Merkel’s mad: German leader indignant over ‘serious’ US spying allegations
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said allegations of a German working as a double agent for the US intelligence are “serious” and if proven correct contradict the spirit of bilateral cooperation.
Germany arrests suspected 'double agent' for
working for US - report
Merkel on Monday joined in a chorus of German politicians voicing
their concern over the arrest of a German
intelligence employee for allegedly spying for the US.
"If the reports are correct it would be a serious case,"
Reuters cited Merkel as saying. "If the allegations are true,
it would be for me a clear contradiction as to what I consider to
be trusting cooperation between agencies and partners."
Berlin is now waiting for explanations from the White House.
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said Sunday that
giving prompt clarification of the details in the case was in the
“US’s own interest.” Earlier, US Ambassador to Germany
John B. Emerson was summoned to the German Foreign Office.
Washington has not yet commented on the matter, however.
Despite the uproar the double agent scandal has caused among German politicians, the government in Berlin has been quick to assure Washington that the issue will not affect ongoing talks on a free trade deal between the European Union and United States.
"The Americans are important partners for Germany including of course in economic terms, so the TTIP (Translatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership) talks ... are not in question or in doubt," government spokeswoman Christiane Wirtz said, Reuters reported.
A 31-year-old German foreign intelligence agency (BND) employee
has reportedly confessed to having spied for the US for two
years. He was allegedly arrested when he tried to also sell some
of the information he possessed to Russian intelligence.
US-German relations already suffered a significant blow last
October, when NSA’s large-scale surveillance on Germany was
revealed due to documents leaked by Edward Snowden. That was when
Chancellor Merkel found out she was not immune to snooping by the
US.
The case has been investigated by a German parliamentary
committee. Some of the classified materials from the hearings
reportedly were part of the documents stolen by the suspected
double agent. This fact enraged German MPs.
"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.
Germany is particularly sensitive to surveillance issues because
of abuses by the Nazis and by the East German Stasi. After
Snowden’s revelations activists in Berlin staged multiple
protests against US mass spying. They’ve also accused Angela
Merkel of too weak a response to the spying scandal.
Germany offered the United States to sign a bilateral no-spy
agreement, but so far the White House has refused.