Germany: Baerbock vows new law to curb weapons exports
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said the new
coalition government would introduce a law that tightens curbs on weapons
exports.
The Green party politician made the comments days after it
was revealed that then-Chancellor Angela Merkel's administration approved
export deals worth nearly €5 billion with Egypt and Singapore as it prepared to
hand over power.
What did Baerbock say?
"As a coalition, we have made it clear that we are
reviewing the arms export policy of the past few years," Baerbock told the
German dpa news agency on Sunday.
"We are working on an arms export control law that will
make clearer the criteria by which arms exports are approved."
The new coalition government
— made up of the center-left Social Democrats (SPD), the Greens and the
neoliberal FDP — vowed in their alliance agreement to tighten arms exports to
so-called third countries outside the European Union and NATO.
That would include Egypt, which has been one of Germany's
key export destinations for arms.
Huge deals approved at last minute
The previous government approved the sale of three warships
and 16 air defense systems from Thyssenkrupp Marine Systems and Diehl Defense
to the North African country.
The approval came during Merkel's last nine days in power
and despite criticism over Egypt's human rights record and involvement in
conflicts in Yemen and Libya.
A deal to deliver a military submarine to Singapore was also
signed off.
On Saturday, figures from the Economy Ministry, requested
from a politician from the socialist Left party, revealed that those
last-minute deals were worth nearly €5 billion ($5.6 billion).
German weapons exports hit new record
The deals made Germany's weapons exports hit a new record in
2021of €9.04 billion.
The previous record high for German arms exports was €8.02
billion in 2019 before the COVID-19 pandemic.
Together with the United States, Russia, and France, Germany
is one of the world's biggest arms exporters, according to the Stockholm
International Peace Research Institute.
The country was responsible for 5.5% of global arms exports
from 2016 to 2020.
If not Germany, then who?
The foreign policy expert for the conservative bloc,
Roderich Kiesewetter, defended the deals by the outgoing government, saying
they were made "within the valid legal framework."
He told dpa that the criticism from leftist parties was
"nothing more than crocodile tears."
Kiesewetter said it was vital to protect Germany's security
interests in the upcoming reform of arms export controls.
"It is in Germany's interest if Middle East countries
continue to be supported in their armaments policy by EU states. It cannot be
in our interest if, in future, these states obtain their supplies from China or
Russia," he warned.
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