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Berlin Says Americans 'Lied' About No Spy Deal (Sueddeutsche Zeitung , Germany)
"'The Americans have lied to us,' a senior official said.
... In August, the word was that the U.S. had already provided verbal
assurances. According to these, there would be 'no mutual spying, no industrial
espionage, and no infringement of national law.' These supposed assurances
appear to have vanished into thin air."
By Hans Leyendecker and Georg Mascolo
Translated By
Stephanie Martin
January 17, 2014
Germany
- Sueddeutsche Zeitung -
Original Article (German)
The
planned no-spy agreement between Germany and the United States is threatening
to fall through. Although officially the negotiations continue, the government
has little hope that a bilateral agreement with the U.S. that includes
restraints on mutual spying can be reached. The U.S. is even refusing to commit
itself to refraining from eavesdropping German government and political
officials.
Within
the federal intelligence service (the BND , Bundesnachrichtendienst ),
which has been entrusted with negotiating the agreement, there is great disappointment:
“We won’t get a thing,” an expert familar with the
state of negotiations told Süddeutsche Zeitung .
BND President Gerhard Schindler is said to
have told members of his staff that he would prefer dispensing with the
agreement entirely to signing it. Resentment among German negotiators is high.
“The Americans have lied to us,” one senior official said.
For
instance, the United States still refuses to disclose how long Angela Merkel’s
phone was tapped, nor will the U.S. provide information about whether the
phones of other German leaders were tapped or are currently being monitored.
Before
the wiretapping attack on the chancellor became public, the U.S. side guaranteed
in writing that the NSA “would do nothing to harm German interests.” When the Federal
Office for the Protection of the Constitution demanded that German experts
be granted access to a suspected listening post on the top floor of the U.S. Embassy
on Pariser Platz in Berlin,
the U.S. refused.
The
federal government has now told the U.S. government that it considers such a
listening station to be a breach of the Vienna
Convention on Diplomatic Relations . The Attorney General’s Office is
looking into the possibility of launching a formal investigation.
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The
American refusal to sign an agreement with any substance comes unexpectedly for
Berlin. As recently as last summer, NSA Chief Keith Alexander gave his German
counterparts, among them BND President Schindler,
hope for a far-reaching agreement. At the same time, he always emphasized that any
agreement would have to be approved by the White House. “It isn't only up to
us,” he reportedly said.
This
apparent agreement by the Americans led the federal government to expect a
quick and positive conclusion. In August, the word was that the U.S. had already
provided verbal assurances. According to these, there would be “no mutual
spying, no industrial espionage, and no infringement of national law.” These
supposed assurances appear to have vanished into thin air.
A
government spokesperson declined to comment on the report in the Süddeutsche Zeitung ,
saying that negotiations were still ongoing. The Chancellor’s Office claimed
that it still hopes “to accomplish something over the next three months.”
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Posted By Worldmeets.US Jan. 16, 2014, 11:49pm