Germany reluctant to impose arms embargo on Turkey
German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said Germany does
not prefer to implement an arms embargo on NATO member Turkey, German newspaper
Stimme reported on Tuesday.
Such a move against Ankara is "strategically
incorrect," Maas said."Strategically, I don't think that's the right
way," said the SPD politician in an interview with the German press
agency, Deutsche Presse-Agentur, according to Stimme.
“That wouldn't be easy with a NATO partner either.
We have already seen before that NATO partner Turkey simply bought them from
Russia since it no longer received missiles from the US", he added.
Following a recent conflict with Turkey over
hydrocarbon resources in the eastern Mediterranean, Germany's EU partner Greece
formally asked the German government in October to place an arms embargo on
Ankara.
The German government restricted arms exports to
Turkey when Turkish troops were deployed into northern Syria in Oct. 2019.
Maas said he had abandoned the idea of a diplomatic
settlement of the dispute. "Of course, we continue to believe that there
will be a solution to the conflict and that we do not have to permanently
remove a NATO partner from armaments cooperation", he said.
Last year, Germany issued a limited ban on weapons
sales to Turkey for military equipment that could be used in an offensive into
northern Syria targeting Kurdish forces.
Germany exported arms worth 243 million euros (268
million dollars) to Turkey in 2018, making up almost one third of all German
weapons exports, according to Bild am Sonntag.
Turkey received 344.6 million euros ($389.4 million)
worth of weapons in 2019 from Germany, which amounts to more than one third of
Germany’s total weapons exports, according to a classified document revealed by
the German Press Agency (DPA) and cited by Greek Reporter.



