Republican presidential candidate Marco Rubio on Wednesday claimed that a report that the US government has continued to spy on some leaders of allied nations "might be worse" than the story suggests.
The Wall Street Journal onTuesday reported that the National Security Agency continued toeavesdrop onfriendly heads ofstate even afterPresident Barack Obama pledged tocurtail the activity.
According toformer and current US officials who spoke tothe newspaper, the NSA spied onIsraeli officials and members ofUS Congress duringthe Iran nuclear talks this year.
Senator Rubio, appearing ontelevision show "Fox & Friends" ahead ofa campaign event inIowa, claimed that the full picture "might be worse," saying that he did not think the report "gets the entire story."
"Well, I want tobe very careful. I'm on, a member ofthe [Senate] Intelligence Committee, so obviously I want tobe very careful ofwhat I say aboutinformation ofthis kind. Obviously people read this report, they have a right tobe concerned this morning aboutit," he said.
"They have a right tobe concerned aboutthe fact that while some leaders aroundthe world are no longer being targeted, one ofour strongest allies inthe Middle East Israel is," he continued. "These are all concerns, and they're legitimate."
By Sputnik