EU Merkel Is ‘Outraged’ by Russian Hack but Struggling to Respond - Very fancy stuff


BERLIN — Chancellor Angela Merkel used strong words on Wednesday condemning an “outrageous” cyberattack by Russia’s foreign intelligence service on the German Parliament, her personal email account included. Russia, she said, was pursuing “a strategy of hybrid warfare.”
But asked how Berlin intended to deal with recent revelations implicating the Russians, Ms. Merkel was less forthcoming.
“We always reserve the right to take measures,” she said in Parliament, then immediately added, “Nevertheless, I will continue to strive for a good relationship with Russia, because I believe that there is every reason to always continue these diplomatic efforts.”
Germany and Ms. Merkel may be furious about what they see as the increasingly bold activities by Russian spies on German territory, which have ranged from toxic disinformation campaigns to cyberattacks and the daylight murder of a former Chechen commander in a Berlin park. But even as patience with President Vladimir V. Putin is running thin, officials are struggling to figure out a good way to respond.

It is another chapter in a German-Russian relationship that is close but complicated and contradictory.

Ms. Merkel has been one of the tougher leaders in Europe when it comes to Russia, demanding a strong line on maintaining economic sanctions against Moscow after the 2014 invasion of Ukraine despite some pushback in other capitals and at home.

But she has also worked hard to keep the lines to Moscow open. The two countries have many economic links, not least in the energy market, and a sizable faction in German politics believes Russia should be a primary partner.
Ms. Merkel also needs Russia’s help on several geopolitical fronts from Syria and Libya to Ukraine; on Wednesday, as the chancellor condemned the cyberattack in Parliament, Dmitry Kozak, Mr. Putin’s point man on Ukraine, was allowed to land in Berlin for talks despite a travel ban, illustrating the complexities in the German-Russian relationship.

The cyberattack on Germany’s Bundestag, the lower house of Parliament, took place in May 2015, siphoning off an estimated 16 gigabytes of data and paralyzing the entire network for several days.
Intelligence officials had long suspected Russian operatives were behind the attack, but they took five years to collect the evidence, which was presented in a report given to Ms. Merkel’s office just last week.
Officials say the report traced the attack to the same Russian hacker group that targeted the Democratic Party during the U.S. presidential election campaign in 2016.
The F.B.I. two years ago issued an arrest warrant for Dmitriy Sergeyevich Badin, a member of the hacker group known as APT 28, or “Fancy Bear,” which is attached to Russia’s foreign intelligence service, known as the G.R.U.
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Last week, Germany’s federal prosecutor’s office issued its own arrest warrant for Mr. Badin, a boyish-looking 29-year-old believed by German officials to work for a department inside the G.R.U. called Center 85.
“I am very glad that the investigations have now led to the federal public prosecutor putting a specific person on the wanted list,” Ms. Merkel told lawmakers on Wednesday. “I take these things very seriously because I believe that a very proper investigation has been carried out.”
In her comments, the chancellor was also strikingly frank about her frustration with Russia.
“On the one hand, I try to improve relations with Russia on a daily basis, and when then, on the other hand, we see that there is hard evidence that Russian forces are operating in such a way, then we are working in a field of tension, which is something that — despite the desire for good relations with Russia — I cannot completely erase from my heart,” Ms. Merkel said.

“That is unpleasant,” she said. “I also find it outrageous.”
Ms. Merkel’s parliamentary email account is not used by her, so officials say no private or sensitive emails are likely to have been stolen by the hackers.

Ms. Merkel has been the victim of a foreign power’s communications sabotage before. When the chancellor learned in 2013 that her cellphone had been tapped by the National Security Agency, following a leak of N.S.A. documents by a former contractor, Edward J. Snowden, it caused deep tensions with Washington, while Barack Obama was president.
At the time, Ms. Merkel struggled to strike a balance between appeasing a German public outraged over what it viewed as reckless disregard by the Americans for the sanctity of their personal data, and the need to continue supporting crucial cooperation between the two countries’ security services.
With Russia, Germany faces a different balancing act. For years now, Ms. Merkel and Mr. Putin have been on opposite sides of a culture war, in which the chancellor has been celebrated as a defender of Western liberal values and the Russian president as an icon of the illiberal backlash.
As such, Germany’s democracy has been a target of very different kinds of Russian intelligence operations, officials say.
In 2016, as Ms. Merkel welcomed hundreds of thousands of refugees, a news item that claimed a 13-year-old Russian-German girl had been kidnapped and raped by migrants in Germany spread quickly on Russian-language news channels. Outrage over a supposed cover-up sparked protests by members of Germany’s Russian-speaking minority across the country, shocking German politicians.
German police officials later proved that the crime never happened. But the damage was done.
On Wednesday, Ms. Merkel said Russia was waging war on multiple levels, including disinformation campaigns, “which we have to take into account and which we cannot simply ignore.”
Following the latest news on the Russian hack, the momentum for some form of response is growing, officials said. But for now it remains unclear when and how Berlin will act.
The government could summon the Russian ambassador or expel Russian diplomats, as it did in December after the federal prosecutor’s office said it suspected the Russian state was behind last year’s assassination in Berlin. But that would almost certainly prompt Moscow to send German diplomats home, too, thinning Berlin’s network inside Russia.
Other options include using European Union sanctions on cyberattackers, which impose asset freezes and travel bans on certain individuals, or pressuring Moscow to withdraw some of its many spies in Berlin. German officials believe that a third of the diplomats registered at the Russian Embassy in Berlin work for the G.R.U.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/05/...tion=click&module=RelatedLinks&pgtype=Article
Correction: May 14, 2020
An earlier version of this article incorrectly attributed responsibility for a 2016 cyberattack in which 900,000 Germans lost access to internet and telephone services. The attack was carried out by a British citizen, not Russia. The article also misstated when the attack took place. It was in November, not December. The sentence has been removed from the article.
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She'll go after random people, but not the US hijacking her phone? How does it take years and years to figure out where a cyberattack came from when it's just a single person? Merkel is a joke, owned.
 
