Berlin--Chancellor Angela Merkel's government faces growing pressure over claims that Germany helped the United States spy on EU leaders and companies, and that a ministry lied about it.
Analysts expect the popular Merkel to weather the scandal, but her close ally, Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere, has drawn media and opposition fire over the "BND affair", referring to the foreign spy service.
The core question is whether his ministry misled parliament when, as recently as April 14, it claimed to have no knowledge of alleged US economic spying in Europe, and of Germany's involvement.
German media have reported that US intelligence asked the BND to eavesdrop on the online, phone and other communications not just of terror suspects but also of aviation giant Airbus, the French presidency and EU Commission.
Conservative daily Die Welt said the scandal now "has reached the chancellery", after the mass-circulation Bild newspaper portrayed de Maiziere -- Merkel's former chief-of-staff responsible for overseeing intelligence services -- as a liar, picturing him with a Pinocchio nose.
Bild, which usually supports Merkel, labelled her "hypocritical" for having voiced moral outrage over 2013 revelations that the US National Security Agency (NSA) had listened to her mobile phone.
Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert and de Maiziere have denied that the government misled parliament about the surveillance activities, pledging all would be explained behind closed doors to parliamentary panels looking at the secret services.
One opposition member of the secret services committee, Greens party lawmaker Hans-Christian Stroebele, demanded Thursday that Merkel's government come clean on what it knew and when it knew it, charging that "parliamentarians can no longer believe what the government tells them."
"If it is indeed confirmed that her ... friends in Paris were knowingly spied on by the BND ... then things can hardly get any more embarrassing," said Stroebele, a critic of US secret services who has visited fugitive intelligence leaker Edward Snowden in Moscow.
AFP