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imageWASHINGTON: A year after Edward Snowden revealed the vast scope of the US data dragnet, America is still reeling from the fallout, which damaged ties abroad and triggered fears of "Big Brother" government.

In the latest twist since Snowden handed over thousands of US intelligence secrets last June, Germany has launched a criminal probe into snooping on Chancellor Angela Merkel's mobile phone.

The timing is embarrassing, just as US President Barack Obama is in Europe for Friday's events marking the 70th anniversary of D-Day, also being attended by Merkel.

Former intelligence contractor Snowden, 30, remains on the run from US espionage charges, having been given temporary political asylum in Russia.

On Wednesday, American whistleblowers urged him not to return home, warning he would not face a fair trial.

Ties between Washington and Europe, as well as other nations such as Brazil, have strained since the revelations, despite assurances from Obama that he is ending spy taps on friendly world leaders.

"In Europe, there has been a significant and negative change in both elite and public attitudes toward the United States over the past 12 months," said Heather Conley, director of the Europe Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

She pointed to a November poll that found only 35 percent of Germans believed the US government was trustworthy.

"While European attitudes regarding data privacy and security have always differed from American perceptions, the damaging revelations have significantly widened these differences and complicated future transatlantic cooperation across a range of issues."

The Obama administration has insisted the National Security Agency (NSA) need tools to be able to thwart terror attacks not just against the United States, but also its allies.

"When you're operate in an intelligence enterprise, there's a whole lot that has to remain secret," said Robert Litt, general counsel to the director of national intelligence.

"But I think we could and should have found a way to explain more the legal authorities that we operate under to protect privacy and civil liberties."

Speaking at the Wilson Center think tank, he warned that growing reluctance by Internet firms to cooperate with state surveillance will lead to "intelligence failures in the future and people will wonder why the intelligence community was not able to protect us.

"I think it's a loss to the nation that companies are losing the willingness to cooperate legally and voluntarily with agencies that are trying to protect Americans and citizens of other nations as well."

'All governments lie'

High-profile American whistleblowers Tuesday launched a new website ExposeFacts.com to encourage others "to shed light on concealed activities that are relevant to human rights, corporate malfeasance, the environment, civil liberties and war."

"All governments lie and they like to work in the dark as far as the public concerned in terms of their own decision-making, their planning," said whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg, a former military analyst who in 1971 revealed the Pentagon Papers, which showed that the then US administration had secretly enlarged the scale of the Vietnam War with bombings in Cambodia and Laos.

"When officials are assured that they will not be held accountable for their decision-making... even very intelligent men and women are capable of making crazy policies, stupid, disastrous, as we saw in Vietnam, and in Iraq."

Other whistleblowers at the launch warned Snowden that faces harsh consequences if he bows to calls from the US administration to return home and face charges brought under the 1917 Espionage Act.

"We've had enough examples to really understand that he will be rail-roaded, he will tried in a kangaroo court and he will be imprisoned for the rest of his life," said Marsha Coleman-Adebayo, a former senior policy analyst for the Environmental Protection Agency, who was sacked after reporting on malpractices by a US mining company in South Africa.

US Secretary of State John Kerry last week lashed out Snowden, urging him to "man-up" and do his patriotic duty by returning to face trial.

But Snowden's lawyer confirmed Tuesday he is seeking to extend beyond August 1 his refugee status in Russia, granted after he was stuck in a Moscow airport when the State Department revoked his passport.

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