German weapons exports peak after last-minute approval

Germany’s weapons exports reached a record level this year after the last-minute approval of deals worth billions of euros by the departing government.

This happened even though the government was only acting in an executive capacity at the time.

The former government approved deals worth almost 5 billion euros (5.6 billion dollars) in its last nine days in office. That brought Germany’s total weapons exports to a record 9.04 billion euros for the year, according to the Economics Ministry in response to a lawmaker’s question, seen by dpa.

Egypt is the main recipient of German arms exports, despite criticism for human rights violations and its involvement in conflicts in Yemen and Libya.

Under the last-minute agreements, Thyssenkrupp Marine Systems may deliver three MEKO A-200 EN frigates to Egypt; Diehl Defence has been authorized to deliver 16 IRIS-T SLS/SLX air defence systems to Egypt; and ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems is allowed to export a type 218 SG submarine to Singapore.

The coalition between the Christian Democrats and Social Democrats was replaced by a new government earlier this month, following September elections.

Details of the deals were conveyed just a day before Olaf Scholz was elected chancellor, although the exports’ value was not known at the time.

It is now clear that the weapons exports to Egypt run to 4.34 billion euros, despite the fact that the government was only acting in an executive capacity, when major decisions are usually avoided.

The deals were done under former chancellor Angela Merkel, along with her Scholz, then vice chancellor.

The lawmaker who posed the question, Sevim Dagdelen, a left-wing foreign policy expert, criticized Scholz, a Social Democrat, and slammed the leading party’s criticism of arms exports to authoritarian regimes as inconsequential.

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