So just because the USA and other counties have the ability to spy on other countries and their citizens then it should be allowed? That's absolutely wrong. Even if there isn't much that people can do to stop spying, it shouldn't be encouraged or ignored.
As for the article it self, well, it's no surprise that the Zionist regime would think so as I'm pretty certain that mossad does things that are much worse than that.
On their own citizens... not without extraordinarily severe oversight.
On other countries... this is more of a grey zone.
In an ideal world, I would agree it would be terrible to spy on other nations.
However our world is far from ideal. Spying can actually be a significant benefit to mankind, as in it's why we are not a nuclear rubble pile.
In the cold war the spies that Russia had in our government and the spies we had in theirs were crucial. There were many times where we came a hairs breath away from total nuclear war. One of the large factors in each case was the spies in each respective country telling their governments, "no, that is a training mission not a preemptive attack".
When your bargaining chips are nuclear weapons having insight into each others bluff is a pretty important factor.
Governments spying on each other isn't like me putting key-loggers on your computer, that stuff is all microscale.
Governments operate on the macroscale, so spying tends to be a standard part of negotiations. EVERY GOVERNMENT DOES IT. The only ones who don't, are the ones too small to organize a program to do it.
Let me put a scenario up for you to think about. You are the representative for country X. You are about to do negotiations with country Y. Country Y has historically occasionally shafted you in negotiations, leading you on for quite a long time, arguing meaningless points, and in the end doing their best to take advantage of you. However other times, they have had negotiations with you that were relativly equal and fair.
It has so far varied depending on the views of the people in office at the time.
Before these negotiations they recently had a new president elected to office. He came from relative obscurity, and has at times during his election made derogatory remarks regarding your country, and at other times seemed supportive of working with your country.
The negotiations at hand represent a possible lasting and beneficial agreement between you. It however requires you to outlay a significant amount of funding and time to get through the negotiation process.
So what do you do?
If you had spies at this point, they could tell you either, no the president was just pandering to people during his campaign and is supportive of you. Or yes the president has no intentions of working with you.
This lets you just walk away from the negotiations since you know he isn't serious, or do your best to make them succeed because you know he is serious. In reality you probably wouldn't walk away in either case, but it would at least help you choose the level of involvement.
Allies or not, negotiations go on like this between every country. They are all looking to their own advantage, which is why they all try to spy on each other.