What’s worse:
the NSA or the East German Stasi?
BY CHRISTIAN
CARYL
President Barack
Obama is headed off to Germany next week, and while he's there he should expect
to get an earful about the National Security Agency surveillance scandals that
have been dominating the news in the United States over the past week.
The Germans are
scandalized. "Germans so outraged at U.S. over spying that Merkel will
raise the issue directly with Obama, says the Washington Post. A leading German data protection
official is telling German
Internet users to avoid American companies like Facebook and Google, since, he
says, all of the data in their networks is likely to be scooped up for use by
U.S. intelligence. A German parliamentarian says that the
revelations about the extent of National Security Agency (NSA) surveillance
remind him of the Stasi, the old East German secret police. (Let's leave aside,
for the moment, the point that European governments still do plenty of spying
of their own, and intrude in the lives of their citizens in ways that many
Americans would find repugnant.)
German
touchiness on the subject has a lot to do with history. There was that singular
unpleasantness with the Gestapo a few years back, of course -- but for all its
crimes the Nazi secret police was actually a fairly small organization that
depended heavily on a wide net of enthusiastic informers within a broadly
regime-loyal population. And then there's the horrifying tale of East Germany's Ministerium fuer Staatssicherheit, the Ministry for
State Security, known more widely by the abbreviated version of its name -- the
Stasi. It was this agency that was responsible for building up what was
probably the most expansive surveillance state in history.

















