Report: NSA Authorized to Spy on 193 Countries
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court allowed information to be intercepted in all but 4 of the world's countries, according to a new report
The National Security Agency exempted four countries from its list of places where it could rightfully intercept information, leaving the worlds 193 other countries open to surveillance, according to a new set of top secret documents leaked by Edward Snowden.
Four countries that had signed a no-spying agreement with the U.S. Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand were declared off-limits by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, the Washington Post reports, but the court approved a list of 193 countries where the NSA could legally conduct surveillance.
The list also authorized spying on 20 organizations not substantially composed of United States persons, including the United Nations, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the European Union.
http://time.com/2945037/nsa-surveillance-193-countries/