Israel’s security will be every German govt’s priority: Merkel

Published October 11, 2021
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett chat during a roundtable discussion with Israeli entrepreneurs, in Jerusalem on October 10. — AP
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett chat during a roundtable discussion with Israeli entrepreneurs, in Jerusalem on October 10. — AP

JERUSALEM: Outgoing Chancellor Angela Merkel said Israel’s security will remain a top priority for “every German government”, during a farewell visit to the Jewish state on Sunday near the end of her 16-year term in office.

Merkel laid a wreath at Jerusalem’s Holocaust memorial Yad Vashem, writing in the site’s guest book that visiting there “touches me at the core every time anew”.

“The crimes against the Jewish people that are documented here are a perpetual reminder of the responsibility we Germans bear, and a warning.”

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, who hosted Merkel through the day, called her “a true friend of Israel”.

The German leader had earlier voiced confidence that whoever followed her as chancellor would feel equally committed to Israel’s security.

HRW assails the chancellor for trying to avoid dealing with the persecution of millions of Palestinians

“Israel’s security will always be of central importance and a central topic for every German government,” she said.

It was “moving” that Israel had come to trust post-war Germany, but this “trust always has to prove itself”, she added.

Bennett credited Merkel with fostering an unprecedented bond between the countries and described her as “Europe’s moral compass” due to her support for Israel.

Merkel had initially planned to visit in August but delayed her trip during the chaotic exit of US and allied forces, including Germans, from Afghanistan.

Two-state solution

The chancellor was not scheduled to meet Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas.

Under Merkel’s leadership, Germany has advocated for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict but she has faced criticism from activists for not pressing Israel to end its military occupation of Palestinian territory that began in 1967.

“We may differ on whether there should be a two-state solution with the Palestinians,” she said, but stressed that both are united in the belief that there must always be “a democratic Jewish state of Israel”.

Bennett reaffirmed his opposition to a Palestinian state, alleging that it would “very likely become a terrorist state about seven minutes from my home”.

Instead, he said he was focused on improving economic conditions for Palestinians.

Omar Shakir, Israel and Palestine director at Human Rights Watch (HRW), criticised Merkel for regarding Israel’s 54-year occupation as “temporary”.

“Maintaining this fiction has allowed the Merkel government to avoid dealing with the reality of apartheid and persecution of millions of Palestinians,” he said in a statement.

Political scientist Peter Lintl at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs said Merkel had at times clashed with former premier Benjamin Netanyahu — in power from 2009 until June — over Israeli policy toward Palestinians.

But “she kept it mostly behind closed doors”, Lintl said.

Published in Dawn, October 11th, 2021

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