sábado, 26 de octubre de 2013

21 NATIONS LINE UP BEHIND UN EFFORT TO STOP NSA



 21 NATIONS LINE UP BEHIND UN EFFORT TO STOP NSA






Foreign Policy reports that 21 nations have joined the push for the adoption of a United Nations General Resolution protecting internet privacy against NSA spying.

They include the following nations:  Argentina, Austria, Brazil, Bolivia, Ecuador, France, Germany, Guyana, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Liechtenstein, Mexico, Norway, Paraguay, South Africa, Sweden, Switzerland, and Uruguay.

Those names don’t mean too much in a vacuum … so let’s look at the size of their economies (using International Monetary Fund figures for 2012):

COUNTRY
RANK (WORLD’S BIGGEST ECONOMIES)
GDP ($USD IN MILLIONS)
Germany
4th
3,429,519
France
5th
2,613,936
Brazil
7th
2,253,090
India
10th
1,841,717
Mexico
14th
1,177,398
Indonesia
16th
878,536
Switzerland
20th
631,183
Sweden
22nd
523,804
Norway
23rd
499,633
Argentina
26th
475,211
Austria
28th
394,868
South Africa
29th
384,315
Venezuela
31st
381,286
Hungary
58th
125,660
Ecuador
63rd
84,040
Cuba
70th
60,806
Uruguay
77th
49,920
Bolivia
93rd
27,232
Paraguay
95th
26,073
Liechtenstein
149th
5,113
Guyana
157th
2,828
TOTAL: $15,866,168 (remember: all figures in this post are in millions.)

In comparison, the U.S. – the world’s largest economy – has a GDP of $16,244,575 … larger than the 21 countries.

But we can’t look at this fight in a vacuum … the rest of the “Five Eyes” of allied spies – Canada, Britain, Australia, and New Zealand – are backing the U.S.  As is Israel (and see this).

So let’s add them to the U.S. side of the ledger:

COUNTRY
RANK
GDP
U.S.
1st
16,244,575
United Kingdom
6th
2,476,665
Canada
11th
1,821,445
Australia
12th
1,541,700
Israel
39th
257,480
New Zealand
55th
169,831
TOTAL: $22,511,696

But China and Russia hate NSA spying so much that they have joined the  new BRICS consortium – along with India, Brazil and South Africa – which is building its own Internet infrastructure to avoid NSA spying.

So let’s add them to the total opposing NSA spying:

COUNTRY
RANK
GDP
21 Countries

15,866,168
China
2nd
8,221,015
Russia
8th
2,029,813
TOTAL: $26,116,996

The bottom line is that there is currently more money aligned against U.S. spying than for it.

Notes: The above analysis is admittedly over-simplified.  But it still shows the general shift of economic power away from American spy imperialism.

For example, concentration of economic power is important.  The U.S. – as the world’s largest economy – would presumably have more power than several nations whose GDP cumulatively equals the U.S.

Japan – the world’s 3rd largest economy – has been a close ally of the U.S. for some time.   Japan hasn’t weighed in on the spying issue, but if we count Japan’s GDP onto the U.S. side, it would swing the economic balance in favor of the U.S.

In addition, the U.S. has by far the world’s largest military, which – for now – gives it additional influence.

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Technical note: For the couple of nations for which IMF figures were not available, we used the CIA Factbook.

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