The Millennium Report
July 6, 2014
RT.com
The arrest of a German intelligence employee for
allegedly spying for the US has caused an uproar among German politicians. The
country’s foreign minister has demanded an immediate clarification of the
situation from Washington.
“If the reports are true, then we’re not talking about
trifles,” Frank-Walter Steinmeier said on a visit to Mongolia, DPA reports. He
added that prompt clarification of the details in the case were in the “US’s
own interest.”
Earlier, US Ambassador to Germany John B. Emerson was
summoned to the German Foreign Office to answer questions concerning the recent
arrest of a 31-year-old German foreign intelligence agency (BND) employee, who
confessed to having spied for the US.
German tabloid Bild reported that the man had been a
double agent for two years, during which time he exchanged bundles of secret
documents for €25,000 ($34,100).
The harshest reaction so far has come from German
President Joachim Gauck. If the spying allegations are confirmed, “one really
has to say, enough is enough,” he told the ZDF broadcaster Saturday.
Activists of German Pirate party wearing mask
featuring US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden attend a rally on May 22, 2014
in front of Bundestag, German parliament, in Berlin. (AFP Photo/DPA)
Angela Merkel on Sunday expressed surprise and
disappointment over the possible involvement of US intelligence in the BND
espionage scandal, according to German businessmen, accompanying her on her
trip to China, Spiegel Online reports. She has not made any comment so far,
however.
Last October, Merkel was enraged to learn she was
allegedly on the NSA’s tapping list since 2002. The Chancellor called the
alleged spying, which became known thanks to Edward Snowden’s leaks,
“unacceptable.”
A German parliamentary committee has been holding
hearings on the NSA’s spying activities in Germany.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel (Reuters/Thomas Peter)
Ironically, the classified materials from the hearings
on US spying could get into the hands of US intelligence, as they allegedly
were part of the documents stolen by the suspected double agent.
“If the suspicion of espionage is confirmed, that
would be an outrageous attack on our parliamentary freedom,” said Thomas
Oppermann, the parliamentary leader of the SPD party, a coalition partner of
Merkel’s Christian Democrats.
Opposition parties have called for caution in future
cooperation with foreign intelligence agencies.
“All cooperation of the German security authorities
with friendly services needs to be reviewed,” Green Party leader Katrin
Göring-Eckardt told Spiegel Online.
The German government is demanding that the US replace
its employees at the Joint Intelligence Staff based in the US Embassy in
Berlin, Bild reports.
While most of the criticism is focused on the US, some
believe it’s the German leadership’s inability to react properly to the NSA
tapping leaks that’s led to the yet another spying scandal. Merkel’s opponents
have repeatedly blamed her for too mild a response to the NSA global
surveillance revelations.
“That’s a result of Merkel’s transatlantic hypocrisy,”
co-chair of the Left Party Katja Kipping said, Der Tagesspiegel reported.
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