BONN AND ITS MAY ENEMIES WITHIN: SPY SCANDALS BARE ITS VULNERABILITY

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000504230005-6
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RIFPUB
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K
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2
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 24, 2012
Sequence Number: 
5
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Publication Date: 
December 10, 1985
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OPEN SOURCE
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Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/24: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504230005-6 / nL.n 'vnI\ I arIGJ ON liZE1 AE i 0 December 1985 Bonn and. Its Many Enemies Within: Spy Scandals Bare Its Vulnerability /( - d7 JAMES M. II~AlQ1AM sp?!al to no lWw Yat Tlmu BONN, Dec. 7 - An undulating wall of cement, steel and barbed wire sepa- rates West and East Germany, but for Communist spies the frontier is the most penetrable in a divided Europe. Several thousand agents of the East German Ministry for State Security are thought to spy on ministries and in- dustries West Germany, pursuing an estimated three-fourths of the Warsaw Pact's espionage on NATO's most im- portant European member. Sharing a common language and cul- ture with West Germany, they operate with little apparent fear of detection or arrest by authorities. In recent days, a dosed-door parlia- mentary investigative commission meeting in Bonn has exposed some of the vulnerabilities of an open society in East-West espionage. secret Hans-Joachim testimony disclosed that edge, a senior com- terintelligence official who defected to East Germany in August, had betrayed two Western agents who had infiltrated ;the inner circle of the ruling Commu- :nist establishment in East Berlin. This 'revelation was quickly passed to the press, provoking what amounted to an unusual confirgratlon of its veracity. "This is why we didn't want to have ,an inquiry in the first place," said mi. chael Butz, an Interior spokesman. "Too much info can be leaked." ,Spies Believed Planted Among the Immigrants The chain of spy scandals that has agitated Bonn for the last five months has highlighted the peculiarities of a sundered Germany. It is one of the .curiosities of Germany's postwar divi- sion that the strivings of Bonn govern. ments to keep alive the Idea of a united Germany have made it easier for Com- munist agents to conduct their work of political, military and industrial espio, page. . Last year, the Government of Chan- cellor Helmut Kohl congratulated itself that some 40,000 East Germans had been legally allowed to emigrate west- ward. Yet West German counterintelli- gence officers consider it inevitable that a new generation of so-called "per- spective agents" - whose work will hot show results for a decade - has been seeded among the immigrants. "It is not that we have more spies than the United States or France," said a Bonn Cabinet minister. "It is just that here suspicion extends over mil- lions of people. In an American city you might write down the names of all spy suspects in a notebook. You can't do that here." "There are three million Germans from the D.D.R. living in West Germa- ny," said an American intelligence Officer, using the German initials for the German Democratic Republic. "How are you supposed to keep track of all of them?" Bonn also presses East Berlin to take steps that will make it easier and cheaper for West Germans to visit friends and relatives in the East. Yet Yearly, according to intelligence offi- cials, several hundred visiting West Germans are crudely blackmailed by East German operatives who try to convert them to agents when they re? turn home. Through staged traffic accidents or threatened reprisals against East Ger- man relatives, the visitors are pres- sured to sign compromising contracts. Some refuse; others sign and denounce their actions on their return, to the West. But a few succumb. The Ministry for State Security also lures unsuspecting university students through mfreelauce "research" that slowly enmesh them in espionage- And so-called Romeos have had as- tounding success in wooing middle. t e Bonn star secrets.ries into betraying Behind the Treachery, `A Bundle of Motives' Georg Pohl, who heads a Bonn-based association that advises businesses on combating espionage, said "a bundle of motives" draws West Germans into spying for the East. He cited resent- ment at missing a promotion, alcohol- ism or other personal debilities that in- vite blackmail,' and the elementary wish to lead a more exciting life. ?The M.F.S. doesn't pay as much as it should for what it gets," said Mr. Pohl, using the German initials for the i Ministry for State Security. "Money