US and Germany allegedly developing secret spy satellites
The U.S. and Germany will jointly develop, according to Wikileaks, and a new secret spy satellites - despite fierce resistance, particularly from France. The Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten on Monday quoted from the dispatches of the U.S. Embassy in Berlin between February 2009 and February 2010.
The project, named HiROS, envisions the construction of an undetermined number of high-resolution observation satellites capable of spotting any object on the planet down to a size of just 50 centimeters (about 1.5 feet), according to classified cables from the US embassy in Berlin leaked to WikiLeaks and obtained by Norwegian daily Aftenposten.
The satellites will have the capacity to take infrared images at night and to send images much quicker back to earth than the satellites currently in service, the cables showed.
Due to the controversial nature of the program, US and German officials have decided it should be presented as a civilian project with environmental aims, run by commercial entities.
But in reality it is "under the total control" of German intelligence service BND and the German aerospace center DLR, the cables showed.
The US embassy cables quoted in Norwegian by Aftenposten cover a period from February 2009 to February 2010. They also show that some countries, "especially France," have tried to stop the project with every means possible.
The opposition from Paris however appears to have been brushed aside by German officials, who according to the cables, said they were sick of being "outmaneuvered by France."
"Absolutely no cooperation is planned with France or any other EU country when it comes to the HiROS project," DLR executive Andreas Eckart was quoted as saying.
According to Aftenposten, the satellites would cost an estimated €205 million ($274 million) and were scheduled to enter service between 2012 and 2013.
Officially, France and Germany are involved in the common Multinational Space-based Imaging System (MUSIS), along with Belgium, Spain, Greece and Italy.
Contacted by news agency AFP, the US embassy in Oslo refused to comment on any information emerging from the some 250,000 US diplomatic cables leaked to whistleblowing website WikiLeaks. The German embassy also refused to comment.
WikiLeaks has so far only made public around 2,000 of the cables in its possession, in cooperation with publications El Pais, The Guardian, The New York Times, Le Monde and Der Spiegel.
Aftenposten , however, said last month it had obtained all the diplomatic documents and would publish stories based on them independently of WikiLeaks' own releases.
The satellites will have the capacity to take infrared images at night and to send images much quicker back to earth than the satellites currently in service, the cables showed.
Due to the controversial nature of the program, US and German officials have decided it should be presented as a civilian project with environmental aims, run by commercial entities.
But in reality it is "under the total control" of German intelligence service BND and the German aerospace center DLR, the cables showed.
The US embassy cables quoted in Norwegian by Aftenposten cover a period from February 2009 to February 2010. They also show that some countries, "especially France," have tried to stop the project with every means possible.
The opposition from Paris however appears to have been brushed aside by German officials, who according to the cables, said they were sick of being "outmaneuvered by France."
"Absolutely no cooperation is planned with France or any other EU country when it comes to the HiROS project," DLR executive Andreas Eckart was quoted as saying.
According to Aftenposten, the satellites would cost an estimated €205 million ($274 million) and were scheduled to enter service between 2012 and 2013.
Officially, France and Germany are involved in the common Multinational Space-based Imaging System (MUSIS), along with Belgium, Spain, Greece and Italy.
Contacted by news agency AFP, the US embassy in Oslo refused to comment on any information emerging from the some 250,000 US diplomatic cables leaked to whistleblowing website WikiLeaks. The German embassy also refused to comment.
WikiLeaks has so far only made public around 2,000 of the cables in its possession, in cooperation with publications El Pais, The Guardian, The New York Times, Le Monde and Der Spiegel.
Aftenposten , however, said last month it had obtained all the diplomatic documents and would publish stories based on them independently of WikiLeaks' own releases.
AFP/mry
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