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Merkel denies US spying 'old news' to army

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Merkel denies US spying 'old news' to army
Photo: DPA

The German government Wednesday denied a report claiming that the nation's military knew for years about the US surveillance programme PRISM revealed by fugitive former intelligence analyst Edward Snowden.

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Germany's foreign intelligence service BND said that a separate programme with the same name existed for NATO forces in Afghanistan to share intelligence.

The spokesman for Chancellor Angela Merkel, who faces elections on September 22, said he had no reason to doubt the BND statement.

The issue is sensitive for Merkel, who said last week she only learnt about the scope of the US National Security Agency (NSA) snooping through media reports.

Many Germans are angry that their emails, phone calls, web searches and other data have been captured and stored under the NSA programme.

Any suggestion that the government failed to stop it or was complicit in it

would spell political danger for Merkel, whose chancellery oversees Germany's

secret services.

The mass-circulation daily Bild reported earlier that the German military

command for northern Afghanistan had been informed of PRISM in September 2011

in a letter from the Kabul command of the NATO-led International Security

Assistance Force.

According to Bild the letter mentioned that the programme was for phone

and email surveillance and run by the NSA.

However, the BND later said in a brief statement: "The programme referred

to as PRISM in today's Bild newspaper is a NATO/ISAF programme that is not

identical to the PRISM programme of the NSA. It is also not classified as

secret."

The BND also stressed that it "had no knowledge of the name, scope and extent of the NSA programme".

Merkel has testily told Washington that "we are not in the Cold War anymore" but also defended the role of secret services in keeping citizens safe and preventing terrorist attacks.

Snowden, on the run from the US government, has been marooned at a Moscow

airport since June 23 and on Tuesday filed an application for temporary asylum

in Russia. Venezuela, Bolivia and Nicaragua have said they would be open to

offering refuge to Snowden.

AFP/jlb

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