US Threatened Germany
Over Snowden, Vice Chancellor Says
By Glenn Greenwald
March 19, 2015 "ICH"
- "The
Intercept" -
German Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel
said this week in Homburg that the U.S.
government threatened to cease sharing
intelligence with Germany if Berlin
offered asylum to NSA
whistleblower Edward Snowden or
otherwise arranged for him to travel to
that country. “They told us they would
stop notifying us of plots and other
intelligence matters,” Gabriel said.
The vice chancellor
delivered a speech in which he
praised the journalists who worked on
the Snowden archive, and then lamented
the fact that Snowden was forced to seek
refuge in “Vladimir Putin’s autocratic
Russia” because no other nation was
willing and able to protect him from
threats of imprisonment by the U.S.
government (I was present at the event
to receive an award). That prompted an
audience member to interrupt his speech
and yell out: “Why don’t you bring him
to Germany, then?”
There has been a
sustained debate in Germany over
whether to grant asylum to Snowden, and
a major controversy arose last year
when a Parliamentary Committee
investigating NSA spying divided as to
whether to bring Snowden to testify in
person, and then narrowly refused at
the behest of the Merkel government. In
response to the audience interruption,
Gabriel claimed that Germany would be
legally obligated to extradite Snowden
to the U.S. if he were on German soil.
Afterward, however,
when I pressed the vice chancellor (who
is also head of the Social Democratic
Party, as well as the country’s economy
and energy minister) as to why the
German government could not and would
not offer Snowden asylum — which, under
international law,
negates the asylee’s status as a
fugitive — he told me that the U.S.
government had aggressively threatened
the Germans that if they did so, they
would be “cut off” from all intelligence
sharing. That would mean, if the threat
were carried out, that the Americans
would literally allow the German
population to remain vulnerable to a
brewing attack discovered by the
Americans by withholding that
information from their government.
This is not the first
time the U.S. has purportedly threatened
an allied government to withhold
evidence of possible terror plots as
punishment. In 2009, a British
national, Binyam Mohamed, sued the U.K.
government for complicity in his torture
at Bagram and Guantánamo. The High Court
ordered the U.K. government to
provide Mohamed’s lawyers with notes and
other documents reflecting what the
CIA told British intelligence agents
about Mohamed’s abuse.
In response, the U.K.
government insisted that the High Court
must reverse that ruling because the
safety of British subjects would be
endangered if the ruling stood. Their
reasoning: the U.S. government had
threatened the British that they would
stop sharing intelligence, including
evidence of terror plots, if they
disclosed what the Americans had told
them in confidence about Mohamed’s
treatment —
even if the disclosure were
ordered by the High Court as part of a
lawsuit brought by a torture
victim. British government lawyers even
produced a letter from an unnamed
Obama official laying out that threat.
In the Mohamed case,
it is
quite plausible that the purported
“threat” was actually the byproduct of
collaboration between the U.S. and U.K.
governments, as it gave the British a
weapon to try to scare the court into
vacating its ruling: you’re putting
the lives of British subjects in danger
by angering the Americans. In other
words, it is quite conceivable that the
British asked the Americans for
a letter setting forth such a threat to
enable them to bully the British court
into reversing its disclosure order.
In the case of
Germany, no government official has
previously claimed that they were
threatened by the U.S. as an excuse for
turning their backs on Snowden, whose
disclosures helped Germans as much as
any population outside of the U.S.
Pointing to such threats could help a
German political official such as the
vice chancellor justify what is
otherwise an indefensible refusal to
protect the NSA whistleblower from
persecution at home, though it seems
far more plausible — given
far more extremist U.S. behavior in the
Snowden case — that Gabriel’s claims
are accurate.
Nonetheless, one of
two things is true: 1) the U.S. actually
threatened Germany that it would refrain
from notifying them of terrorist plots
against German citizens and thus
deliberately leave them vulnerable to
violent attacks, or 2) some combination
of high officials from the U.S. and/or
German governments are invoking such
fictitious threats in order to
manipulate and scare the German public
into believing that asylum for Snowden
will endanger their lives. Both are
obviously noteworthy, though it’s hard
to say which is worse.
Email the author:
glenn.greenwald@theintercept.com