|
Berlin admits giving US bombing targets in Iraq
By Tony Paterson in Berlin
01/14/06 "The
Independent" -- --
Chancellor Angela Merkel's fence-mending visit to the United
States is being overshadowed by a growing scandal over reports
that German intelligence had fed America key information about
military targets in Iraq before the US invasion.
German MPs have called for a full inquiry into the allegations
amid speculation about the future of Franz Walter Steinmeyer,
Mrs Merkel's Social Democrat Foreign Minister, who was a senior
government official during the Iraq war.
The reports of German-US intelligence co-operation, aired on
Germany's ARD television channel, were confirmed by Berlin
government sources and appeared to run directly counter to
official German government policy on the war.
Citing a US government official, the TV channel said German
intelligence officers in Baghdad had supplied information about
a restaurant in the Mansur district of the city which the Iraqi
leader, Saddam Hussein, was said to have frequented on the eve
of the US-led invasion. The US military bombed the building
killing 12 people.
Renate Kunast, the opposition Greens party parliamentary leader
described the reports as "monstrous". She added: "This suggests
Germany took part in the war against Iraq after all."
Government officials conceded that Germany's BND intelligence
services maintained a presence in Baghdad. But they declined to
say what kind of information had been passed to the Americans
other than details about which buildings - such as schools,
hospitals and embassies- should not be bombed.
Mrs Merkel's two day trip to Washington had been widely
canvassed as an attempt to repair the most serious rift in
German-US relations since 1945, caused by the vehement
opposition by her predecessor, Gerhard Schröder, to the
invasion.
In Germany, there is speculation that the reports of German-US
intelligence co-operation had been deliberately timed to
embarrass Mrs Merkel during her visit and dampen her attempt to
improve relations with Washington.
But in a speech at Washington's German embassy shortly after her
arrival, Germany's first woman Chancellor suggested she was
determined not to disappoint her American hosts, "We must now
muster enough strength to begin a new phase in our
relationship," she said.
And in a clear acknowledgement of the White House stance on
terrorism she added: "The fight against terrorism has proven
more difficult than the Cold War."
Washington underscored the importance of Mrs Merkel's visit by
allotting three hours for her meeting with President George Bush
and the Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice. In Germany, the US
ambassador to Berlin has been on in a charm offensive, saying in
interviews that German-US ties are "excellent." Before Mrs
Merkel's visit, the Bush administration said they viewed
Germany's new conservative leader as a strong partner who could
help bridge differences.
Yet despite the pro-US rhetoric, German officials have made
clear they have no misgivings about the abilities of Mrs
Merkel's grand coalition government to substantially change
Germany's position on key issues of American interest.
Although Mrs Merkel has shifted from her predecessor by
stressing the importance of a US-led Nato, she ruled out sending
German troops to Iraq. Shortly before her visit, she criticised
the US prison in Cuba, saying: "Guantanamo cannot and should not
exist in the long term. Ways must be found to handle prisoners
differently."
Surveys show that among the 72 per cent of Europeans opposed to
US foreign policy, Germany tops the bill, with 83 per cent of
the people at odds with President Bush.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
Translate
this page
(In accordance with Title 17
U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to
those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the
included information for research and educational purposes.
Information Clearing House has no affiliation whatsoever with the
originator of this article nor is Information Clearing House
endorsed or sponsored by the originator.) |