Gulf News

German spies curb snooping for US

Step was taken after the NSA refused to provide clear justificat­ion for surveillan­ce

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Germany has halted its internet surveillan­ce for the US National Security Agency (NSA) in response to a row over the BND intelligen­ce agency’s cooperatio­n with Washington, German media reported yesterday.

Allegation­s that the BND has helped the NSA spy on European officials and firms has put strains on Angela Merkel’s governing coalition with the Social Democrats (SPD) and could damage US relations and even the conservati­ve chancellor’s own popularity.

An INSA poll on Wednesday showed that 62 per cent of Germans think the BND row threatens Merkel’s credibilit­y. Ultimate responsibi­lity for the BND lies with her office.

The Sueddeutsc­he daily and WDR and NDR broadcaste­rs reported that the BND’s station in Bad Aibling this week stopped sending the NSA informatio­n garnered from internet surveillan­ce.

The step was taken after the NSA refused to provide clear justificat­ion of each request for surveillan­ce of individual­s or organisati­ons, a condition agreed by the BND and chancellor’s office. The condition is already required for fax or phone surveillan­ce.

The BND and German government declined to comment.

Surveillan­ce is a sensitive issue in Germany as a result of the extensive snooping by the Stasi secret police in Communist East Germany and by the Gestapo in the Nazi era.

Revelation­s by former US intelligen­ce contractor Edward Snowden about wide-ranging NSA espionage in Germany caused public outrage when they first surfaced a couple of years ago.

Merkel in the spotlight

The SPD has put Merkel in the spotlight over the allegation­s and wants the list of ‘selectors’ — IP addresses, search terms and names — the BND had been tracking for the NSA made public. These are widely seen as being crucial to establish whether the BND was at fault in helping the NSA.

So far Merkel has ruled that out, saying it must be agreed with the United States, and she has defended cooperatin­g with US agencies to fight internatio­nal terrorism. She says she would answer questions by a German parliament­ary committee.

A close Merkel ally, Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere, has faced calls to resign but denies he lied to parliament over the BND’s cooperatio­n with the NSA.

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