Macron demands to know if US is still spying on EU leaders
[PARIS] French President Emmanuel Macron urged the US to clarify media reports that American intelligence monitored German Chancellor Angela Merkel and other European politicians with the help of Denmark.
"If the information is correct, then that's unacceptable between allies, and even less so between European allies," Mr Macron told reporters after a bilateral meeting with Dr Merkel. "We expect complete openness and a clarification of the facts from our Danish and American partners."
The aim isn't just to find out what spying activities happened in the past, but also to determine "which practices are still going on today" in order to maintain trust between the US and Europe, he said, adding that "there's no room for suspicion between us."
Dr Merkel said she agreed with Mr Macron's position.
Denmark's state broadcaster DR cited a classified report saying that the Danish Defence Intelligence Service allowed the US National Security Agency to use the country's internet cables for spying on Dr Merkel and politicians in France, Sweden and Norway.
Denmark is one of America's closest allies in Europe.
GET BT IN YOUR INBOX DAILY
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
The latest spying allegations come years after Wikileaks reported that the US had bugged the phone of Dr Merkel and other world leaders. Then-President Barack Obama promised that the US wouldn't spy again on Germany during his tenure.
BLOOMBERG
KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
International
Indonesia to drive the growth of Asean’s green economy: PM Lee
Vietnam April exports up 10.6% y/y, industrial output up 6.3%
Inflation overshadows US economic resilience, hurting Biden
South-east Asia heat wave shuts schools, stokes power demand
Star Entertainment chair Foster steps down, adds to management exodus
Fading bets of early RBA cuts frustrate Albanese reelection plan