





The leak of a trove of highly sensitive Pentagon documents online weeks ago exposes U.S. spy activities on its allies and foes.
It also highlights the country's hegemonic mindset in cyber security, going against the Clean Network initiative that is the U.S. State Department's approach to safeguarding the nation's assets, including citizens' privacy and companies' most sensitive information.
The leaked Pentagon documents have opened a unique and rare window into the inner workings of American espionage.
The information reveals where the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has recruited agents privy to the closed-door conversations of world leaders, as well as what types of satellite imagery the U.S. uses to track Russian forces, including a rare advanced technology that has never been publicly identified, said The Washington Post.
The UN expressed concern to the U.S. that communication between the Secretary General and other senior UN officials have been on the subject of surveillance and interference by the U.S. government. "Such actions," said UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric, "are inconsistent with the [U.S.] obligations enumerated in the UN charter and the Convention on the Privileges and Immunities of the United Nations."
The documents that Edward Snowden leaked in 2013 revealed that a new age of spying had begun post September 2001.
Driven by fears of foreign terrorism and empowered by technological advances, the U.S. created a sophisticated network of global surveillance that was scooping up vast amounts of data from millions of emails and phone calls around the world, according to The New York Times.
Based on global cybersecurity communities' analysis, a report released in April by China Cybersecurity Industry Alliance has illustrated cyber-attacks, surveillance and secret thefts carried out by the CIA.