Las Vegas Review-Journal

Germany outlines plan to support IS fight

- By John O’Donnell

FRANKFURT — Germany could send 1,200 soldiers to the Middle East by the end of the year to support a coalition battling Islamic State, Germany’s top defense official told a newspaper on Sunday as his minister backed an internatio­nal alliance against the group.

Chancellor Angela Merkel promised to support the offensive against Islamic State during talks with French President Francois Hollande, who called for more countries to help fight the militants after the Nov. 13 attacks in Paris.

Germany’s defense minister Ursula von der Leyen called for the alliance for a limited time to combat the militants in a commentary in an advance copy of the Bild newspaper due out on Monday.

She said the aim of what she called a “special purpose” alliance was to “weaken ISIS, to limit its freedom for maneuver, to destroy its training camps, to win back city by city, destroy its oil revenue and break the aura of invincibil­ity.”

Germany’s troops plan, which still needs approval from parliament and was outlined by Germany’s Chief of Defence Volker Wieker in Bild am Sonntag, does not include direct involvemen­t in the coalition’s air offensive.

In Germany, the public still dislikes sending forces overseas except for in peace missions, in part due to memories of Nazi militarism.

Under the plan, a German frigate would accompany France’s Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier, Wieker said in the interview. German planes would refuel the jets of the coalition as well as take photograph­s in the region.

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