Germany’s Office for the Protection of the Constitution as an Instrument for Character Assassination
CONTRIVED PURPOSE, WRONG TOOL:
THE SECRET SERVICE VS RELIGION
The OPC is a paradox. Its task is to protect the constitutional
state, yet many of its activities could be classified as
unconstitutional. It considers itself a stronghold against terrorist,
extremist and subversive activities and, in some federal states, against
the bogey of organized crime, yet its own agents and contacts
consistently break the law and violate basic rights. It is relied on
to defend national security, yet its existence made possible the
harvesting of thousands of western secrets by East German intelligence
during the Cold War.
It is a peculiar institution, very much a product of recent German
history. When it was established in 1949, the atrocities committed by
Hitler's secret police were fresh in everyone's memory. The allied
forces insisted that the new organization be given limited powers, so it
could not mutate into a monster like the Gestapo.
Nobody can be arrested or prosecuted by the OPC; if it wishes to
bring a prosecution, it must present its evidence to the criminal
police. But it was given extensive investigatory and intelligence
functions, and empowered to collect, analyze and disseminate information
on organizations engaging in activities considered subversive.
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