isn't the main reason that people spy. You don't make money through espio- nA broad range of West German espio- nage experts agreed that few of their countrymen become spies out of idea logical conviction. The 36-year-old Fed- eral Republic has had nothing com- parable to the cabal of Cambridge-edu- cated British intellectuals who became spies for the Soviet Union through a be- lief in the superiority of Communism. But a high-ranking West German in- telligence officer observed that Switz- erland, another nation where German is spoken, was far more resistant to in- filtration than his country. He pin- pointed the division of Germany, its 94azi past and a feeble West German national consciousness as reasons for the countrys's vulnerability. "We notice that if the D.D.R. is rather successful here, compared to Switzerland, it is because of the ab- senc a of an identity with the state in the Federal Republic," he said. The defection of Mr. Tiedge, a 19. year veteran of West Germany's coun- terintelligenee agency, may be a case After a detailed investigation, Barn's Interior Ministry has oonchuded that the Berlin-born Mr. Tiedge was not a long-term "mole" planted in the Fed- eral Office for the Defense of the Can- stitution in Cologne. Rather, according to an official privy to the investigation, Mr. Tiedge, a 48-yearold widower, made an impulsive decision to flee a burden of mounting debts and responsi- bility for three troubled teen-age daughters who were drifting Into the Cologne a sc6ne He had also Just been denied promodw In a letter written from East Berlin, the hard-drinking Mr. Tiedge said he 1had absconded because of "a hopeless personal situation." Did the Traitor Warn Three Agents to Flee? Even so, Mr. Tledge's abrupt defect tion is generally considered the gravest operativee blow to West German intelli- gen since 1981 when Heinz Felts, an officer in charge of gathering inteW- gence on the Soviet Union, was re- vealed to have been working for a dec- ade for the K.G.B., the Soviet Intelli- gence agency. Mr. Tiedge's knowledge of West Germany's methods of coun- tering Warsaw Pact spying will make Communist offensive efforts here much easier. Interior Ministry investigators be- lieve that Mr. Tiedge, who had been re- sponsible for tracking East German spies, warned three highly placed Com- munist agents in Bonn to flee: Ursula Richter, a 52-yearold secretary in an organization of former refugees; Her- bert Whiner, a senior official in a foun- dation close to the liberal Free Demo- cratic Party, and his wife, Herta-As- trid Wiliner, a long-serving secretary in the Chancellor's office. The same officials assert that Mr Tiedge was unaware that Sonja Lune- burg, a secretary to Economics Minis- ter Martin Bangemann, was a spy. In- filtrated into the Federal Republic in the 1900's under the identity of a West German who had moved to the East, the 80-year-old Miss Ltineburg set, off the Bonn spy scandal by failing to re- turn from vacation on Aug. 2. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/24: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504230005-6 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/24: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504230005-6 Since Miss Luneburg was not under surveillance or suspicion, her dlnp- pearance remains a mystery. East German diplomats have privately told high-ranidng members of the Kohl Government that she did not work for the Ministry for State Seedily. "DO. Just be arse they say tit doesn't mean It s the truth," ace intelligence official said. Investigators are Inclined to bellows that Margaret. Bohe+? a secretary in the offices of President Richard vm? Weizoilcker, had been working for the K.G.B. for 18 years. She was arrested an Aug. 25 after having been observed meeting in Copenhagen with a man called Pram Becker, a Gorman-sposk- ing agent who hod bass lover. err cording to 015ciai& The Soviet Union, Poland and Cz echosiovakia have been known tore- cruit agents from German-speaking minorities In their own' count rlee fist spying in West Germany, Spying Scandal Bring' Fall of a Chancellor The Tiedge scandal has lllumiaated what critics contend are wealmen In Week Germany's Intelligence Prods dares. One has been a reluctance of Bonn governments to take measures that would seem to discriminate against settlers from East Germany - like Mr. Willner, a veteran of the Nazi SS and the East German Communist Party. The immigrant issue came dramati- cally into focus In 1974 when Chancellor Willy Brandt was forced to resign after an East German agent Gtinter Guil- laume, an immigrant from East Ger- many, was discovered in his entourage. An investigative commission recom- mended in. a post-mortem report that resettled East Germane should be sub. ject to more thorough security docks. But