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US SPYING

Paris and Berlin axe Cold War-era surveillance pact

The impact of the US online spying affair continues to have knock-on effects in Europe. Berlin announced on Tuesday that it had cancelled a Cold War surveillance pact with France after coming to a "mutual agreement" with Paris.

Paris and Berlin axe Cold War-era surveillance pact
Berlin has annulled its surveillance pact with Paris. File photo: Dano/Flickr

Germany said on Tuesday it had cancelled a 1960s surveillance pact with France after annulling similar accords with the US and Britain in the wake of revelations about US online spying.

The 1969 accord was axed "in mutual agreement", the foreign ministry said, four days after the Washington and London accords were axed amid the debate on data privacy protection sparked by the snooping scandal.

The so-called administrative agreements dating from the Cold War-era reportedly allowed the former Allies to request surveillance data from Germany's intelligence services when it related to the safety of their troops stationed in Germany.

Germans are especially sensitive to the issue of state surveillance with memories of the methods employed by the Nazis and East Germany's communist regime still very much alive.

Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said that, with the last annulment, Germany was "continuing our course in light of the recent debate about privacy protection in a consistent way".

Britain, the United States and France stationed troops in West Germany after World War II and it was an important base for the NATO allies during the Cold War.

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FRANCE GERMANY

‘We want to move ahead’: Macron and Merkel to sign new Franco-German treaty

French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel will sign a new treaty with Merkel's spokesman saying France and Germany: "want to move ahead to ensure the security and wellbeing of citizens as well as a strong, sovereign and democratic Europe."

'We want to move ahead': Macron and Merkel to sign new Franco-German treaty
Photo: AFP

French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel will sign a new treaty on January 22 to further strengthen Franco-German cooperation in the run-up to next year's EU elections, Macron's office said Tuesday.

The two leaders, both of whom have been weakened domestically, will meet in the French border town of Aix-la-Chapelle to ink an accord “which will strengthen the already close ties between Germany and France,” the French presidency said.

Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert said the eurozone's two biggest economies “want to move ahead to ensure the security and wellbeing of citizens as well as a strong, sovereign and democratic Europe.”

The treaty will cover joint projects in the areas of defence, climate change and security as well as the sensitive issue of “economic and social convergence,” the French presidency statement said.

The meeting comes as Merkel enters the twilight of her rule and Macron attempts to defuse the “yellow vest” anti-government rebellion which has engulfed French cities over the past seven weeks.

The couple seen as the glue of the European project will meet in the town hall of Aix-la-Chapelle, former capital of the ninth-century Carolingian Empire, which laid the foundation for Germany, France and several other modern European countries.

The French and German parliaments will, on the same day, adopt a draft agreement on closer cooperation in the form of a 100-member joint parliamentary assembly, the French statement said.

France and Germany's ruling parties and their allies fear an unprecedented challenge from populists in May's European Parliament elections.

In his New Year's address Macron said he would set out his vision for a “renewed European project” in the coming weeks.

The 41-year-old centrist was elected on a promise to revolutionise the post-Brexit EU but Germany shot down his proposals for a huge common fund, with Berlin agreeing only to a limited budget to finance investment.

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