Obama
‘knew and approved’ NSA spying on Chancellor Merkel – report
The Bild am Sonntag article is HERE
President
Obama was aware of NSA spying on German Chancellor Angela Merkel
since 2010, German media have revealed. An NSA spokeswoman later
denied the allegations.
RT,
27
October, 2013
According
to German Bild am Sonntag newspaper, which cited US intelligence
sources, National Security Agency chief Keith Alexander briefed Obama
on the bugging operation against Merkel in 2010.
"Obama
did not halt the operation but rather let it continue," an
unnamed high-ranking NSA official told the newspaper.
Moreover,
the paper said, the US president later ordered the NSA to prepare a
comprehensive dossier on Merkel.
That
contradicts earlier reports that Obama personally assured Merkel he
didn’t know – and that he would have stopped it if he had.
An
NSA spokeswoman released a statement on Sunday after the Bild am
Sonntag revelations came to light that: "Alexander did not
discuss with President Obama in 2010 an alleged foreign intelligence
operation involving German Chancellor Merkel," adding that "news
reports claiming otherwise are not true."
The
newspaper report added that the NSA was listening in to the
chancellor’s both work phone provided by her political party, and
supposedly her secure phone that she only received this summer. This,
the paper said, is evidence that the operation continued until the
"immediate past."
NSA
spy activity was reportedly conducted on the fourth floor of the US
Embassy in central Berlin, just a stone’s throw from the German
government’s headquarters.
The
NSA's findings, SMS messages and phone calls, were directly reported
to the White House in Washington, unlike as usual to NSA headquarters
in Fort Meade, Maryland, the paper’s source said.
Earlier
this week Berlin said that Merkel's communications were "absolutely
safe," since she was conducting her important "state
political" conversations on encrypted fixed-circuit phone lines.
This secure landline phone in her office is allegedly the only one
that NSA did not have access to, according to Bild am Sonntag.
Chancellor
Merkel turns out to be not the first German leader to be bugged.
According to the report, the NSA also spied on Merkel's predecessor,
Gerhard Schroeder, after then-President George W. Bush launched a
surveillance program in 2002.
On
Saturday, Der Spiegel reported that Merkel’s mobile phone had been
on an NSA target list since 2002, and had been under the name “GE
Chancellor Merkel.” The monitoring operation was reportedly still
in force as recently as a few weeks before Obama's visit to Berlin in
June 2013.
In
its report, the newspaper disclosed details of a recent conversation
between Obama and Merkel. During the phone call Wednesday, Obama
allegedly assured Merkel that he had not been aware that her phone
had been bugged, and that if he had known, he would have immediately
stopped it.
Merkel
made clear to Obama that if the information was proven to be true, it
would be “completely unacceptable” and represented a “grave
breach of trust,” her spokesman, Steffen Seibert, said after the
call.
Germany
said Saturday it would send the chiefs of its foreign and domestic
intelligence agencies to Washington for talks with the White House
and the National Security Agency to investigate the spying
allegations.
"What
exactly is going to be regulated, how and in what form it will be
negotiated and by whom, I cannot tell you right now," German
government spokesman Georg Streiter told reporters.
German
media, citing sources close to the intelligence services, confirmed
Saturday that the German delegation to the US would include top
officials from the German secret service.
Both
Germany and France have said they want “a no-spy deal” with the
US to be signed by the end of the year.
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