"President Obama said he was very sorry... as the case caused a big debate in Japan," Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said without confirming the spying claims.
Suga added that Abe told Obama that if the allegations were true, "it could shake our relationship of trust."
In July, WikiLeaks posted online what appeared to be five U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) reports on Japanese positions on international trade and climate change.
Here is the press release from wikileaks about the Japan cables:
I always find it funny when the US complains about Chinese industrial espionage and yet here, not to mention many other instances, the US is happy to engage in industrial espionage just the same, with a tool kit that exceeds China's no doubt. Like they say, there is only one rule: there are no rules.
With all the revelations about spying on Germany, France, Brazil, and Japan, I do find it interesting that there is not a peep that I've heard about the US spying within the five eyes group. Somehow I doubt that they would refrain from doing so out of some moral boundary, could it be that those are the only allies the US trusts, or perhaps they know that the release of such espionage would be more damaging to US foreign policy so they're just more careful about doing so?