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DATE=3/30/2000 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=EUROPE SPY (L ONLY) NUMBER=2-260767 BYLINE=RON PEMSTEIN DATELINE=BRUSSELS CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: The European parliament plans to vote next month on a resolution condemning the U-S-led Echelon spy network for industrial espionage against European businesses. Correspondent Ron Pemstein reports from Brussels. TEXT: Echelon was set up in 1971 as an electronic monitoring system during the Cold War. European-Union member Britain helps operate the system, along with listening posts in Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. A British news report says the system led by the U-S National Security Agency has engaged in industrial espionage against European businesses. Green Party members of the European Parliament demanded a committee of inquiry look into the charges. They cite reports Echelon is capable of intercepting phone calls, electronic mail, and fax messages. They also say information gathered on Echelon helped the United States beat the European Airbus Consortium in selling aircraft to Saudi Arabia in 1994. The European Commission has a problem in investigating these damages. Commission spokesman Jonathan Faull explains that no European business has complained about damages from spying. /// FAULL ACT ONE /// Nobody has come forward, and we should certainly be interested in talking to people who want to come forward, but nobody has done so. /// END ACT /// Another problem is that Britain is a member of the European Union. In a letter released by the Commission, the British government cities 1985 legislation that authorizes interception of communications in cases involving - safeguarding the nation's economic well-being. The Commission also has a letter from the State Department stating that - the U-S intelligence community is not engaged in industrial espionage. The letter also says the U-S government does not collect information for the benefit of private firms. The European Commission has been aggravated by interviews given by the former director of the U-S Central Intelligence Agency, James Woolsey. He has justified industrial espionage by the United States on the basis of the use of bribery by European companies. Commission spokesman Faull expresses outrage about the justification, while not denying bribery is sometimes used to make a sale. /// FAULL ACT TWO /// I do not deny that cases of bribery arise in all sorts of countries by the way, not only in Europe, from time to time, I am not that naive. What I am saying is outrageous is - the suggestion is that espionage could be justified in order to redress some apparent imbalance caused by the fact that European companies are considered to bribe more than American companies. /// END ACT /// In the European Parliament's debate, Portuguese Interior Minister Fernando Gomes says the E-U justice ministers will discuss the Echelon system in their next meeting at the end of April. He says the European Union cannot accept the existence of such a system that violates data privacy. But he also says there is no evidence that companies ever benefited from communications interception or have been damaged by it. (SIGNED) NEB/RDP/JWH/RAE 30-Mar-2000 10:10 AM EDT (30-Mar-2000 1510 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .