| By MARK LANDLER,
 New York Times
 
 Published: July 11, 2007
 
 FRANKFURT, July 11 - While the British public reacted to the latest
 terrorist strike there with stoicism and a practiced determination to get on
 with their lives, Germany has erupted in a rancorous dispute over how to
 deal with a terrorist threat that has yet to materialize here.
 
 The debate, which has simmered for months, flared up again in the wake of
 the botched car bombings in London, after Germany's top security official,
 Wolfgang Schäuble, said Germany should consider detaining potential
 terrorists and sanctioning the killing of terrorist leaders abroad.
 
 Mr. Schäuble, a conservative politician who is the country's interior
 minister, also said that the police should be allowed to conduct clandestine
 searches of private computers by way of the Internet, a practice now
 forbidden.
 
 "The old categories no longer apply," Mr. Schäuble said in an interview with
 the magazine Der Spiegel. "We have to clarify whether our constitutional
 state is sufficient for confronting the new threats."
 
 Mr. Schäuble's remarks, which were confirmed by his spokesman, have set off
 a storm of protest from opposition leaders, and even from Social Democratic
 members of his own "grand coalition" government.
 
 
 Alting skrider jo, hvis man ikke ved hvem der er demokrater, og hvem der er
 det modsatte. 007 med licens til at dræbe, er jo fra en anden tid, som meget
 gerne skulle være et overstået kapitel, - ellers begynder man jo at ligen
 Putins Rusland.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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