Germans
lose trust in US, see NSA whistleblower Snowden as hero – poll
Germans’
confidence in the US as a trustworthy partner has plummeted following
the NSA scandal, while Edward Snowden, who exposed America’s spying
on its allies, is considered a hero by 60 percent of the population,
a poll shows.
RT,
8
November, 2013
The
recent chain of scandals over US global snooping has seriously
damaged the opinion of Germans about their longtime ally.
Only
35 percent still see Washington as a reliable partner – a drop of
14 percent since July, according to a survey conducted by public
broadcaster ARD and Die Welt daily. This year’s figures are a
massive drop from the situation at the start of President Barack
Obama’s presidency, when he was given an enthusiastic welcome on
his first official visit to Berlin, and 76 percent of Germans said
they trusted the US government in a Nov. 2009 poll.
US
President Barack Obama’s personal approval rating with Germans has
also plummeted. Once a highly popular foreign politician, now Obama
enjoys support from only 43 percent of Germans, while over half are
unhappy with his performance.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel – whose private mobile phone was also
allegedly bugged by American security services – warned earlier
that spying among friends was unacceptable. She made it clear to
Obama that if the information was proven to be true, it would
represented a “grave breach of trust.” Merkel also demanded that
Washington sign up to a 'no-spying' agreement with Berlin and Paris
by the end of this year.
But
most Germans are not about to be fooled a second time around, it
seems. Over 90 percent think that the Americans would breach a
no-spying agreement anyway and continue their surveillance
activities, the survey found.
Meanwhile,
six out of 10 Germans consider NSA whistleblower Snowden a hero, with
only 14 percent of those polled saying that the 30-year-old security
specialist was a criminal. However, respondents were fairly evenly
split on whether he should be given asylum in Germany: 46 percent
were in favor, and 48 percent against.
German
officials have ruled out granting Snowden political asylum, arguing
that the NSA whistleblower is “not a political refugee.”
Merkel
reaffirmed Monday the importance of Berlin’s ties with Washington,
making it clear that Germany would not take any steps that might harm
relations with the US.
“The
trans-Atlantic alliance remains for us Germans of exceptional
importance,” Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert told reporters in
Berlin. “There is hardly a country that has profited as much from
this partnership and friendship as Germany... and this will guide the
chancellor in all future decisions.”
However,
Germany wants Snowden to testify concerning espionage allegations
against the US and the UK. Currently, Germany is considering the
possibility of questioning Snowden in Moscow, where he has been since
June.
Snowden,
who faces espionage charges in the US, was provided with temporary
asylum in Russia in August.
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