NSA bugs Merkel aides instead of chancellor
by alethoRT | February 24, 2014
In
the wake of President Obama's promise to stop spying on German
Chancellor Angela Merkel, the US intelligence has switched its attention
to her top government officials, a German newspaper reported.
Washington's
relations with Germany were strained last year after revelations that
the US National Security Agency (NSA) was conducting mass surveillance
in Germany and even tapped the mobile phone of Chancellor Merkel.
Facing
the German outrage, President Barack Obama pledged that the US would
stop spying on the leader of the European country, which is among the
closest and most powerful allies of America.
After the promise was made, the NSA has stepped up surveillance of senior German officials, German newspaper Bild am Sonntag (BamS) reported on Sunday.
"We
have had the order not to miss out on any information now that we are
no longer able to monitor the chancellor's communication directly," it
quoted a top NSA employee in Germany as saying.
BamS
said the NSA had 297 employees stationed in Germany and was surveying
320 key individuals, most of them German decision-makers involved in
politics and business.
Interior
Minister Thomas de Maiziere is of particular interest to the US, the
report said, because he is a close aide of Merkel, who seeks his advice
on many issues and was rumored to be promoting his candidacy for the
post of NATO secretary-general.
A
spokesman for the German Interior Ministry told the newspaper it would
not comment on the "allegations of unnamed individuals."
Privacy
issues are a very sensitive area in Germany, which holds the memory of
invasive state surveillance practices by the Nazi government and later
by the Communist government in the former East Germany.
Part
of the outrage in Germany was caused by the allegation that US
intelligence is using its surveillance capabilities not only to provide
national security, but also to gain business advantage for American
companies over their foreign competitors.
Berlin
has been pushing for a ‘no-spying deal’ with the US for months, but so
far with little success. Germany is also advocating the creation of a
European computer network which would allow communication traffic not to
pass through US-based servers and thus avoid the NSA tapping.
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