Reports of US Skipping G7 Summit Over NSA Surveillance False - White House

© AP Photo / Charles DharapakUS President Barack Obama, third left, walks with, from left to right: Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi; Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper; British Prime Minister David Cameron; European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso; French President Francois Hollande; Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe; after a G7 group photo
US President Barack Obama, third left, walks with, from left to right: Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi; Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper; British Prime Minister David Cameron; European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso; French President Francois Hollande; Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe; after a G7 group photo - Sputnik International
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Earlier on Tuesday, German tabloid Bild reported citing its sources that US President Barack Obama could skip the G7 summit if the German government decided to handover a list of US spying targets to parliament.

WASHINGTON (Sputnik) — The reports of Washington allegedly threatening to skip the G7 summit in Bavaria over a possible revelation of US surveillance targets to German parliament are false, US National Security Council Spokesperson Ned Price told Sputnik on Tuesday.

"To be clear, we have not threatened — nor even contemplated — withdrawing from the Summit over intelligence-related matters. Any suggestion otherwise is completely false."

 

Price stressed that Washington remained in touch with the chancellery regarding the ongoing German parliamentary inquiry, but this issue was "ultimately an internal German matter."

"The President looks forward to meeting with Chancellor Merkel next month at the G-7 to discuss pressing global challenges. Indeed, we work closely with Germany on all matters of international concern, and the Germans are indispensable partners," the spokesperson concluded.

BND monitoring base in Bad Aibling, near Munich, Germany - Sputnik International
Obama Could Skip G7 Summit in Bavaria Over NSA Spying Row – German Paper
The two-day summit is scheduled to kick off on June 7 in Bavaria’s castle Elmau, less than 60 miles from the notorious Bad Aibling monitoring station used by US spying agency NSA to eavesdrop on EU firms and officials.

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Socialist coalition partners regard NSA snooping on EU targets as a violation of EU and German laws.

The Socialist Democrat (SPD) Secretary General Yasmin Fahimi told Bild on Tuesday they had given the chancellery until June 8 to disclose the lists of so-called selectors — email addresses and phone numbers — that the NSA passed on to its German colleagues in Bavaria.

SPD chief Sigmar Gabriel said this was not an ultimatum, but added that he expected Merkel to comply.

The NSA could limit cooperation with Germany’s Federal Intelligence Service (BND) in warning of possible terrorist attacks if its spying targets are dragged into the light, the tabloid reported citing German security sources.

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