THE W. GERMANS: EYES TO THE EAST

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP88-01314R000300380029-1
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 8, 2004
Sequence Number: 
29
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 26, 1975
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP88-01314R000300380029-1.pdf525.78 KB
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WASHINGTON POST 26 December 1975 Approved For Relea.~e,20. 4/09/28 : CIA-RDP88-01314R0 As in -the Uriitecl States, I ~" i1'` wiretaps here must he by c'nnrt ro?rlpr? Rut n No a,: in the .. I V I1/LCII JLa I.CJ, L({CI c t11'; evcr les wiretaps s tha o t the ast vernment claimed it never I.n.r n( n .1y ilia; B Michael Getter BONN--lt'est Germany's, foreign ? intelligence.,sc:r-' vice -set up almost 30-years ago with the quiet help and- money of the U.S. Central? Intelhgenc:e agent v is t struggling to' overcome some of the same kind of public einbarrassments.,;that, its American counterpart has suffered, The West Germans are not in the same league as, the CIA, Other Cloaks, Other [daggers= V1 however. By-. and.large %the - surfaced here occasionally . ' over the years have been smaller and less dramatic;.': than those that have recently dealt hammer blows, to the image of the American'in- telligence service The West German public and Parliament appear-to- have a higher tolerance of questionable activities, by their own intelligence agen- cies. It i5 areaction explained - in part., no doubt;, by- the generally?conservative? tilt:; of the.adult population here and by" this country a:;:: unique . geographical position oil the front line-with t onimunist East -Europe " Nevertheless the, .Atlantic :Uliai~ce may now ' be paying a price for the -peculiar, problems that both of these -huge intelligence services?are becoming noted for.'Although. cooperation is officially good, there is evidence that the extra dimension'1 of cooperation ?- . between American and West--German.., intelligence may `now be missing. Since the widespread disclosure.of CIA misdeeds by 11 Congress and the press, ex- ! time-,- in. espionage . in.' perienced allied, specialists i vesttgations and , then say they are convinced the' released. The West German West Germans are holding; press, with the exception of an back from Washington some occasional burst of attention, of their most sensitive in- normally by the weekly 11 formation for fear of public newsmagazine Der Spiegel, disclosure. does not focus much attention These specialists also on West German intelligence acknowledge that the: for;some of the-same reasons A6% ~M& U.S. Army-. and the Bonn proven, it was also estimated government claimed that the that there vert many more i use of the stationery wasa dossiers ancF that those-? versation was authentic.-The J destroyed, despite Ehmke's identified., Next spring, the BND will be Catching spies' inside West'. 20 years old But its history Germany is' the responsibility - really goes back to World War of the West German-. Ii, when Gen. Richard Gehlen equivalent of the FBI, rather. ran Hitler's eastern-. in- than the BND. German in- telligence service. When Nazi terior secur - Germany collapsed,.Gehlep,- ity officials, in a report last, some of his staff,. his year, said they uncovered reputation, and his files on the.:. twice as many spies in 1974 as Russians survived and-were they (lid in 1973, despite ' . eagerly scooped up by the US.; Unofficially, it is claimed In the - Cold ' War 'at- that are being caught or head of all German foreign uncovered by the German intelligence in 1946 with `the:- Office for the Protection of the.. blessing of the U.S Army and Constitution, But the general the,- fledgling CIA, officially view of Western officials here : established the following year.: remains that the West Ger- West German irilelligence mans are still losing this battleheadquarters then,, as now,. is against the East, Europeans, in Puilach in the heart of in still .larger numbers of-" In. 1955,"'._; , Gehlen"s Many. of the scandals that",' the BND by a Cabinet decree ' have surfaced here are linked . to this-special problem. of the Adenauer government The most jolting examples. rather than bylaw. were the disclosure in 1961 The general remained at the that the BND's chief of Soviet top until 1968, always unseen counterintelligence, Heinz by the, public. He retained a Felfe. was a Russian spy, and ... certain mystique and prestige the 1974 resignation of federal-, until 1969;,; when disclosures chancellor Willy Brandt after'. began to appear' that his it was discovered that one of organization had been'out- his top aides-Gunther distanced by the East Ger Guillaume-was an East mans. The Guillaume affair German agent. There have - ,, would later produce tales been episodes. Gehlen and charges that the was not aimed at the BN < Gehlen was succeeded as telligence-but rather at West under Gehlen in ..Hitler's German internal security.. 4 eastern intelligence operation Information on Guillaume was and went on to a career in the available for many years but West German army. was in the wrong files.and { never properly pieced . Because of the.< heavy together. American involvement in the The aftermath. of the i 'BND's- birth, it is not sur- Guillaume affair produced prising that it has much in most of what is on the public common with the CIA. - deal, in foreign intelligence Americans have never gotten over their suspicions. that the West German federal in- telligence service--commonly known by its initials B ND- is' too vulnerable to infiltration by Communist: agents, par-: example took place last year when; an embarrassing telephone conversation bet- ween two top politicians showed up verbatim in the magazine Stern, - The transcript was on U.S._. 0300380029_1 Horst Ehmke, the former chief of Brandt's chancellory, told the West German Parliament last year that an iinvestigdtion had turned up at least 54 dossiers of well-known West German politicians and public figures secretly put together by the BND during the 1950s and 1960s in apparent violation of its charter to collect information outside West Germany's borders only.. J Although it has. never been ticularly from East Germany..= Thus the CIA is-also un-" derstood to be holding back to some extent. on the West' Germans. The fear of being copromised is also said,'to extend to?? the U.S.; National:.'. Security' few of?its.:latest' super-secret .4 code-breaking: and com munications projects BND which officially, admits to more than`5,000 persons on ;:. aggressiveness,, by the huge.'% East;Germans having fled to the ,_"= test< since 1949, with' assimilation: no- problem for the would-be spy among them, the Bonn government has had its-hands full. over the years just,: trying to , protect itself' it has:been widely but, unoffi Tally 'estimated that between 10.000 and t5-non': East Germans- and Poles but. open and democratic society at any one time.. i Efforts to uncover the hordes', of .foreign spies ' operating in- West. Germany causeoccasional . in fringements of the civil. Fights of the innocent. How much is. hard to measure. There are occasionally reports of persons being -arrested, held for quite some TA only 'but have vogue Imes in their 'charters' bout protec- ting such intelligence in their own country. Both not only collect but assess what they err'lect, unlike the British who .id to leave the analysis to -rother group. Until recently, ,h did not have very clear or ,. r ong lines of political control by their governmentsc There are also.-vast dif- ferences primarily=- growing. out- of West Germany's position facing Communist spies and armies. Unlike the CIA's global reach, the West,' German service is- heavily-,, concentrated' on!,-. Eastern *ls urope. ieest Germany's idULIUlA WL 3laa auaup W.ll~h1.L1 l.Fl'UJN .UUd'1' number of so-called sources in 2,- December 19'l j the massive East-West spy P !t~saMLlfsoac 1ftle s es~eOt~4/09/28 : CIA-RDP88-01314ROO0300380029-1 now t a the BND has an ex traordinarily difficult target to penetrate. No intelligence service is really any better] than its ability to infiltrate agents or attract dissidents or a lackluster West' German intelligence product. may the -same language and:I cultural advantage in East Germany as the .East Ger in the,. Third. World.. may mans in West Germany. But eventually foster