Analysis: Germany`s new armed forces
By Stefan Nicola
KEHL AM RHEIN, Germany (UPI) -- The German armed forces, once
limited to securing domestic territory, have undergone a startling
transformation over the past seven years. The governing coalition of
Social Democrats and Alliance 90/Greens, despite its anti-military
track record, has extended the Budeswehr`s arm as far as the
Balkans, Africa and Afghanistan.
| The Bundeswehr, once
restricted by the German constitution to exclusively domestic
protection, can now send armed troops to foreign countries
|
"The decision of SPD and Greens to send German troops into the
Kosovo in 1998 has transformed the Bundeswehr," Benjamin Schreer,
military expert at the German Institute for International and
Security Affairs, a Berlin-based think tank, said Tuesday in a
telephone interview with United Press International. "The Bundeswehr
is now operating on a global scale."
According to Germany`s defense ministry, about 7,000 soldiers are
serving in missions in Afghanistan, Bosnia, Djibouti, Ethiopia,
Georgia, Kosovo and Sudan, making Germany one of the top
contributors to international missions.
Roughly 2,250 men and women are stationed in Afghanistan, as part of
the U.N.-mandated, NATO-led peacekeeping mission. They are serving
with the 10,500-strong International Security Assistance Force to
bolster security in western and northern Afghanistan and in the
capital, Kabul.
Taking into account that some of the top Social Democrats have their
political origins in the peace movement, and that the Greens in the
past had talked about leaving NATO and getting rid of the Bundeswehr,
the transformation of Germany`s armed forces is rather startling.
"Nobody would have guessed in 1996 that a government of SPD and
Greens was to send German troops into the Kosovo," Schreer said.
"But they (SPD and Greens) have accepted the realities of a new
strategic framework."
The challenges of the 21st century have included a few controversial
ones. The mission in the Balkans, where German Tornado planes bombed
Serbian radar stations, was topic of a heated debate not only within
Germany`s governing coalition, but also in the international
community. Most Germans, however, supported the war in former
Yugoslavia.
After the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Germany took part in
several anti-terrorism missions. The operation "Active Endeavor" has
German units monitor the Mediterranean waters for terrorism-related
activities. In Afghanistan and East Africa, German troops battle
Islamist terrorism with sea units, ground troops and special forces.
The mission in Afghanistan had German troops, roughly 100 special
forces who, for the first time since World War II, took part in
ground combat.
The Kommando Spezialkraefte, known by its acronym KSK, is a highly
trained and well-equipped special unit that has successfully been
assigned to Kosovo and Afghanistan. Most of their operations,
however, are classified.
The Bundeswehr, once restricted by the German constitution to
exclusively domestic protection, can now send armed troops to
foreign countries -- a war of aggression, with Germany taking part,
however, is not only unconstitutional, but also unthinkable, taking
into account the country`s past.
"The Bundeswehr still operates mainly in peace-keeping missions and
always in a multilateral framework," he said. "That`s acceptable for
all parties in the Bundestag and the German public."
German troops, after Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder had fiercely
campaigned against a U.S.-led war against Baghdad, stayed out of
Iraq. German units stationed in Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates,
however, have trained Iraqi security personnel.
Most peacekeeping missions, such as the Kfor operation in the
Balkans, and the stability missions in Macedonia are politically
uncontroversial, as they are accompanied by virtually zero
casualties.
The many recent humanitarian assignments of the Bundeswehr, such as
those in Indonesia after the December 2004 tsunami, have a long
tradition: Since 1960, roughly 130 such missions have been carried
out by Bundeswehr troops.
After the fall of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact, the German
armed forces faced key reforms. After the CDU-led government under
Chancellor Helmut Kohl integrated roughly 20,000 soldiers of former
communist East Germany, the SPD/Greens pushed further structural
changes. Defense Minister Rudolf Scharping and his successor, Peter
Struck, gradually downsized the Bundeswehr, which during the Cold
War was 495,000 men-strong. Now a bit more than 250,000 men and
women -- who were allowed to join in 2001 -- serve in its ranks.
"The experience in the Kosovo had many realize that the Bundeswehr
has to acquire new skills," Herfried Muenkler, military expert at
Berlin`s Humboldt University, Tuesday told UPI. "The need to adapt
to new, fast-changing threats and enemies, including international
terrorism cells, combined with the need for structural reforms --
that`s a tough job for any government."
Seven years of Scharping/Struck can thus be considered "a relatively
intense but successful reform story," he said.
Those years will likely come to an end, however, as the SPD trails
Angela Merkel`s Christian Democrats, who are ready to take office in
Berlin after the Sept. 18 elections. Schreer and Muenkler both said
they don`t think a CDU-led government would do things very
differently, however.
The military`s budget and the domestic draft, which all young men at
the age of 18 have to enter for 10 months, have been topics of much
discussion in recent years. The SPD/Greens have floated the option
of getting rid of Germany`s general conscription, which the CDU is
unlikely to back.
"The draft, in the long term, is not sustainable," Schreer said.
"Other European Union countries are deciding to get rid of it.
Germany will likely have to follow."
Scharping and later Struck have tried to get more money for their
troops, but the ever-growing federal deficit has no room for much
spending. Currently, the Bundeswehr gets roughly $29 billion a year,
compared to U.S. defense expenditures of roughly $400 billion.
The current development is dangerous in light of the forces` new
assignments, Schreer said.
"If the Bundeswehr continues to be increasingly challenged in
international missions, and new investments fail to be made, then
our troops will likely face serious problems after 2007."
Any new government, whether CDU or SPD-led, would have to deal with
those, he said.
Source
|