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Israel plays down report that US spied on Netanyahu

'I didn't fall off my chair from The Wall Street Journal report,' Energy Minster Yuval Steinitz says
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was a key opponent to the Iran nuclear talks (AFP)
By AFP

An Israeli minister and close ally of Benjamin Netanyahu has sought to play down revelations the US monitored the Israeli prime minister's private communications.

"I didn't fall off my chair from The Wall Street Journal report," Yuval Steinitz, minister of energy and a former intelligence minister, said on public radio on Wednesday.

The WSJ said on Tuesday that the US National Security Agency monitored Netanyahu's conversations as he campaigned against the nuclear deal with Iran that was eventually agreed in July.

In March, Israel denied reports in the newspaper that its security forces spied on the negotiations between Tehran and major powers.

"Israel does not spy on or in the United States; we adhere to that rule, and one could expect others to do the same," said Steinitz, who was in charge of the Iranian file while intelligence minister between 2013 and 2015. 

"But we are not naive. We know that countries - even friendly ones -  try to collect intelligence on us, and we conduct ourselves accordingly," he said.

Steinitz did not mention the case of American Jonathan Pollard, whom US authorities freed in November after he had spent 30 years in jail for spying for Israel. 

He reaffirmed the friendship between Israel and the United States, "our greatest and most important friend", and stressed the two countries' "excellent co-operation" on intelligence matters.

"I don't think it caused us damage," he said of the WSJ report.

Netanyahu's office, as well as the spokesman of the foreign ministry, declined to comment on the report.

The White House has not denied the Tuesday report but emphasised the depth of its relationship with Israel. 

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