BRUSSELS — The European Union confirmed Tuesday that free-trade negotiations with the United States should kick off as planned next week, despite widespread concerns over the alleged eavesdropping of EU diplomats.
The Commission, the EU's executive branch that leads the negotiations on behalf of its 28 members, said the planned start of talks in Washington next Monday "should not be affected" by the surveillance scandal that has emerged in recent days.
However, it insisted that the trans-Atlantic atmosphere needed to clear up for the talks to be successful.
"For such a comprehensive and ambitious negotiation to succeed, there needs to be confidence, transparency and clarity among the negotiating partners," it said in a statement.
The talks are likely to take at least a few years.
The first week of technical negotiations start in Washington on Monday but political outrage over the U.S. eavesdropping allegations had raised questions over whether they would go ahead.
On Sunday, an apparent leak from former U.S. intelligence systems analyst Edward Snowden in Germany's Der Spiegel magazine allegedly showed that the National Security Agency bugged the EU's diplomatic offices in Washington and infiltrated its computer network.
The magazine said the NSA took similar measures to listen in on the EU's mission to the United Nations in New York, and also used its secure facilities at NATO headquarters in Brussels to dial into telephone maintenance systems that would have allowed it to intercept senior EU officials' calls and Internet traffic.