Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Germany gives elite army force 'time to press reset button' over far-right activity

Germany's defense minister has said the Special Forces Command (KSK) will not be immediatel­y disbanded over far-right extremist links. Instead, she urged soldiers to change the elite unit from the inside out.

-

Germany's Special Forces Command (KSK) will not immediatel­y be completely disbanded over far-right links, but given a short time to show it can change from within, German Defense Minister Annegret KrampKarre­nbauer announced on Wednesday.

In the wake of numerous revelation­s of far-right activity among the KSK's ranks, a task force was asked to urgently investigat­e. Announcing the results alongside Bundeswehr Chief of Defense Eberhard Zorn, Kramp-Karrenbaue­r said the unit would be given time to put its own house in order.

"The analysis concludes that the KSK cannot persist in its current form. That it must be changed from the inside out and that it must be better reintegrat­ed into the Bundeswehr."

"We will give the KSK time to press the reset button," said the minister.

Kramp-Karrenbaue­r had already announced structural reforms of the KSK unit, which include the dissolutio­n of one of its four combat companies. She warned that, should the KSK fail to make sufficient progress by the end of October, it would be disbanded as a whole.

"If we let things go on then the danger is indeed great that we will have a real structural problem for the future," she said.

The KSK has been part of the German Army since 1996. The group focuses on anti-terrorism operations and hostage rescues from hostile areas. Its members have served in Afghanista­n and the Balkans, but its operations are kept secret.

Author and Bundeswehr expert Thomas Wiegold told DW that the minister was "trying to get rid of those toxic parts in this unit without disbanding the unit as a whole, without destroying the capability they need."

Read more: Germany to sack extremist soldiers — and faster

The extremism allegation­s go as far back as 2017, when KSK members at a commander's farewell party allegedly threw pig heads, played right-wing

rock music and performed the Nazi salute.

A report by Germany's Military Counterint­elligence Service (MAD) in January revealed that 500 soldiers in the German military were being investigat­ed for right-wing extremism.

MAD noted that 20 of the suspected right-wing extremism cases currently being processed were within the KSK. In relation to the number of personnel, this was five times the proportion in the rest of the Bundeswehr.

Read more: New figures on extremism in German military 'tip of the iceberg'

In May, police seized explosives and weapons at the home of a KSK soldier. Kramp-Karrenbaue­r had previously described the disappeara­nce of 48,000 rounds of ammunition and 62 kilograms of explosives as "disturbing" and "alarming."

var pymParent = new pym.Parent( 'promio-pym-container', 'https://system.promioconn­ect. com/ register/ 16401/ default/en/newsletter-form', {} );

 ??  ?? Defense Minister Kramp-Karrenbaue­r has offered the KSK time to show it can change
Defense Minister Kramp-Karrenbaue­r has offered the KSK time to show it can change

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany