https://sputnikglobe.com/20240820/ex-afd-mep-germany-would-rather-upend-its-economy-than-slash-military-aid-to-ukraine-1119847573.html
Ex-AfD MEP: Germany Would Rather Upend Its Economy Than Slash Military Aid to Ukraine
Ex-AfD MEP: Germany Would Rather Upend Its Economy Than Slash Military Aid to Ukraine
Sputnik International
Berlin will continue to borrow on the international financial markets and to fund Ukraine's war effort despite it stifling the German economy, Dr Gunnar Beck, former MEP for the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, told Sputnik.
2024-08-20T19:17+0000
2024-08-20T19:17+0000
2024-08-20T19:19+0000
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German Finance Minister Christian Lindner's letter, released on August 17, told the government that from 2025 onwards there would be no additional funds in the budget to arm Ukraine.That prompted a storm of criticism in the European media. Germany has been the second-largest supplier of military aid to the Kiev regime after the US, committing over €10.2 billion ($11.3 billion) in weapons to date, according to the Kiel Institute."The German government will simply continue to borrow on the international financial markets, raise taxes and stifle the economy," he added."That's pretty much what most Western governments are doing, but the German government to an increasingly dangerous extent because Germany is also largely bankrolling, the EU," the commentator said, adding that Germany will defend the Western political and economic order "to the last euro.""Germany is not a fully sovereign country," Beck stressed, and its political elite "is not safeguarding the national interest."Deputy federal government spokesperson Wolfgang Buechner insisted to reporters that the outcome of the inquiry into the 2022 Nord Stream sabotage attack would not negatively impact relations with Ukraine.But the German Federal Prosecutor’s Office has reportedly issued an arrest warrant for a suspect in the attack, a Ukrainian diving instructor named as Volodymyr Z.Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Seymour Hersh reported in the wake of the Nord Stream sabotage that the attack was conducted by US and Norwegian operatives.It backfired on the German economy, robbing it off cheap Russian gas and hatsening de-industrialization thanks to high energy costs.He added that the probe was only launched "under significant public pressure," and the European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen, a former German defense minister "consistently prevented any investigation at EU level."The German government "has gone very far in assuring Ukraine of its support," despite the suspected Ukrainian trace, the former MEP stressed."Don't expect any continuation of a serious investigation into Nord Stream attacks," he warned. "And don't expect any significant change in German foreign policy."
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is germany slashing military aid to ukraine, war in ukraine, ukraine war, germany is second largest provider of military aid to ukraine, germany's investigation, nord stream sabotage, alleged ukrainian trace in nord stream sabotage, german economy
Ex-AfD MEP: Germany Would Rather Upend Its Economy Than Slash Military Aid to Ukraine
19:17 GMT 20.08.2024 (Updated: 19:19 GMT 20.08.2024) Berlin will continue to borrow on the international financial markets and to fund Ukraine's war effort despite it stifling the German economy, Dr Gunnar Beck, former MEP for the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, told Sputnik.
German Finance Minister Christian Lindner's letter, released on August 17, told the government that from 2025 onwards there would be no additional funds in the budget to arm Ukraine.
That prompted a storm of criticism in the European media. Germany has been the second-largest supplier of military aid to the Kiev regime after the US, committing over €10.2 billion ($11.3 billion) in weapons to date, according to the Kiel Institute.
"I'm almost certain that the reduction in financial assistance to Ukraine hinted at by German minister last week will not go ahead. Germany will not reduce that assistance to Ukraine," Beck, a lawyer and academic specializing in EU law and, told Sputnik.
"The German government will simply continue to borrow on the international financial markets, raise taxes and stifle the economy," he added.
"That's pretty much what most Western governments are doing, but the German government to an increasingly dangerous extent because Germany is also largely bankrolling, the EU," the commentator said, adding that Germany will defend the Western political and economic order "to the last euro."
"Germany is not a fully sovereign country," Beck stressed, and its political elite "is not safeguarding the national interest."
Deputy federal government spokesperson Wolfgang Buechner insisted to reporters that the outcome of the inquiry into the 2022 Nord Stream sabotage attack would not negatively impact relations with Ukraine.
But the German Federal Prosecutor’s Office has reportedly issued an arrest warrant for a suspect in the attack, a
Ukrainian diving instructor named as Volodymyr Z.Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Seymour Hersh reported in the wake of the Nord Stream sabotage that the attack was conducted by US and Norwegian operatives.
It backfired on the German economy, robbing it off cheap Russian gas and hatsening de-industrialization thanks to high energy costs.
"There is no reason to assume that the German government is seriously interested in unearthing the truth about who is behind the Nord Stream attacks," Beck said. "Germany only commenced an investigation into the North Stream sabotage attacks significantly later than any of the other countries concerned."
He added that the probe was only launched "under significant public pressure," and the European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen, a former German defense minister "consistently prevented any investigation at EU level."
The German government "has gone very far in assuring Ukraine of its support," despite the
suspected Ukrainian trace, the former MEP stressed.
"The German government regularly yields to international pressure from both the EU, and the US," Beck noted, and is unwilling to assert German national interest "over the wishes of many of the other parties concerned."
"Don't expect any continuation of a serious investigation into Nord Stream attacks," he warned. "And don't expect any significant change in German foreign policy."