Deutsche Welle, 9 July 2013
Whistleblower and former NSA contractor Edward Snowden has said there are close ties between German and US intelligence authorities. Such secret cooperation has been going on for decades, experts say.germ
Whistleblower and former NSA contractor Edward Snowden has said there are close ties between German and US intelligence authorities. Such secret cooperation has been going on for decades, experts say.germ
Edward
Snowden has done it again: after blowing the whistle on US secret service the
National Security Agency (NSA), he told German news magazine Der Spiegel on
Monday (08.07.2013), "They work hand in glove with German
authorities."
Only last
week, German authorities had pretended they had been left in the dark about the
surveillance program PRISM. The presidents of all three German secret services
testified to that effect in front of a parliamentary committee monitoring
German intelligence.
Snowden says American intelligence worked hand in glove with German authorities |
Has Germany
profited from US spying programs?
Intelligence
expert Erich Schmidt-Eenboom doesn't just believe that German authorities knew
very well about the US data collection spree. He also thinks it possible that
German intelligence profited from the surveillance programs.
According
to Schmidt-Eenboom, German authorities have definitely profited from such
programs "when it comes to international terrorism threats. The technical
intelligence authorities of NATO states work closely together and are quite
successful. And the [German foreign intelligence service] BND profits from it.
That's one reason why the violations [of basic rights] by this partner haven't
been brought to light," the analyst told German broadcaster
Deutschlandfunk.
Oppermann says getting more information from the US is vital |
The
agencies exchange "finished intelligence" reports - summarized
studies derived from intelligence "raw materials," Schmidt-Eenboom
said. But things are different when it comes to terrorism and early warnings.
"If the NSA discovers an acute threat, it will be sent immediately as an
urgent matter to the respective German authorities and to the German
chancellor's office."
A
well-known example of such an exchange between friends is the case of the
"Sauerland group," a terror cell. Germany only got wind of the
group's planned terror attacks when American intelligence authorities passed on
information they had found on the Internet.
Cooperation
has been going on for decades
But how
does the cooperation between German and US authorities work? It's clear that
cooperation intensified after the terror attacks of September 11 shocked the
world in 2001. In October of that year, all NATO states - including Germany -
agreed to expand intelligence cooperation. Some of that agreement is still
secret.
According
to Schmidt-Eenboom, there's a long history of US intelligence in Germany.
"Until 1968, the Allies had certain rights that allowed them to intercept
on a large scale." According to historian Joseph Foschepoth, author of the
study "Monitored Germany," this right still exists. In 1968, the
German government agreed to a secret arrangement that still allows US
intelligence to carry out surveillance activities in Germany.
Schmidt-Eenboom says German agencies depend on US intel |
Enlightening
talks in Washington?
Der Spiegel
now mentions another form of cooperation: the NSA passed on programs to the BND
that were capable of analyzing foreign data streams. That cooperation was
reportedly confirmed by the BND's president when he spoke before the
parliamentary committee.
But
Oppermann doesn't think these bits of information suffice - neither in regards
to the German or the US intelligence authorities. "Ultimately we want to
know if it's true what Snowden said. It's unacceptable that Snowden holds the
privilege of interpretation for weeks on this matter and we can't check this
with the Americans."
For the
next couple of days, high-ranking German officials from both the government and
intelligence agencies, as well as German Interior Minister Hans-Peter
Friedrich, are on a visit to Washington, and they are keen to talk. They hope
to find out the truth about the accusations about the NSA snooping scandal.
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