A good part of the list of people tapped are either anarchists, members of leftist groups, anti-authoritarian human rights and anti-war activists or "Arab businessmen" about whom we have learned very little, as well as an Al Jazeera correspondent in Athens. This part of the list would be of no interest for either Turks or private parties.
Note that among those listed are military officers involved in procurements. Now Greece has traditionally been a very interesting market for weapons manufacturers. It is spending now ~3,5 billion dollars per year on defense (and that's without the "clandestine" budget re-purposed for military needs). This translates into one of the highest defense spending percentages of GDP in Europe. Add to that the extravagant amounts paid for Olympic security, and there are lots of people that would be interested in finding out about procurement plans over the past few years. Bear in mind that over the past years, military officials have often leaked their "surprise" at how quickly and, one could say, clairvoyantly, US defense companies reacted to their private discussions among themselves.
Note also that one of the people tapped was Greek businessman Vassilis Katsikeas, with business interests in Bulgaria. Now it turns out that Katsikeas immediately after the list was announced reported that he was illegally abducted in Bulgaria last year and questioned by self-described CIA agents regarding, among other things, the leftist terrorist organization November 17 (why the CIA might think he was connected with that group is a sad story having to do with how the CIA has misunderstood what the leftist terrorist groups in Greece were about - more in another diary maybe).
Anyway, the only alternative to the US agency scenario is that the published list was in fact two lists: one list of "quasi legal" surveillance on "suspicious" individuals, installed with Vodafone's cooperation by the Greek Secret Service before the Olympics, and another list, "added" afterwards to the first, covertly, by unknown perpetrators that included government and military officials. This scenario does not necessarily require US involvement.
It seems likely also, that the wiretaps were put in place with "inside" help, which means that either Vodafone, or Ericsson employees (Vodafone used Ericsson hardware) are quite likely implicated as well.
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I haven't followed up on the first diary because the situation is, if anything, even murkier today than it was after the ministerial press conference. One thing which is certain is that the "suicide" of a high ranking Vodafone Technical Officer, whose expertise would have certainly involved him in the phone tapping detection and investigation, one day after Vodafone officially acknowledges that they had detected the wiretaps, looks more suspicious with each passing day and each journalist investigation.
It now seems evident however, that Voulgarakis left quite a bit of information out of his official statement. It is also likely that the only reason that the Greek government went public with the incident was that certain newspapers had picked up the issue and were calling officials and asking "curious" questions.
Anyway, the ten questions I listed in my previous diary remain unanswered. And this spy scandal (as it is referred to in the Greek Press) has severely shaken the conservative government, which stands accused of mismanaging the whole affair. We're hoping here in Greece that either the investigation of the suicide or the official judicial inquiry might shed some light on this, though I wouldn't bet on it. The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom - William Blake