Chers USA : Pourrait n'a pas de droit, et les grains de rendre malheureux alliés - Texte par Die Welt - Washington - Au sein de l'espace de quelques jours, ambassadeurs américains à Paris, Mexico et Berlin ont été remis en réunion de crise, et le président Barack Obama a reçu deux appels téléphoniques à partir de la colère des chefs d'État européens. Les temps sont durs pour la politique étrangère américaine, qui ne semble plus faire la différence entre ami et ennemi. Du moins, c'est l'impression désagréable créé par de nouvelles allégations que les États-Unis a été espionnage sur ses alliés et même leurs chefs de gouvernement. Le fait que le w
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Dear USA: Might Doesn't Make Right, And Moles Make Miserable Allies - Text by Die Welt - Washington - Within the space of a few days, U.S. ambassadors in Paris, Mexico City and Berlin have been called into crisis talks, and President Barack Obama has received two angry phone calls from European heads of state. These are difficult times for American foreign policy, which no longer seems to differentiate between friend and foe. At least, that is the unpleasant impression created by new allegations that the U.S. has been spying on its allies and even their heads of government. The fact that the whistleblowers - former National Security Agency employee Edward Snowden, who leaked information about phone-tapping, and journalist Glenn Greenwald, who reported it - are being treated as spies only serves to condemn the U.S. government further. This paranoid surveillance of everyone and everything is becoming highly damaging for the country's international reputation. The American media's reaction to the allegations that German Chancellor Angela Merkel's phone was tapped has been rather muted, but it seems none of the newspapers fails to mention that Merkel grew up in ''communist East Germany, '' as if her experience of the Stasi made Merkel particularly sensitive to being spied on. But the example of the Stasi shows that mass surveillance no longer leads to valuable information. It would take an impossibly large commitment of both time and manpower to evaluate such a flood of information. Surely the National Security Agency would be drowning in data if the allegations of tapping 70 million French phone calls in one month turned out to be true? It seems that U.S. columnists are not endowed with a gift for irony. Otherwise they might have reassured their allies by pointing to the ongoing problems with the Obamacare website. ''Don't worry, dear Europeans, our government employees are far too sloppy to do any damage with your data.'' Nurturing mistrust - .The American approach see
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