The Telegram (St. John's)

Rafah assault would make regional peace ‘very difficult’: Scholz

- SARAH MARSH

AQABA, Jordan — The large number of civilian casualties that would result from an Israeli assault on the Gaza city of Rafah would make regional peace “very difficult,” German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said on Sunday after talks with Jordanian King Abdullah.

This was one of the main arguments he was expected to bring to talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu later on Sunday during his whirlwind trip to the region, he said.

The hastily arranged talks come after Israel on Friday approved a plan to attack the city on the southern edge of the shattered Palestinia­n enclave where more than half of its 2.3 million residents are sheltering after five months of war.

“Right now, it is about ensuring we come to a longlastin­g ceasefire,” Scholz said after talks with Abdullah at his private residence in the

Jordanian Red Sea port of Aqaba. “That would enable us to prevent such a ground offensive from taking place.”

Asked if he was prepared to exert pressure on Netanyahu to stop such an assault, Scholz said it was “very clear we must do everything so the situation does not get worse than it already is.”

“Israel has every right to protect itself ... At the same time, it cannot be that those in Gaza who fled to Rafah are directly threatened by whatever military actions and operations are undertaken there.”

Israel says Rafah is one of the last stronghold­s of Hamas, which it has pledged to eliminate, and that residents will be evacuated.

Scholz did not directly answer a question about whether Germany would react to a large-scale Rafah offensive — for example, by restrictin­g German weapons exports to Israel.

Germany has been one of Israel’s staunchest allies alongside the United States, consistent­ly supporting its right to defend itself, underscori­ng its duty to stand by the country’s side in atonement for its perpetrati­on of the Nazi Holocaust in which six million Jews died.

But the government has faced accusation­s — including from prominent Jewish residents in Germany — of allowing guilt to blinker its response to Israel’s retaliatio­n.

Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim accused Europe during a visit to Berlin last week of being “hypocritic­al” and selective in its concern for different peoples, overlookin­g decades of widespread Palestinia­n suffering.

Still, German government officials have stressed in recent months the need for Israel to adhere to internatio­nal law in its response to the Hamas attacks and called upon Israel to allow more humanitari­an aid into Gaza.

 ?? FABIAN BIMMER • REUTERS ?? German Chancellor Olaf Scholz attends a press statement ahead of a trilateral meeting of the consultati­on forum “Weimar Triangle” at the Chanceller­y in Berlin, Germany, on March 15.
FABIAN BIMMER • REUTERS German Chancellor Olaf Scholz attends a press statement ahead of a trilateral meeting of the consultati­on forum “Weimar Triangle” at the Chanceller­y in Berlin, Germany, on March 15.

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