Merkel urges US ‘not to spy on partners’

German chancellor says latest spying allegations show Berlin and Washington at odds over the role of intelligence.

German chancellor, Angela Merkel.
German chancellor, Angela Merkel.

Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, says new allegations of US spying show Berlin and Washington are completely at odds over how they view the role of intelligence, and she hopes German action will persuade the US not to spy on partners.

Merkel’s comments to German broadcaster ZDF on Saturday came two days after her government told the CIA station chief in Berlin to leave the country, in a dramatic display of anger after German officials unearthed two suspected spies.

On Friday Josh Earnest, White House press secretary, said ”when differences arise, we’re committed to resolving those differences through the established private channels ... we don’t believe that trying to resolve them through the media is appropriate”.

The scandal has chilled relations with Washington to levels not seen since Merkel’s predecessor opposed the US invasion of Iraq in 2003. It follows allegations last year that Merkel’s phone was tapped by American agents.

Asked how angry she was on hearing of the suspected spies, one of whom worked for German foreign intelligence (BND), the other at the Defence Ministry, Merkel said: “It is not about how angry I was. For me it is a sign that we have fundamentally different conceptions of the work of the intelligence services.

“I can’t say in advance if [the measures we took] will have an effect, of course I hope something will change. But the
important thing is to show how we view things... and it is not a co-operative partnership when such things take place.”

Merkel said there were far more critical things on which to spy and snooping on friends eroded trust.

“We are not living in the Cold War any more and are exposed to different threats. We should concentrate on what is
essential,” she said.