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POLITICS

Scholz says Germany open to boosting troops in Baltics

Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Sunday said Germany was prepared to send extra troops to the Baltic states, ahead of a key trip to Washington where he will seek to bolster his influence in the Ukraine crisis.

German Chancellor
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz. Photo: Michael Sohn / POOL / AFP

“We are… prepared to do whatever is necessary to strengthen” Germany’s presence in NATO operations in the Baltics, Scholz said in an interview with the ARD broadcaster.

Germany leads a NATO operation in Lithuania and has around 500 soldiers stationed there.

Asked whether reinforcements could be agreed at a NATO defence ministers’ meeting in mid-February, Scholz said: “We are ready to make a decision.”

Defence Minister Christine Lambrecht had earlier said in an interview with the Funke media group that Germany was prepared to strengthen its presence in Lithuania.

“In principle, troops are… available for reinforcement, and we are now in talks with Lithuania about what exactly would be useful,” Lambrecht said.

The pledge comes amid growing fears that Russia may be preparing to invade Ukraine, with the West accusing President Vladimir Putin of amassing more than 100,000 troops at the border.

Russia denies it plans to invade but has demanded wide-ranging security guarantees from the West, including that Ukraine never be allowed to join NATO.

With Scholz, facing growing criticism of Germany’s apparently ambivalent stance in the crisis, will travel to Washington for the first meeting of his chancellorship with US President Joe Biden on Monday.

He will also meet the leaders of the Baltic states in Berlin this week and will travel to Ukraine and Russia later this month.

Scholz, who in December succeeded veteran German leader Angela Merkel, on
Sunday doubled down on Germany’s refusal to send weapons to Ukraine.

“For many years, the German government has had a clear course that we do not deliver to crisis zones and that we also do not deliver lethal weapons to Ukraine,” he said.

Asked whether Washington saw Germany as the “weakest link” in NATO, he replied: “That is a false impression that does not prevail in Washington
either.”

Member comments

  1. I think Lithuania should thank NATO for the ‘offer’ but request UK or US troops instead. Much less chance that they will be withdrawn at the first sign of trouble.

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POLITICS

Austrian far-right radical Sellner wins German ban battle

Radical Austrian nationalist Martin Sellner on Friday won a legal battle against an entry ban imposed by Germany following his meeting with the far-right AfD that sparked an uproar in the country.

Austrian far-right radical Sellner wins German ban battle

Sellner had triggered outrage in Germany after allegedly discussing the Identitarian concept of “remigration” with members of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) at a meeting in Potsdam in November.

The city of Potsdam subsequently imposed a ban on Sellner entering Germany.

But the administrative court in Brandenburg state on Friday found in favour of Sellner’s appeal against the prohibition.

READ ALSO: Germany issues entry ban to Austrian far-right activist Sellner

“A real and sufficiently serious threat to public order and public security… was not demonstrated” by the authorities which had initiated the ban, said the court in a statement.

Welcoming the ruling, Sellner wrote on X, formerly Twitter, that he “will return to Germany soon and will push more and louder than ever on remigration and deislamisation”.

Sellner’s Identitarian Movement espouses the far-right white nationalist Great Replacement conspiracy theory.

READ ALSO: EXPLAINED: Who is Austria’s far right figure head banned across Europe?

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