Denmark ‘helped US spy on European leaders’

1 June 2021, 12:04

German Chancellor Angela Merkel
Virus Outbreak Germany. Picture: PA

The Danish Defence Intelligence Service allegedly helped the US National Security Agency from 2012 to 2014.

Sweden’s defence minister has demanded that Denmark explain why its foreign secret service allegedly helped the US spy on European leaders, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel, more than seven years ago.

“We want the cards on the table,” said defence minister Peter Hulqvist, who added it was “unacceptable to eavesdrop on allies”.

Danish legislator Karsten Hoenge, of the left-leaning Socialist People’s Party that is supporting Denmark’s Social Democratic government, said he would quiz the Scandinavian country’s defence and justice ministers in parliament about the case.

“The government must explain how come Denmark has been acting as a willing tool for a US intelligence service, and what it will mean for co-operation with Denmark’s neighbouring countries,” he said.

The Danish broadcaster DR said the Danish Defence Intelligence Service, known in Denmark by its acronym FE, conducted in 2014 an internal investigation on whether the US National Security Agency (NSA) had used the co-operation with the Danes to spy against Denmark and neighbouring countries.

The probe, codenamed “Operation Dunhammer,” concluded that the NSA had eavesdropped on political leaders and officials in Germany, France, Sweden and Norway.

According to DR, the alleged set-up between the United States and Denmark reportedly allowed the NSA to obtain data by using the telephone numbers of politicians as search parameters.

DR said its report was based on interviews with nine unnamed sources, all of whom were said to have had access to classified information held by the FE.

The military agency allegedly helped the NSA from 2012 to 2014.

Reports in 2013 that the NSA listened in on German government phones, including Mrs Merkel’s, prompted a diplomatic spat between Berlin and Washington that soured otherwise good relations with Barack Obama’s administration.

Mrs Merkel declared that “spying among friends” was unacceptable and said later that she stood by that comment.

Still, there were also reports that Germany’s own BND intelligence agency may have helped the US spy on European companies and officials.

In a written comment to DR, Danish defence minister Trine Bramsen said the government cannot discuss intelligence matters.

She added the present government has “the same point of view” as the former Social Democratic government led by Helle Thorning-Schmidt, who was in power during that period: “the systematic wiretapping of close allies is unacceptable”.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Tributes outside the Zhuhai People’s Fitness Plaza after the crash (Ng Han Guan/AP)

Chinese man sentenced to death for killing 35 people by driving into a crowd

Israel Palestinians Gaza

Israeli troops burn Gaza hospital after forcibly removing staff and patients

Ousmane Sonko

Senegal to close all foreign military bases as it cuts ties with France

Nato secretary-general Mark Rutte close-up

Nato steps up Baltic Sea patrols amid probe into damaged undersea power cable

The wreckage of Azerbaijan Airlines Embraer 190

Azerbaijani minister suggests plane that crashed was hit by weapon

Migrants stand in line to board a bus after being deported from the US back to Mexico

Mexico tests app allowing migrants to send alert if detention in US imminent

Azerbaijan Airlines has blamed 'external interference'

Azerbaijan Airlines blames 'external interference' for plane crash that killed 38 people

Sebastian Zapeta

Man indicted in burning death of woman on New York City subway train

Kamal Adwan hospital following airstrikes on Thursday

Israel raids and burns one of Gaza’s last remaining hospitals, forcing patients and staff to remove clothes

Ex-Suzuki Motor Corp chairman Osamu Suzuki (Shizuo Kambayashi/AP)

Former Japanese car company boss Osamu Suzuki dies aged 94

Kazakhstan Azerbaijan Airliner Crash

Azerbaijan’s flag carrier suspends flights to more Russian cities after crash

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

Netanyahu says Israeli air strikes on Yemen to continue 'until the job is done' despite injury to WHO crew member

Yemen Israel

Houthi rebels fire missile at Israel hours after airstrikes on Yemen airport

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier (S’ren Stache/dpa via AP)

Germany’s president dissolves parliament ahead of February election

The famous faces we lost in 2024

A-list singers, actors, sports stars and politicians: Remembering some of the famous faces we lost in 2024

New reports point to Russian involvement in the plane crash.

Russia 'denied emergency landing' to Azerbaijan Airlines plane and 'jammed GPS system' before crash