|
Germany waits on UN's approval to occupy Iraq
STRATEGIC DEFENSE:
Berlin has already increased troops in Afghanistan but has clarified it priorities
REUTERS, BERLIN
Tuesday, Aug 12, 2003, Page 6
|
Akram Mohamed, 38, a veteran from the Iranian-Iraqi war sits on his wheelchair as he directs the traffic next to a policeman at Al-Baya district of Baghdad, on Sunday. Hundreds of Iraqi policemen and other civil servants responded to US calls shortly after the war as part of efforts to resume order and key services to the capital's anarchic streets.
PHOTO: REUTERS
|
German Defense Minister Peter Struck said on Sunday that German troops could form part of a NATO mission in Iraq once the force was backed by a UN mandate.
"If the relevant UN mandates are in place and if NATO is asked to take on more responsibility, then we would have no reason to oppose an engagement by the [NATO] Alliance in Iraq," Struck told Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung newspaper.
Struck's comments opening up the possibility of German troops being deployed in Iraq is the latest sign of easing transatlantic tensions, after US President George W. Bush praised German peacekeeping efforts in Afghanistan on Friday.
Germany could form part of a NATO force in Iraq once the government agreed to the deployment of troops, but Struck said it was still a "theoretical" issue.
With almost daily attacks on US troops in which 55 have died and a monthly bill for the Iraq campaign of around US$4 billion, there are growing calls from Washington for European governments to share the burden of restoring peace in Iraq.
|
"If the relevant UN mandates are in place and if NATO is asked to take on more responsibility, then we would have no reason to oppose an engagement by the [NATO] Alliance in Iraq."
|
|
Minister Peter Struck, German defense minister
|
Struck has called for the international peacekeeping operation in Afghanistan to be expanded beyond the capital Kabul after his country hands over command of the force to NATO.
Speaking in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, on Sunday en route to Afghanistan, Struck said the government would look at Kunduz, 200km northwest of Kabul, as a possible area to deploy peacekeepers.
"I think we have to examine Kunduz," he told reporters, adding that he would discuss with Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer whether to send an investigating team to the area to assess it.
In the Sonntagzeitung newspaper, Struck outlined Germany's main priorities when it came to deploying troops abroad, stressing Germany's strong ties with the US.
"Our first priority is to secure stability on our own continent, Europe, such as in the Balkans," Struck said.
"Secondly, special German interests in a region or a country outside Europe such as Afghanistan, where we are fighting international terrorism and have shown solidarity with our most important coalition partner, the United States," he said.
Struck said he was sceptical about German troops taking part in peacekeeping missions in Africa and ruled out German involvement in Liberia.
Germany was a staunch opponent of the US-led invasion of Iraq and its stance alongside France in opposing the campaign put serious strain on relations with Washington.
This story has been viewed 2774 times.
|