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[BIGGER ROLE] GERMANY White Paper ?
Quote:
German Military Said to Take More Assertive Role in Shift
July 11, 2016
![[BIGGER ROLE] GERMANY White Paper ?](https://dl.kaskus.id/www.jihadwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Bundeswehr.jpg)
Germany will take on greater military leadership in global conflicts, requiring a sustained increase in defense spending and troop strength, according to plans for the nation’s first overhaul of security policy in a decade.
A “renaissance of classic power politics” is increasing “the risk of violent conflict between states, including in Europe and its neighborhood, as the example of Russia’s actions in Ukraine demonstrate,” according to a draft document by Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government obtained by Bloomberg. Merkel’s cabinet is expected to discuss the so-called white paper at its weekly meeting on Wednesday, just days after she and fellow NATO leaders including President Barack Obama met at the alliance’s summit in Poland.
Germany is ready to take on responsibilities and leadership, reflecting “our increased role in international security policy,” according to the document, which also backs further consolidation of Europe’s defense industry. Germany’s last white paper, adopted in 2006, describes the country only as a “reliable partner” in international military missions.
While containing caveats about self-imposed military restraint and acting in concert with Germany’s partners, the draft lays out a shifting view of outside challenges -- from Russia to refugees -- that’s already driving Merkel and her government toward a more assertive stance. That includes arming Kurdish fighters in Iraq, aiding U.S.-led airstrikes in Syria and leading a North Atlantic Treaty Organization battalion to be deployed in Lithuania as part of the alliance’s deterrence push against Vladimir Putin’s Russia.
With the U.K. poised to leave the European Union, Merkel also faces pressure to step up on other fronts: Italy’s banks may need aid to avoid another euro-area crisis, and Germany’s share of the EU economy will rise to a quarter from a fifth once Britain drops out.
Germany spends about 1.2 percent of gross domestic product on defense and Merkel said last week that “much remains to be done” to reach NATO’s goal of 2 percent. The U.S., which ensured Western Europe’s security for decades during the Cold War, spent an estimated 3.6 percent last year, according to NATO.
Germany’s armed forces face an unprecedented confluence and range of crises and conflicts, so defense spending and troop strength need to keep rising in the years ahead, according to the draft. That reflects the stance taken by Merkel and her defense minister, Ursula von der Leyen, who in May announced Germany’s first buildup of military personnel since the Cold War ended 25 years ago.
Set up after World War II as a bulwark against a Soviet-bloc invasion, Germany’s military has faced accelerating change under Merkel:
- Conscription was suspended in 2011 to speed the shift to a professional army
- Of Germany’s 177,000-strong armed forces, 3,300 troops are deployed on global missions from Afghanistan and the Horn of Africa to Mali and Turkish-Greek coastal waters
- Defense spending is set to rise almost 7 percent to 36.6 billion euros ($40 billion) in 2017, with further increases down the road
- All deployments still require parliamentary approval, seen as a post-Nazi safeguard against militarism
‘More Decisively’
Signals that Germany is edging toward a more assertive stance have increased since German President Joachim Gauck, a former East German pastor, said in 2014 that the country needs to step out of history’s shadow and engage in international missions “earlier, more decisively and more substantially.”
In May, the Defense Ministry scrapped Germany’s post-Cold War upper limit of 185,000 military personnel, adding 14,400 soldiers as well as 4,400 civilian employees over the next seven years.
“Rarely has the German military faced higher demands than in the last few months,” von der Leyen said at the time.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articl...n-policy-shift
Quote:
Germany Now Plans To Expand Its Army And Its Scope
BREITBART LONDON 11 Jul 2016
![[BIGGER ROLE] GERMANY White Paper ?](https://dl.kaskus.id/media.breitbart.com/media/2016/07/Screen-Shot-2016-07-11-at-10.03.07-640x480.png)
(AFP) – “Economic giant, political dwarf” — that is how the world long viewed post-World War II Germany, the European export power reluctant to use military muscle in global conflicts.
It is an image that Europe’s most populous country wants to shed as it gradually assumes a bigger defence role, within the frameworks of NATO and the European Union.
