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New Military Mission?

DW staff (sms)January 16, 2008

The German army is preparing to send troops to northern Afghanistan as part of NATO's quick reaction force, according to media reports. But some in say the move may endanger lives in Germany.

https://p.dw.com/p/Cr27
A Bundeswehr soldier in Kunduz
Additional assignments may be waiting for German troops stationed in AfghanistanImage: picture-alliance/ dpa

The deployment of 250 combat troops, who would join in the search for and fight against terrorists, would mark a departure from the Bundeswehr's current mission. To date only stabilization forces have been deployed to the main German base at Masar-i-Sharif.

The Social Democratic Party's defense spokesman, Rainer Arnold, told the Passauer Neue Presse on Wednesday, Jan. 16, that the German army had begun making preparations for the deployment.

"This task falls to Germany in the summer," he said, adding that the mission, slated to start in July, signaled a "new quality" in the German engagement in Afghanistan. Part of the new mission could include pursuing terrorists, Arnold told the paper.

Ready to replace Norwegians

A German soldier with a machine gun in Kabul
Germany may be called on to replace other NATO troops leaving this yearImage: AP

With 350 Norwegian troops leaving Afghanistan by the middle of the year and Germany heading NATO's International Security and Assistance Force (ISAF) in the country's north, it is likely that the Bundeswehr will have to replace the Norwegians.

"If other countries are no longer available to do this task after September, then we will do it ourselves," the head of the German Federal Armed Forces Association, Bernhard Gertz, told the Mitteldeutsche Zeitung. "It's in the interest of our own soldiers."

In a separate interview with the daily Der Tagesspiegel, Gertz added: "It is clear that we will take over this task."

Government spokesman Ulrich Wilhelm, however, said that the NATO decision on which country takes over the Quick Response Force is not expected to be made before the end of January.

The defense ministry in Berlin also confirmed that planning was underway and said that the deployment fell under the mandate for German forces in Afghanistan renewed by parliament last year.

Mission covered by mandate?

A German Tornado jet lands, as German soldiers, part of the ISAF talk
Germany also has reconnaissance jets stationed in AfghanistanImage: AP

But the ministry denied that the deployment would add a "new quality" to the Bundeswehr's mission in Afghanistan.

Spokesman Thomas Raab said the army's current mission already included "infantry-like components," and that it was already possible for Germans to escort convoys and help other nations' troops or nationals.

But some in Germany have questioned whether the new deployment makes sense for the Bundeswehr.

"With the planned deployment of Bundeswehr combat units, the German government is, against all better judgment, bringing terror into the country," opposition Left Party leader Oskar Lafontaine said.

New dangers

A girl stands on top of a painted 'Peace-Tank' in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin on Tuesday, May 8, 2007. The painted tank is supposed to commemorate the 62nd anniversary of the capitulation of Hitler's Nazi Germany on May 8, 1945 and is also aimed at protesting against the further deployment of German troops in Afghanistan
Polls show most German oppose the Bundeswehr's deployment to AfghanistanImage: AP

Greens Party defense expert Winfried Nachtwei told tagesschau.de that "the risk of slipping into hard situations would be unavoidable" should Germany join the quick reaction force.

That's a fact Gertz said Germany would have to get used to since the soldiers would be called on to fight if their comrades or the people they are protecting are in danger.

"You have to assume that these situations will arise," he told the Mitteldeutsche Zeitung. "And you cannot expect from the outset that it will all occur without any victims."

Pacifist organizations have said they intend to protest the Bundeswehr's plans.

In October, the Bundestag renewed the mandate for 3,500 German troops in Afghanistan, combining two previous mandates. Up to 3,000 troops, part of NATO's forces in the country, are deployed in a training, reconstruction and security mission in Afghanistan's relatively peaceful north.