White House unhappy with Cuban Eavesdropping on US Telephone conversations
Washington DC, Today the white house released evidence that the Cuban government has been eavesdropping on American telephone conversations placed both a the Guantanamo Bay naval base in Cuba as well as of domestic phone calls in the southern united states.
At a white house news conference today held by president Bush and CIA director Porter J. Goss, the Bush administration showed their evidence of this spying and denounced this as a grave invasion of privacy and violation of U.S. laws that prohibit eavesdropping on private telephone conversations with out governmental consent.
The evidence presented, shown in this photograph taken out side of Havana Cuba, shows a Cuban intelligence eavesdropping center equipped with technology sufficient to listen in on phone calls made as far north as central Florida in the southern United States.
CIA director Porter J. Goss said that it was not clear why the Cuban government would want to eavesdrop on American telephone conversations, but speculated that this might be another example of the Al Qaeda terrorist network having established allegiances with foreign governments.
President Bush said that if we where not already there we would invade Cuba to curb such spying tactics and further win the war on terrorism.
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