So when does Germany end up as somebody's client state? Seriously it's just sitting out there ripe for the taking. Sweden too.

EDIT: Lol, was looking at her wikipedia page, and if this little bit isn't a fucking riot.
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"Leader of the free world" :story:
 
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lol
Hitler too was outraged at the Russian invasion of Berlin, but struggled to respond
 
So when does Germany end up as somebody's client state? Seriously it's just sitting out there ripe for the taking. Sweden too.

EDIT: Lol, was looking at her wikipedia page, and if this little bit isn't a fucking riot.
Ver archivo adjunto 1294924
"Leader of the free world" :story:

Ja, ve ahre zie leader off zie free vorld! Un vorold free off hate speech, off misgendering, off nationalism, und free of zie insecurity zat comes mit zie state security apparatus not being avare of your movements and activities at all times!

Vie Germans have un very specific notion off freedom.
 
No functioning army, a crappy economy in an EU-induced tailspin, leadership chosen for it's ability to appear progressive and diverse in all the pictures instead of possessing actual leadership qualities, you spent the last 4 years distancing yourself from traditional military and social allies on the continent (UK) and off (US) because your knee-jerk reaction to cuck out and run from anything that resembles national pride means the populists of the world must be shunned until they start supporting globalism again, and total dependence on Russia for gas imports because you kneecapped the domestic energy industry for not being green enough ( or maybe it was not hiring enough women? Can't remember, only that it was doing SOMETHING wrong...) and that means your only option to "stand up" is the usual:

Looks like it's strongly-worded-letter-to-Brussels time again, Mein Damen und Herren

Just cry while you do it to show how unhappy you are with the situation...


I would disagree with you in here. As much as one may despise Merkel or her policies, it's clear that she is a Leader with capital L, since she has sovereignly ruled Europe for almost two decades. All her posturing about being against "nationalism" etc is really just a theatre, since the whole EU is in essence a German project to dominate other European countries. And German economy can hardly be called crappy, as it's alone about 1/6 of the GDP of whole EU.

Calling UK and US "traditional social allies" is also quite fucking rich, considering that this alliance is wholesale built upon the fact that Germany got invaded by them in the end of WWII. If something, it could be said that Merkel distancing Germany from the anglosphere is a sign that NATO has failed in the first of it's mission goals, "to keep the Germans down".
 
I would retort that yes, she is the de facto leader of the EU, but, the EU is hardly something anyone respected going into the 2010's even when it wasn't crumbling. Holy Roman Emperor was a title that gave you a lot of power, yes. You might as well have been a God to the average subject under you. But in the end, it wasn't enough power to not collapse the first time someone on the outside gave you a shove, so, was it really power? Congrats, you're the meanest baddest dog in the junkyard, but step outside the gate to where the city Animal Control patrols with better equipment that you have and see how long you lst.

She's the kind of person who gets elected to power in modern-day mainland Europe, but, modern-day mainland Europe is a cucked-out institution that spends more time policing bad language on the internet and cramming in ever more non-integrating immigrants, meaning it fundamentally can't hold together. Congrats, you're the biggest clown in the circus, or charitably, maybe, the least insane at the mental hospital. Nothing good that comes out of the EU was your doing, and your support of a lot of ruinous decisioins will soon be evident as the breakdown of that project continues..

The economy isn't garbage, per se, but, is also not robust enough to survive a septic shock like the Rona' , something that bedevils almost all major modern economies who've spent the last 25 years globalizing, Trump and the UK are the only ones who stood up and even entertained the notion that might be a problem..... meanwhile, Mutti Merkel just signs bigger and bigger natural gas deals with a country she considers all but the enemy. She's been living on a constructed narrative as the ideal 21st Century ruler well beyond that idea's "sell by " date.
 
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Wasn't she a member of the stasi in her youth?
I don't have a source at hand, but no, she personally was never connected with the Stasi. She is however strangely well-connected with former political leaders of Eastern Germany, and got her start in politics in the Western part when those men were forced to quit after their positions were revealed.
 
Ja, ve ahre zie leader off zie free vorld! Un vorold free off hate speech, off misgendering, off nationalism, und free of zie insecurity zat comes mit zie state security apparatus not being avare of your movements and activities at all times!
Ihren Flugschein bitte....


All her posturing about being against "nationalism" etc is really just a theatre, since the whole EU is in essence a German project to dominate other European countries.
Its not, well it atleast didnt started like that, it was a French and Italian idea to keep the Unified germany down.
But well, Italians and French arent realy known for good plans.

I don't have a source at hand, but no, she personally was never connected with the Stasi.
Well thats up to debate. But it doesnt realy matters if she was spying on somebody or not, 1/4 of the population was doing that.
her connections to the Elite are more interesting, she is the Daughter of the Leader of the DDR church and was allowed to do stuff no regular eastern german would have been allowed to.
 

?? What is being unclear. Was for operation against corrupt doping agency. Russians get banned national sports, meanwhile athletes from elsewhere are of having blind eye turned. Anti-doping agency are givings free pass for shit like amphetamine and saying is for althetes's legit "medical reason".

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And we lost some b0iz. Dats about it.
 
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