That ambition, the outcome of a debate that began two decades ago, is the message of Germany’s new military roadmap, the defence ministry’s so-called White Paper, to be released Wednesday.
It marks a shift for Germany which, burdened by guilt about Nazi terror and the Holocaust, for decades stepped softly on the world stage and long refrained from sending troops abroad.
The paper, the first of its kind issued in a decade, envisions a future defence union of European states — reviving a 1950s-era idea that was rejected by France at the time — as Europe is nervously eyeing Russia and digesting the shock of the Brexit vote.
“Germany is increasingly seen as a key player in Europe,” says a draft of the document seen by AFP.
“Germany, a globally highly connected country… has a responsibility to actively help shape the world order,” it says, vowing that the country is ready to “assume responsibility” and “help meet current and future security and humanitarian challenges”.
– Paradigm shift –
![[BIGGER ROLE] GERMANY White Paper ?](https://dl.kaskus.id/cdn3.spiegel.de/images/image-276176-panoV9free-sldt-276176.jpg)
The paper presents a paradigm shift for a country often lampooned as a “Bigger Switzerland” — prosperous and seeking to stay neutral — in the words of French economist Alain Minc.
While Germany’s dark past has nurtured a strong pacifist tradition, its leaders have also often been stung by allies’ criticism that they are not pulling their weight in tackling crisis hotspots, lack the stomach for full-fledged military engagement and prefer chequebook diplomacy.
It was not until 1994 that Germany’s highest court allowed the country to participate in multinational peacekeeping missions.
Germany has since deployed troops to conflict zones, from the Balkans to Afghanistan and Mali, but has also earned criticism for staying out of other conflicts, especially the 2011 NATO intervention in Libya.
Over the past two years, President Joachim Gauck and Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen have repeatedly argued that Germany must engage more forcefully abroad.
Berlin has since joined the international alliance against the Islamic State group, though in a non-combat role, sending Tornado reconnaissance jets, aerial refuelling planes and other support.
Germany, a major arms exporter, has also broken with another taboo — sending weapons into an active conflict — by arming Kurdish Peshmerga fighters battling IS in Iraq.
And at the NATO summit in Warsaw, Germany was one of the members to pledge to station rotating battalions in Poland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania from 2017 as a collective deterrent against Russian adventurism.
– ‘European defence union’ –
![[BIGGER ROLE] GERMANY White Paper ?](https://dl.kaskus.id/vignette3.wikia.nocookie.net/deadliestfiction/images/8/85/Bundeswehr_580_430_80.jpg/revision/latest?cb=20101226020434)
The new engagements come as the German army has complained of being overstretched, underfunded and plagued by equipment failures, including its G36 assault rifle, which reportedly doesn’t shoot straight at high temperatures.
The Bundeswehr is now set to see its budget boosted and to get its first increase in troop strength since the Cold War, when it was still a conscript force, with plans to recruit nearly 20,000 personnel over seven years.
Germany, in order to reassure international partners, stresses in the White Paper that it will act within the trans-Atlantic and European frameworks.
“As a long-term goal, Germany aims for a common European security and defence union,” says the text.
For now, this means using all ways of military cooperation authorised under the EU treaties and “strengthening the European defence industry” through tie-ups, with France in particular.
A former German chancellor, Gerhard Schroeder, presented an even more ambitious vision in an article co-authored with Minc, the French economist, in news weekly Die Zeit.
They proposes that Paris and Berlin “pool their resources” in foreign and security policy, and that their armed forces work together as closely as possible.
France, as a permanent member of the UN Security Council, would commit to presenting a common position with Germany, the authors suggested.
It is far from certain, however, that such an idea could gain traction now in France, a nuclear-armed military power whose politicians have been traditionally wary of German pacifism and still resent its abstention in the UN vote on the Libya intervention.
http://www.breitbart.com/london/2016...-role-eu-nato/
Jerman mengambil peran yg lebih besar di Eropah, sebagai kekuatan ekonomi terbesar di kawasan EU
gimana pendapat formiler, akankah jerman jadi kekuatan militer yg besar seperti PD II?
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