BERLIN – Germany's armed forces will come
under a new security and defense strategy from 2016, the German government
has announced.
Defense Minister
Ursula von der Leyen announced in Berlin on Tuesday that Germany, which
has been traditionally hesitant in taking part in international military
operations mainly because of its Nazi past, would act "without any
taboos".
Speaking at the
start of a meeting of experts, civil and military officials and
politicians on the construction of a new defense strategy for Germany, der
Leyen said: “Today, we are beginning our work on a new White Paper on the
security policy and the future of our armed forces, the Bundeswehr."
She said the White
Paper would form the basic strategic document of the German military.
Germany has long
opposed providing weapons to parties in conflict zones, but decided last year
to send arms and ammunition to the Kurdish Peshmerga forces in their fight
against the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant, or ISIL.
- 'Alarming
developments'
In another milestone
decision last month, the German parliament approved deploying up to 100
soldiers in northern Iraq to train Peshmerga
forces, clearing the way for the first German military deployment
abroad without any NATO or UN Security Council mandate.
Public opinion in
the country has been largely against Germany taking any military role in
international conflicts but, in recent months, German government officials have
been advocating a more aggressive foreign policy, supported by military
measures, stressing Germany's responsibility for international "peace and
stability".
Von der Leyen
emphasized that "alarming developments" relating to
"international terrorism" along with the rise of the
self-proclaimed ISIL and the Ukrainian crisis had shown the need for a
change in Germany’s existing White Paper, which dates back to 2006.
She promised an
"inclusive and transparent process" in defining a new security and
defense strategy for the armed forces and said consultations would be
carried out with security experts, politicians, defense industry
representatives, government officials and military personnel, before the German
cabinet finalized the strategy in the summer of 2016.
- 'Hybrid threat'
Von der Leyen said:
"The combination of a brutal, pseudo-religious ideology with the latest
modern communications constitutes a new hybrid threat," referring to
ISIL’s use of the Internet and social media.
She said the
conflict in eastern Ukraine had also shown it was difficult to respond
with conventional tools to modern warfare.
"This
orchestration of the various elements of hybrid warfare would change the
security architecture of our continent fundamentally," she said.
The announcement
came after German President Joachim Gauck, Foreign Minister Frank-Walter
Steinmeier and der Leyen repeatedly pushed for a more
aggressive foreign policy for Germany.
Source +TurkishPress.com
Tagged +TurkishPress.com
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