Chancellor Helmut Scbimidt's left- of-center Government refused to en- dorse the recommendation, which re. maimed a dead letter. "The problem for us is that we can- not put all the people who come from the D.D.R. under a blanket of mis- trust," commented Gerhard Baum, a former Interior Minister in ,the Schmidt Cabinet and a leading figure in; the Free Democratic Party. East Germany's Counn mist rules, by contrast, go to oxsraardlnary lengths to seal on sonottivsly placed at- ficials from any contacts with the Went. Ranking members of the Minis- try for State Security, for example, live in luxurious gbstta and are watched 21, hours a day. "There is no member of the People's Army who has a relative in the Federal Republic," observed Heisbert Helleo- broich, the former head of the Office for the Defame of the Constitution. ?Tbey we the danger. They are Ger- man. This makes them bard to pens. ttate." Low Morale Said to Hurt Intelligence Services 0 According to various specialists, low moral* in the West German Intelli- a e community the two problem Traditionally, main hntelllgsnoe services have not had and governments have to how late themselves from what have be. come chronic problem areas. Since the fending of the Federal Ra- pubiid, every bead of the Office for the Defbne of the Constitution has do. parted because of scandal. Mr. HefeD. broicb, who had been promoted to take over the Federal Intelligence Service, would have been the ftrg exception to this rule, but he was diamiwd for hav- ins allowed Mr. Tiedge, a clear sa curity- risk, to keep his past. Morale was not heightened, experts maintain, by the Kohl Government't impulse to play down the Tledge span. dal to protect diplomatic re4tiaoa with East Germany. As the affair was pealr, ing, From Josef Strauss, the powerfal Bavarian President, said at a news conference in the East German city of Leipzig that intelligence services mostly reported nonsense. Colleagues of Interior Minister Frie- drich Zimmermann contend that an ex. cessive concern for individual privacy - embodied in legislation from the Brandt-Schmidt era - has inhibited camterespionage. One ministry offi- cial noted that such scruples have pre vented photographs from being at- tached to the dossiers of secretaries and others who undergo security checks. "So if you want to put somebody under surveillance," this official said, "you have to first go and get a photo. graph of him so that the people watch. ing him know who he is and what he looks like.,, This official also argued that the tromely strict West German lon the egislation of telephones and mail Interception overly Iimits such activi- ties. The law stipulates that if a tele- phone tap does not lead to prosecution the person concerned must be informed of the action; rather than provoke civil rights scandals, the official said, the ministry errs qn the side of prudence. New Chief Is Expected `To Shake Things Up' Some critics from friendly NATO services contend that a bureaucratic mentality pervades West German in- telligence, and they welcome the ap- pointment of the hard-driving Ran*. Georg Wieck, a professional diplomat with experience in the Soviet Union, to head the Federal Intelligence Service. "Pullach is a four-and-a-half-day- week place," a NATO tots ligssce offi` per complained, using the name of the service's headquarters. "Yoe 'should ' try to get a phone call through there as a Friday afternoon. Wieck will shake things up" . Western experts, regularly warn against a tendency glamorize the East German Ministry for State Se- curity. But over the years the ministry has enjoyed political backing, conti- nuity in its leadership - Gen. Markus I Wolf has led its intelligence-gathering wingsiu~ 150O's - and status in the hierarchy. "They have a stricter discipline than the army or the police and live in their own world segregated from the peo- ple," commented From Loeser, a high- ranking East German Communist who defected In 1981. "The frishteo is that over the years time has been a tremendous growth of the machine of the secret police You can visually on that by the number of huge building the secret police have built in East Ber- lin." In their contest with the West, the East German services have suffered setbacks - most spectacularly in 1979 when Werner Stiller, a top-ranking offi- cer in the Ministry for State Security, defected to West Berlin. But the minis- try's cam mentality and. Marxist- Laoioist indoctrtnation dearly enable many East German officers to ward elf the temptatiaos of the good life in the, West ..There is such a thing as Ideological motivation," an American intdlhgano.. officer warned. "You and I don't be- lieve in it, but it exists." d Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/24: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504230005-6