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Behind the scenes
New York News Kyiv has appealed to Western allies for heavy weaponry to fight off an anticipated Russian offensive
German-made tanks could be key to turning the tide of the war in Ukraine, and Germany is under growing pressure to provide them amid fears of a new Russian offensive.
Germany, which has enjoyed decades of close economic ties with Russia, has so far been hesitant to provide Ukraine with its Leopard 2 tanks, and to approve the donation of German-made tanks from other allied nations.
‘Window of opportunity’
Western officials believe there is an impending “window of opportunity” in which Ukraine may be able to push Russian forces back, said the BBC, and that Moscow is “running short of ammunition and trained troops” despite efforts to mobilise additional forces.
Many believe that Germany’s Leopard tanks could be “key” to forcing back Russian forces. They are in “more plentiful supply” than British tanks and are operated by “more than a dozen other nations”, added the broadcaster.
Allies such as Poland and Finland are keen to provide Ukraine with their own German-made Leopard tanks – but Germany must give them permission to export the tanks, which it has yet to do.
Defence officials from more than 50 countries gathered at the Ramstein air base in southern Germany today, a day after several allied nations pledged more equipment to Ukraine to fend off further Russian offensives. Ukrainian president Volodymr Zelenskyy made a direct appeal for tanks at the talks, telling ministers at the airbase that “hundreds of thank yous are not hundreds of tanks”.
‘Long-standing German reticence’
“Germany’s long-standing reticence to wade into foreign conflicts” is in part due to “norms and policies built on guilt over World War II”, said The Washington Post. It is “anxious to avoid being seen as militarily aggressive in the decades since” the Second World War and has therefore “largely shied away from exporting weapons into conflict zones”.
For these reasons, it is sometimes described as a “pacifist” nation in security and foreign policy circles, added the paper.
Others, however, argue that Germany’s approach to international conflict is less to do with a “principled aversion to war” and is instead dependent on a “deep-seated preference for diplomacy and the idea of pushing change through economic ties”.
Germany’s historic ties with Russia have meant that the war in Ukraine has put the country in a difficult position, it added. Former German chancellor Angela Merkel, who hails from East Berlin and is fluent in Russian, played a key role in brokering a ceasefire agreement with Russia in the contested region of Donbas in 2014. But her tenure also “deepened Germany’s dependence” on Russian fossil fuels.
But it is not simply Germany’s “conscience” that is driving its foreign policy, writes Politico’s European correspondent Matthew Karnitschnig – it is its corporations. He adds that while Germany may “hang back” from supporting Ukraine in its fight to “defend its democracy from invasion by a tyrant”, it seems to have “no qualms” over selling weapons to authoritarian regimes in the Middle East such as Egypt and Qatar.
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