The German Ministry of Defense announced today that investigates possible interception of private conversation mamong senior Air Force officers regarding the war in Ukraine.

“We are looking into whether communications linked to the Air Force were targeted, military counterintelligence (BAMAD) has taken all the necessary measures,” a ministry spokesman said.

German media reported the case came to light after Russian accounts close to the Kremlin published what appeared to be a recording of a conversation between German officers on social media.

These mainly refer to the scenario of the use by the Ukrainian forces of long-range German-made Taurus missiles and their possible effects, especially if they are used against targets such as the Crimean bridge connecting the Kerch peninsula with Russian territory.

Experts interviewed by German magazine Der Spiegel said the conversation is authentic.

Ukraine has long been asking Germany for these types of missiles, which have a range of more than 500 kilometers. but so far Berlin has refused citing the risk of escalating the conflict.

“If this story is confirmed, it will be particularly problematic,” said the chairman of the parliamentary committee responsible for the control of secret services, Constantin von Notch, speaking to the RND group of newspapers.

“The question is whether this is an isolated case or a structural security problem” within the German military, he added.

A defense expert for the main opposition party, the Christian Democrats (CDU), Roderich Kiesewetter, assessed that “the conversation was deliberately released by Russia at this particular moment with a specific aim”, to stop in its infancy the discussion in Germany about the supply of Taurus to Ukraine.

“And other conversations have certainly been intercepted and will be published later in order to serve Russia’s interests,” he predicted, speaking to the ZDF television network.

According to Spiegel, the conversation between the officers lasted half an hour and came from a video conference held on the public WebEx platform and not on an internal, secret military network, raising questions about the Bundeswehr’s internal security rules.