Deadline looms: Merkel govt split on Saudi arms exports
BERLIN: German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s coalition government was on Thursday struggling to overcome divisions on whether to extend or scrap a weapons export embargo against Saudi Arabia.
Berlin last October reacted to the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Istanbul by declaring a freeze on weapons sales to Saudi Arabia and other countries involved in the Yemen war.
It has since faced protests by EU partners because the ban, originally imposed until March 9, has impacted joint defence projects such as the Eurofighter and Tornado jets. While France and Britain have urged Germany to end the export halt, human rights groups argue strongly that it should stay in place beyond a new deadline on Sunday, March 31. That view has many backers among the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD), junior partners to Merkel’s conservative CDU/CSU bloc in the coalition government.
"We oppose defence exports to dictatorships and into active conflict zones," SPD deputy leader Ralf Stegner said on public TV. Merkel’s bloc favours resumed sales, at least of joint European defence projects.
"Another unilateral German stop to defence exports, imposed without coordination with European and NATO partners, would be wrong and dangerous," its economic policy expert Joachim Pfeiffer told the Passauer Neue Presse daily.
This week French ambassador Anne-Marie Descotes criticised Germany’s "unpredictable" arms export policy and pointed out that some companies in the sector were marketing products as "German free" in terms of components. A German security council meeting Wednesday including Merkel failed to resolve the issue, media reports said. One reported compromise proposal was to give the green light to multinational defence products with a German share of no more than 20 percent.
Stegner urged "a sensible solution", stressing that the SPD too wants Germany to cooperate with other European powers on joint defence projects. Media reported another idea on the table would be for Germany to hold onto six naval patrol vessels and a training ship that had been ordered by Saudi Arabia. Media group RND said that if the Saudi export stop is extended by six months, the German state could buy the ships for its navy, customs service and federal police.
At least 10,000 people are estimated to have been killed in the Yemen war since March 2015. This week more than 20 non-government groups operating in Yemen wrote to Merkel to urge her to maintain the freeze, citing the "great risk" that the arms would be used to "facilitate violations of international humanitarian law and human rights". Germany is among the world’s top arms exporters, a group led by the United States that also includes Russia, China, France and Britain.
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