Opinion: Angela Merkel's indignation over NSA spying is genuine and rightly so
October 29, 2013 -- Updated 1642 GMT (0042 HKT)
Editor's note:
Charlotte Potts is a German national who has worked as a journalist and
producer for both major German TV networks, ARD and ZDF, in Washington,
DC. She reported on the 2008 and 2012 US campaigns and elections for a
German audience and currently covers politics and society across the US.
Follow her on Twitter @charlottecpotts
Washington (CNN) -- Angela Merkel might be the most
powerful female politician in the world these days. She certainly is in
Europe. We now know that her cell phone was monitored by U.S.
intelligence, not just since she became the German Chancellor in 2005,
but also for an additional three years before that.
Many U.S. analysts are
now arguing that Merkel's anger at the revelations is manufactured for
public consumption. They could not be more wrong.
A lot of Germans were
flustered when they learned this summer that the NSA had been collecting
millions of bits of so-called meta-data on them. According to opinion polls, 60% of Germans supported Edward Snowden's release of classified information. Just 17% found what he did was wrong.
Charlotte Potts
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For Germans, the
discussion about U.S. surveillance is not a joke. In fact, it couldn't
be more serious. We value our privacy highly. It is seen as an
individual liberty that often could not be taken for granted in German
history. Both the Nazi secret police -- the Gestapo -- and the East
German intelligence agency -- the Stasi -- spied extensively on
citizens.
Even in more recent
decades Germans have repeatedly fought battles about privacy and against
a perceived "Überwachungsstaat" -- or "surveillance state." Compared to
the U.S., Germany already has many laws concerning data privacy, but
two-thirds of Germans would even like stricter regulations.
Back in the summer,
Merkel tried to downplay the U.S. surveillance herself and stood strong
on the side of the U.S. ally. In mid-July, Merkel gave an interview on
the topic, which in light of the recent revelations, seems almost
satirical.
The host of the show
introduced her as "the lady who hopes that at least her cell phone is
bug-proof, even from U.S. intelligence services." Merkel said later in
the interview: "I know that I am not being monitored."
A month later -- and in
the midst of an election campaign dominated by this issue -- the German
government announced that the "NSA scandal," as the German media called
it, was over because the U.S. had ensured more transparency. The German
public's anger calmed and Merkel cruised to re-election.
Last week Merkel learned in a particularly personal way that the issue is far from over.
She became Germany's first NSA victim known by name and gave the extent of U.S. spying a face.
Politically Merkel
didn't have a lot to gain by bringing this issue to the table again. Her
anger is not simulated for domestic consumption. In fact, the opposite
is true, since she is now criticized for not taking the extent of the
surveillance more serious in the beginning.
Merkel is usually
measured. For her to pick up the phone and call President Barack Obama
to publicly criticise the extent of U.S. surveillance shows how
disgruntled she really is. Her anger seems real and rightfully so.
Eavesdropping on
Merkel's conversations and reading her text messages is completely
unacceptable. Not because she is the most powerful female politician,
but because she is one of the closest allies the U.S. has in Europe and,
overall, a trusted friend.
Back in the summer, Obama said that if he wanted to know what Merkel is thinking, he could pick up the phone and just ask her.
In retrospect, this
comment verges on the offensive. So what benefit does it really bring to
spy on Germany? Are these benefits really worth the costs? Even if
Obama has begun a foreign policy shift towards Asia in his presidency,
he still needs strong transatlantic partners.
Of course, the "Handyüberwachung" -- the German word for spying on cell phones -- hits close to home for Merkel.
She grew up in Eastern Germany where every conversation, every step, was monitored by the Stasi.
It's in part because of
her past that Merkel always had a lot of respect for the United States.
She values freedom and liberties and with that the country, which seemed
to value these attributes the most: The United States.
Merkel wouldn't
challenge relationships with the U.S. if she didn't think it was
necessary. She wouldn't endanger the Swift data exchange agreement and
negotiations on a free trade zone between the European Union and the
United States, just to demonstrate that she is a strong leader or to
strengthen her position at home, which is stable regardless at the
moment.
Ever since World War II,
German-U.S. relations have flourished through trust in each other. That
trust is broken now. For the first time it seems, the U.S. has crossed
an actual threshold.
Tapping the phones of ally leaders shouldn't be a question of "can we", but rather "should we?"
Now it is time for the
U.S. to try to understand those cultural concerns, to show Europeans
that security doesn't trump liberty; that the intelligence services
haven't gone wild and, especially, to rebuild the trust of a valued
ally.
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