
Germany's foreign intelligence service is to be given far more scope for taking decisive action in threatening situations under plans of the office of Chancellor Friedrich Merz, according to media reports on Thursday.
The proposals would allow sabotage operations to weaken hostile forces, according to public broadcasters WDR and NDR as well as the Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper, citing a new draft law on the country's Federal Intelligence Service BND.
A BND spokesman said that out of respect for the work of the government and the legislature, he would not comment on the amendment of the law or on any interim results.
According to the reports, the BND will no longer be limited to espionage, gathering and evaluating information, but will in future also carry out operational actions to protect the country. This would require a "special intelligence situation."
Such a threat level would have to be determined by the National Security Council comprised of key ministers, with approval from two-thirds of the members of the control panel of the Bundestag lower chamber of parliament.
The involvement of this secret committee - which monitors the work of the BND as well as the domestic intelligence service and military counter-intelligence - in such decisions would be new for the country.
Observers believe the proposed greater parliamentary involvement may be intended to reassure members of the legislature who are sceptical about expanding the BND's powers.
A special intelligence situation would reportedly be defined as one where a threat to Germany or its allies is identified, for example through another country's preparations for war or increased hybrid attacks.
In this scenario, the agency would also be allowed to actively retaliate against cyberattacks and redirect data streams or shut down IT infrastructure from which attacks are launched.
The BND will reportedly also be permitted to evaluate data using artificial intelligence and to use facial recognition software.
Agency personnel will be allowed to enter homes to install espionage technology and to secretly manipulate and sabotage equipment, such as weapon parts, to render them harmless.
The amendment to the BND Act is still in its early stages, according to the media outlets.
One aim of the planned reform is to enable the agency to act more quickly and decisively against significant increases in hybrid threats, particularly from Russia.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
The Most Compelling Books of the 10 years - 2
Pick Your Favored pizza beating - 3
'The Beast in Me' arrives on Netflix: Is it based on a true story? And what drew Claire Danes to it? What to know about the thriller series. - 4
Toyota Motor Europe to roll out smart EV charging through new partnerships - 5
EU foreign ministers commemorate Russian massacre in Bucha
See tonight’s solar storm unfold across the world
Why is the Artemis 2 rocket launch different from all other rocket launches?
Kristin Cavallari was the teen queen bee of 'Laguna Beach.' Now she's a 'cringey' mom.
Qatar LNG Ships U-Turn After Attempt to Pass Through Hormuz
Netflix’s Price Hikes Just Got Rejected by an Italian Court. Here’s Why It Matters Everywhere
Couch Styles of 2024: What's Moving
Fossil analysis changes what paleontologists know about how long T. rex took to grow full size
Motivational Travel Objections for History Buffs
What did the gov’t approve for Israel’s 2026 state budget?











