Security expert Christian Mölling considers the secret documents of the US government that have appeared on the Internet to be useless and not very meaningful. Mölling says the documents represent a snapshot and only highlight the events.
The security expert Christian Mölling considers the secret documents of the US government that have appeared on the Internet to be useless and not very meaningful. Mölling says on Friday in star– “Ukraine – the situation”, the documents would represent a snapshot and only highlight the events. “That’s a microscopic perspective,” warns the research director of the German Society for Foreign Relations. “We don’t have to worry about these documents because we can’t sort them. We can’t contextualize them.” In addition, it was unclear whether the information was correct at all. He points out that secret services are always careful to protect their sources: “You can never tell whether the information came from a cocktail reception, from a source that has been reliable and systematic for three years, or whether someone started ChatGPT .”
Secret material can also be wrong
The expert suggests that the services concerned may now try to cast doubt on the material’s credibility by disseminating further documents containing false information. “From an intelligence agency perspective, I would try to discredit any information that’s out there now,” he says. “This should rise in a fog.”
Anniversary of the Russian invasion
Agitators, warmongers, protesters, nuisances: the faces of the Ukraine war
Mölling supports Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock’s critical attitude towards China. This is only consistent and correct in terms of content, he says of the minister’s visit to China. He describes the “unreflected prosperity number” as old thinking and states that it is no longer enough to just focus on making money through trade with China. What the gas supplies were for Putin, the trade connections are for China: “namely, a potential for blackmail.” Therefore, a new way must be found to become freer and more independent, which is also associated with costs. Mölling also sees this in connection with the turning point in history caused by the Russian attack on Ukraine: “Most people are probably not yet fully aware of the long-term transformation phase we have entered with this war,” he says.
Source: Stern

I have been working in the news industry for over 6 years, first as a reporter and now as an editor. I have covered politics extensively, and my work has appeared in major newspapers and online news outlets around the world. In addition to my writing, I also contribute regularly to 24 Hours World.