The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Top German spy ousted after clash with Merkel

- By Frank Jordans

The head of Germany’s domestic intelligen­ce agency lost his job Tuesday after his remarks downplayin­g anti-migrant violence became a battlegrou­nd between Chancellor Angela Merkel and her conservati­ve critics.

The ouster of Hans-Georg Maassen is the latest political aftershock resulting from the influx of more than a million refugees into Germany since 2015, which has boosted right-wing populism in Germany and beyond.

Critics have long questioned whether Maassen, who took charge of the BfV spy agency in 2012, was still suitable for the post over his handling of the 2016 Berlin Christmas market attack and his contacts with the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany party.

Maassen’s decision to openly contradict Merkel in an interview with the mass-circulatio­n daily Bild this month appears to have sealed his fate.

Responding to violent rightwing protests following the killing of a German man, allegedly by migrants, in the eastern city of Chemnitz, Maassen said his agency had no reliable evidence that foreigners were “hunted” down in the streets — a term Merkel had used.

He added that “according to my cautious evaluation, there are good reasons for thinking that it is deliberate misinforma­tion, possibly in order to distract the public from the murder in Chemnitz.”

Maassen provided no evidence to back up his assertion, but his comments were seized upon by the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany party, which called him “a very good top civil servant who had the courage to criticize Merkel’s completely failed asylum policy” and now faces a “witch hunt.”

Merkel’s coalition partners, the center-left Social Democrats, accused Maassen of downplayin­g apparent anti-migrant violence and called for him to be fired .

For a senior civil servant to publicly wade into such a politicall­y sensitive issue would normally have meant swift career death, but Maassen’s direct boss — Interior Minister Horst Seehofer — initially backed the spy chief.

Seehofer has regularly sparred

with his conservati­ve ally

Merkel on migration since 2015, when he was one of the most prominent critics of her decision to keep open Germany’s borders as hundreds of thousands of asylum-seekers

trekked across the Balkans.

In a short statement following three-way talks Tuesday between Merkel, Seehofer and the head of

the Social Democrats, the government said Maassen will be moved to a new job within the Interior Ministry and will be replaced at the spy agency.

Maassen may be out of the firing line for now, but the 55-year-old will likely remain influentia­l behind the scenes within Germany’s security apparatus.

The government statement noted that Seehofer “values his expertise in questions of public safety” and observers say the new job comes with a hefty pay rise.

 ?? MICHAEL SOHN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Hans-Georg Maassen, center, head of the German Federal Office for the Protection of the Constituti­on, waits for the beginning of a hearing at the home affairs committee of the German federal parliament, Bundestag, in Berlin, Germany.
MICHAEL SOHN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Hans-Georg Maassen, center, head of the German Federal Office for the Protection of the Constituti­on, waits for the beginning of a hearing at the home affairs committee of the German federal parliament, Bundestag, in Berlin, Germany.

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