on sunday. Everybody remembers what Prism is, but
here's a reminder about Tempora. Direct access to & tapping of telco backbone cables where they come on shore in the UK. Anyone remember the name of the similar US program?
I don't know what I find more ominous - the GCHQ conducting dragnet spying
without the UK government appropriately in the know, or the US government
being in the know and condoning it.