Spying On Our Friends Is Not a Good Idea
By Eric Margolis
July 27, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
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There’s been so much dramatic news these
days – from Greece’s miseries to Iran, China from blowhard Donald
Trump – that the shocking story of how America’s National Security
Agency has been spying on German and French leadership has gone
almost unnoticed.Last year, it was revealed
that the NSA had intercepted Chancellor Angela Merkel’s cell phone.
She is supposed to be one of Washington’s most important allies and
the key power in Europe. There was quiet outrage in always
subservient Germany, but no serious punitive action.
Brazil’s president, Dilma Rousseff, was also
bugged by American intelligence. Her predecessor, Luiz Lula Da
Silva, was also apparently bugged.
This year, came revelations that NSA and perhaps
CIA had tapped the phones of France’s President, Francois Hollande
and his two predecessors, Nicholas Sarkozy and Jacques Chirac.
Hollande ate humble pie and could only summon some faint peeps of
protest to Washington. Luckily for the US, Charles de Gaulle was not
around. After the US tried to strong-arm France, ‘le Grand Charles’
kicked the US and NATO out of France.
This week, Wikileaks revealed that the US NSA had
bugged the phone of Germany’s foreign minister, Frank-Walter
Steinmeier, for over a decade. Imagine the uproar and cries “the
Gestapo is back” if it were revealed that German intelligence had
bugged the phones of President Barack Obama or Secretary of State
John Kerry.
A lot of Germans were really angry that their
nation was being treated by the Americans as a northern banana
republic. Many recalled that in the bad old days of East Germany its
intelligence agency, Stasi, monitored everyone’s communications
under the direct supervision of KGB big brother at Moscow Center.
The National Security Agency and CIA claim their
electronic spying is only aimed at thwarting attacks by
anti-American groups (aka “terrorism”). This claim, as shown by
recent events, is untrue. One supposes the rational must be a twist
on the old adage “keep your enemies close, but your friends even
closer.”
Ironically, the political leaders listed above –
save perhaps Brazil’s da Silva – are all notably pro-American and
responsive to Washington’s demands.
Why would the US risk alienating and humiliating
some of its closet allies?
One suspects the reason is sheer arrogance…and
because US intelligence could do it. But must US intelligence really
know what Mr Merkel is making Mrs Merkel for dinner?
Until Wikileaks blew the whistle, some European
leaders may have known they were being spied upon but chose to close
their eyes and avoid making an issue. Raising a fuss would have
forced them to take action against the mighty US.
Besides, British, Italian and French intelligence
are widely believed to have bugged most communications since the
1950’s. But not, of course, the White House or Pentagon. The only
nation believed to have gotten away with bugging the White House was
Israel during the Clinton years. The Pentagon was bugged by a number
of foreign nations, including Israel, China and Russia.
Humiliating Europe’s leaders in this fashion is a
gift to the growing numbers of Europeans who believe their nations
are being treated by the US as vassal states.
There is widespread belief in Western Europe that
US strategic policy aims at preventing deeper integration of the EU
and thwarting a common foreign policy or a powerful European
military. Britain serves as a Trojan horse for America’s strategic
interests in Europe.
Way back in the 1960’s, then German defense
minister Franz Josef Strauss, an ardent proponent of a truly united
Europe, thundered that Europeans would not play spearmen to
America’s atomic knights. But, of course, that’s just what happened.
The US still runs and finances NATO in the same
way the Soviet Union commanded the Warsaw Pact. Washington calls on
Europe for troop contingents in its Mideast and south Asian colonial
wars in the same way that the Persian Empire summoned its vassals to
war.
Many Germans and French, both right and left,
would like their leaders to react more forcefully to NSA’s
ham-handed spying. However, Mrs Merkel and President Holland are
both political jellyfish eager to evade any confrontation with Big
Brother in Washington. Maybe he has too much dirt on them.
But a confrontation is inevitable one day if
Europe is to regain its true independence that was lost after World
War II.
Eric S. Margolis is an award-winning,
internationally syndicated columnist. His articles have appeared in
the New York Times, the International Herald Tribune the Los Angeles
Times, Times of London, the Gulf Times, the Khaleej Times, Nation –
Pakistan, Hurriyet, – Turkey, Sun Times Malaysia and other news
sites in Asia.See also -
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