The Sueddeutsche Zeitung newspaper and the TV channel NDR reported that their investigations based on documents leaked by former National Security Agency (NSA) contractor Edward Snowden showed that Social Democrat (SPD) chancellor Schroeder was spied on by the NSA at least from 2002.
Schroeder, who headed a coalition government with the Green party between 2001 and 2005, was listed under the number 388 in the "National Sigint Requirements List" of the NSA. The list contained the names of persons and institutions to be monitored by the spy agency, the reports said.
The Sueddeutsche Zeitung and NDR said their investigations showed that Schroeder's phone may have been bugged by the NSA from 2002 and Merkel was spied on by the agency since she began her first term in 2005.
US President Barack Obama assured the German chancellor recently that spying on her would not happen again during his presidency and he would not allow US intelligence operations to damage the close friendship and cooperation between the two countries.
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Commenting on the revelations, Schroeder said in a statement that when he was in power he "would not have thought about being monitored by American intelligence agencies; now I will not be surprised," according to the reports.
Green party parliament member Hans-Christian Stroebele, the only western politician to meet Snowden in Moscow since he was granted a one-year asylum by Russia in August, said he firmly believed that Schroeder and possibly other members of the SPD-Green government were spied on by the NSA.