The Jerusalem Post

Merkel: Bad deal better than no deal,

We will be very careful to ensure P5+1 agreement is honored, German leader says

- • Jerusalem Post Staff

“I can understand the great concern in Israel about what Iran is doing. We just have different opinions over the question of how best to eradicate the threat,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said in an interview aired Sunday on Channel 1 News.

“Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu believes that the agreement between the West and Iran does not provide the security that he would like for Israel. We are of the opinion that the existing framework, though not perfect, is preferable to having no agreement at all,” she said. “We will continue to discuss this. Germany will be very careful to ensure that the [P5+1] agreement is honored.”

Merkel said Tehran merely abiding by the nuclear deal does not take care of all the concerns. “We are very concerned about Iran’s ballistic missile program,” she said. “That’s why we are having discussion­s, also with Britain, France and the United States on this issue.”

When asked about Berlin’s decision not to take part in the American-British-French attack a week ago in Syria, in response to the Assad regime using chemical gas against its own people, Merkel said that while she recognized the significan­ce of maintainin­g the Chemical Weapons Convention, which was establishe­d in the wake of World War I, Germany had other roles as part of what she referred to as the “Western union.”

“We have a division of labor,” Merkel said. “There are things that countries like France, Britain and the US are doing, as in this case. There are other things in which the US or other countries rely on us to do, things like staying in Afghanista­n, for example, or that we take responsibi­lity in Mali... We said that this operation was both necessary and proportion­ate.”

In a rare reference to the so-called “submarines affair,” an ongoing investigat­ion into possible corruption in Israeli military procuremen­t from Germany, Merkel said: “This is a question that needs to be investigat­ed in Israel, and they are looking into it. Israel is a state of law and it will provide the necessary answers.”

“What’s important is the issue of Germany’s motivation to support Israel by supplying it with advanced submarines,” she said. “It is a long tradition that didn’t start during my term, but began with my predecesso­rs. It is a tradition of commitment to the security of Israel. We believe these submarines are a concrete contributi­on to this, everything else must be clarified in Israel itself.”

Touching on the rise of antisemiti­sm in Europe in general and in Germany in particular, Merkel said she felt burdened by the fact that her country has not yet managed to completely wipe out antisemiti­sm and warned of an increase in antisemiti­sm as a result of the massive influx of immigrants to Germany, many of whom arrived from the Middle East.

“We have new phenomena, like refugees, or people of Arab origin, who bring with them a different form of antisemiti­sm,” Merkel said. “But unfortunat­ely, antisemiti­sm was also here before. We are sad about the fact that dozens of years after the establishm­ent of the Federal Republic there is no Jewish kindergart­en, no school and no synagogue that doesn’t have police protection.”

When asked whether she will follow the lead of US President Donald Trump and announce the transfer of the German Embassy to Jerusalem, she said: “I think we should continue to work towards a two-state solution despite the great difficulty and rare successes. The status of Jerusalem can only be determined in this context. Therefore, we are not transferri­ng the embassy to Jerusalem. We want a Jewish and democratic Israel, but we also want a viable state for the Palestinia­ns.”

When asked whether Jerusalem would be the capital of a future Palestinia­n state, Merkel said: “This is precisely what we need to negotiate, that’s exactly the difficulty, and I would like for political talks on this matter to take place.”

At the end of the Channel 10 interview, Merkel unveiled plans to visit Israel in the coming months.

“It has been a long time since I was in Israel and I plan to be back sometime in the second half of this year,” she said.

Merkel concluded by congratula­ting Israel and its citizens on the occasion of its 70th birthday.

“Israel is a country where the founding fathers made huge achievemen­ts, and the citizens of today continue to do so,” she said. “Israel’s security is constantly threatened, and therefore I have repeatedly emphasized, also because of the continuing responsibi­lity we have in the wake of the Holocaust, that Israel’s security is part of Germany’s national interest.”

 ?? (Reuters) ?? ANGELA MERKEL
(Reuters) ANGELA MERKEL

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