“Fallout Continues from German/U.S. Double Agent” is the headline of Deutsche Welle (DW) Sunday, but the headline is an understatement, as Germany responds, across the political spectrum, to British puppet Obama’s unrelenting spying on Germany, treating it, in effect, as an enemy state. On July 2, German authorities arrested a 31-year-old employee of Germany’s foreign intelligence service, the BND, who reportedly sold 218 documents to an unnamed U.S. intelligence agency for 25,000 euros ($33,000), according to the German news agency DPA, which cited unnamed BND officials. This BND aide copied the documents to his flash drive. Of the documents sold, reportedly three pertain to a just-launched German parliamentary inquiry into NSA surveillance programs. The DW story says that the man offered his services to to the U.S. Embassy in Berlin, but that “the U.S., rather than notifying the BND, may have taken him up on his offer, one person said.” On July 4, Deputy Foreign Minister Stephan Stei
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