AO PAULO — The Brazilian government says U.S. Vice President Joe Biden has telephoned President Dilma Rousseff in an effort to ease tensions created by the disclosure that the United States collected data on billions of telephone and email conversations in Latin America’s biggest nation.
The Brazilian presidency’s website says that Rousseff and Biden spoke for 25 minutes on Friday night.
After the phone conversation, Communications Minister Helena Chagas told reporters that Biden called Rousseff to offer explanations and to “express his regret over the negative repercussions caused by the disclosures.”
Chagas said Rousseff accepted Biden’s invitation to send a delegation to Washington to receive “technical and political details” about the case, but the date and makeup of the delegation had not been decided. State-run Agencia Brasil news agency said the group would be comprised of representatives of the foreign, justice and Defense ministries and would go to Washington in about three weeks.
Rousseff told Biden that she wants the U.S. government to “change its security policies and practices,” the communications minister said. “The president told Biden that the privacy of Brazilian citizens and the country’s sovereignty cannot be infringed in the name of security,” she said.
The O Globo newspaper reported earlier this month that information released by the National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden showed Brazil is the top target in Latin America for the NSA’s massive intelligence-gathering effort aimed at monitoring communications around the world. The Brazilian government is investigating the disclosures and alleged links between Brazilian and U.S. telecommunications firms with a presence in the country.
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