The Corner

National Security & Defense

NATO, Germany, and Cyber-Insecurity

(Kacper Pempel/Reuters)

Germany is, among the largest NATO members, one of the weakest links in the Atlantic Alliance. Under the circumstances, this doesn’t make pleasant reading.

The Financial Times:

The head of Germany’s national cyber security agency [the BSI] Arne Schönbohm has been sacked over reports of his alleged ties to Russian intelligence.

A government statement said interior minister Nancy Faeser had released Schönbohm from his duties with immediate effect after the German media aired accusations against him.

The allegations centre on his links to an organisation known as the “German Cyber Security Council”, which he co-founded roughly a decade ago. According to reports in the German media, one of its members is a company founded by a former Russian intelligence agent.

To stress two points, these are only allegations, and any country can be vulnerable to espionage. Nevertheless, this was not entirely reassuring (my emphasis added):

Schönbohm has been in the public spotlight since a report on the German TV programme ZDF Magazin Royale this month highlighted his relationship with the German Cyber Security Council. The BSI chief had given a speech at the council’s 10-year anniversary celebration earlier this year, although he had told subordinates not to appear at its events.

The programme also focused on a Berlin-based cyber security company called Protelion that had until recently been a member of the council. The company, which was previously called Infotecs, was a subsidiary of a Russian company called OAO Infotecs. According to the research network Policy Network Analytics, OAO Infotecs was founded by a former employee of the KGB, whom Russian president Vladimir Putin had rewarded with an honorary medal.

Protelion declined to comment. OAO Infotecs could not be reached for comment.

The German Cyber Security Council last week said it had excluded Protelion as a member, saying its actions had been a “violation of the goals” of the association.

This, as the FT explains, comes at a time when NATO members are increasingly worried about Moscow’s capacity for sabotage.

The Schönbohm scandal comes at a time of heightened fears that Russia might target Germany’s critical infrastructure over its support for Ukraine. This month the country’s rail network fell victim to an act of sabotage that briefly paralysed all train services in northern Germany.

More to come, I fear.

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