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Al-Ahed Telegram

Germany Declines Comment on Reported ’Deep Freeze’ with US Intelligence

Germany Declines Comment on Reported ’Deep Freeze’ with US Intelligence
folder_openGermany access_time8 years ago
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The German government declined to comment on a report that US intelligence agencies were reviewing their cooperation with German counterparts and had dropped joint projects due to concerns secret information was being leaked by lawmakers.

Germany Declines Comment on Reported ’Deep Freeze’ with US Intelligence

Bild newspaper reported on Saturday that US spy chief James Clapper had ordered the review because secret documents related to the BND's cooperation with the United States were being leaked to media from a German parliamentary committee.

However, a spokesman for the US embassy in Berlin said it did not comment on intelligence matters.

Allegations the BND intelligence agency helped the National Security Agency [NSA] spy on European companies and officials had been major news in Germany for weeks. It had strained Chancellor Angela Merkel's coalition and damaged her popularity.

"The German government puts great faith in the intelligence cooperation with the United States to protect our citizens," a government spokesman said when asked about the Bild report.

"The government doesn't comment on the details of that cooperation in public but rather in parliament committees."

Moreover, the newspaper said it had seen documents in which Clapper, director of national intelligence, expressed concern that information on the cooperation from Merkel's chancellery to the parliamentary committee was leaked and harmed US interests.

Clapper said Germany could no longer be trusted with secret documents, according to Bild, and as long as that is the case US intelligence agencies should examine where to limit or cancel cooperation with Germany.

Furthermore, Bild quoted a US official saying the leaks were worse than those attributed to former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.

"What the German government is now doing is more dangerous than what Snowden did," the US official was quoted saying.

Though, critics in Germany had accused Merkel's staff of allowing the BND to help the NSA spy on European companies and officials.

A poll last week found one in three Germans feels deceived by Merkel regarding a row over spying on Germans.

Revelations by Snowden about wide-ranging espionage in Germany by the United States, including allegations that it bugged Merkel's mobile phone, caused outrage in Germany when they emerged two years ago.

Consequently, Merkel argued the BND must work with the NSA to fight terrorism, but privacy was a sensitive subject in Germany, after decades of snooping by the Gestapo and then by the Stasi secret police in East Germany.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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