Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

German cabinet approves military aid for IS fight

1,200 soldiers to help coalition, but may not participat­e at any one time

- Associated Press

BERLIN: The German cabinet on Tuesday approved plans to commit up to 1,200 soldiers to support the internatio­nal coalition fighting against the Islamic State group in Syria.

The mandate still requires Parliament­ary clearance. Chancellor Angela Merkel’s governing coalition has a huge majority and approval looks assured in a vote that, according to senior lawmakers from her conservati­ve bloc, is likely on Friday.

Following the Paris attacks, Merkel agreed to honour a request from France to provide support for its operations against IS in Syria.

Germany plans to send Tornado reconnaiss­ance and tanker aircraft to the region, as well as a frigate to help protect the French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle in the eastern Mediterran­ean, but won’t actively engage in combat.

Foreign minister FrankWalte­r Steinmeier told the daily Bild that he doesn’t expect Germany to have 1,200 soldiers participat­ing at any one time. He said that figure is an upper limit which, as is customary with military mandates, includes a significan­t “safety buffer.”

“We are doing what is militarily needed, what we can do best and can accept politicall­y,” he said. Left-leaning opposition parties in Parliament are deeply skeptical. Simone Peter, a leader of the Greens, questioned whether there is sufficient legal basis for the deployment and pointed to the absence of a clear UN mandate.

“The legal question is not the only one,” Peter told ARD television. “We say clearly that this deployment also has no political aim, no political concept, and so it is irresponsi­ble.”

 ?? AP ?? An activist in London protests on Tuesday against Britain’s proposed air raids on IS targets in Syria. British Prime Minister David Cameron has called for a debate and vote on the issue in Parliament on Wednesday.
AP An activist in London protests on Tuesday against Britain’s proposed air raids on IS targets in Syria. British Prime Minister David Cameron has called for a debate and vote on the issue in Parliament on Wednesday.

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