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President Obama told Germany's ZDF TV that he did not want to "harm" his relationship with Mrs Merkel
President Barack Obama has said he will not let controversial surveillance by US intelligence services undermine Washington's ties with Germany.
Speaking to Germany's ZDF TV, he indicated that US bugging of Chancellor Angela Merkel's mobile phone had been a mistake and would not happen again.
After the row broke out last year, Mrs Merkel accused the US of an unacceptable breach of trust.
On Friday, Mr Obama ordered curbs on how intelligence was being collected.
Personal pledgeOn Saturday, the US president told ZDF: "I don't need and don't want to harm that (US-German) relationship by a surveillance mechanism that somehow would impede the kind of communication and trust that we have."
- Accessing internet company data
- Tapping fibre optic cables
- Eavesdropping on phones
- Targeted spying
"As long as I'm president of the United States, the chancellor of Germany will not have to worry about this."
But he added the US intelligence services, like all others, would continue to be interested in what world governments' intentions were.
"There is no point in having an intelligence service if you are restricted to the things that you can read in the New York Times or Der Spiegel, " he said.
"The truth of the matter is that by definition the job of intelligence is to find out: Well, what are folks thinking? What are they doing?"
It is clear that President Obama thinks there is some repairing of the relationship with Germany to be done, the BBC's Stephen Evans in Berlin reports.
Mr Obama said he and Chancellor Merkel might not always be of the same opinion but that was not a "reason to wiretap", our correspondent adds.
The interview was broadcast a day after the president ordered restrictions on the use of bulk data collected by US intelligence agencies, saying civil liberties must be respected.
Details of the times, numbers and durations of phone calls - known as metadata - are currently collected and held by the National Security Agency (NSA). But Mr Obama said he was ending that system "as it currently exists".
He asked the attorney general and the intelligence community to draw up plans for metadata to be held by a third party, with the NSA requiring legal permission to access them.
Mr Obama also stressed that such data had prevented terror attacks at home and abroad, but that in tackling threats the government risked over-reaching itself.
He also pledged that the NSA would not be spying on the leaders of close allies.
Hero or traitor?Leaked documents last year revealed that the US had spied on friendly foreign leaders, including on the personal mobile phone of German Merkel.
A spokesman for Mrs Merkel said on Friday many Germans were "rightfully concerned" by spying reports and that the rights of foreign citizens must be respected.
He said Berlin would continue to hold confidential talks with the US on "a new clear basis for co-operation amongst intelligence agencies".
The leaked documents showed that the US had been collecting and storing almost 200 million text messages every day across the globe, according to the Guardian newspaper and Channel 4 News.
Edward Snowden, the former NSA contractor who leaked the information, is wanted in the US for espionage and is now living in exile in Russia.
Civil liberties groups see him as a hero for exposing what they see as official intrusions into private lives, but many Americans believe he has endangered American lives.
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