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    <title>German Foreign Policy</title>
    <link>http://www.german-foreign-policy.com</link>
    <language>en-en</language>
    <item>
      <title>Breath-Taking Progress</title>
      <link>http://www.german-foreign-policy.com/en/fulltext/58533</link>
      <description>(Own report) - The German Council on Foreign Relations (DGAP) is propagating in favor of the deployment of combat drones. The influential think tank, headquartered in Berlin, has published an opinion poll indicating that more than two-thirds of the German population are in favor of using Unmanned Combat Aerial Vehicles or UCAVs in warfare. The results of this poll can be found in the current edition of "Internationale Politik," the journal published by the DGAP. The journal extensively treats the subject - with an unambiguous tenor: UCAV development is characterized as an "enormous technological leap" that the German armed forces cannot evade. The authors consider the construction of combat drones, which, based on artificial intelligence can quasi "autonomously" carry out killer functions without human intervention, to be a "logical consequence." The PR campaign, launched by the DGAP, accords with the German government's intention to increase the reliance on UCAVs in future wars.</description>
      <pubDate>2013/05/15</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Impact of the Crisis</title>
      <link>http://www.german-foreign-policy.com/en/fulltext/58532</link>
      <description>(Own report) - The EU crisis is causing a serious weakening of the EU's foreign policy, concluded a recent study published by the Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP) in Berlin. Not only are the member states' financial outlays for foreign and military activities clearly diminishing, due to leeway shrinkage caused by budget cuts, but "conflicts between member states have grown" around how to handle the crisis, according to the SWP. This has stifled "joint foreign policy initiatives." The think tank points out that the enduring crisis and the hard-line German austerity dictate have damaged the prestige of the EU and, therefore, also severely tarnished its global "soft power." Particularly damaging are the cuts in the military sector, even ranging up to 30 percent reductions in defense spending of the smaller and medium sized EU countries, jeopardizing their long term capability of participation in EU wars. The option of instrumentalizing a common EU foreign and military policy, to reinforce German clout and eventually promote it to world power status, had always been an important motive in Berlin for the buildup and development of the EU.</description>
      <pubDate>2013/05/13</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>North Africa's Powder Keg</title>
      <link>http://www.german-foreign-policy.com/en/fulltext/58531</link>
      <description>(Own report) - In the prelude to an EU "mission" to Libya, German government advisors are insisting on stronger German engagement in that country. The country is socially highly fractured and "instable," according to a recent study published by the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP). Many militias are still in tact, with no central command structure, and with some waging fierce battles against others. These conditions are not in Germany's economic and security policy interests. In fact, not only are there anti-western Islamist militias operating on Libyan territory, who have extended their range of activities to Northern Mali and Algeria, constituting a long term threat to western hegemony over the area. The country has, at the same time, resumed being Germany's largest non-European oil supplier, and thereby, taken on a prominent significance in Germany's energy policy. The BASF subsidiary Wintershall, with headquarters in Kassel, produces a major portion of its oil in Libya, and is interested in taking over RWE Dea, also active in Libya. Battles between rival militias caused an interruption of Wintershall's production already last year.</description>
      <pubDate>2013/05/07</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>Roll Back China's Influence</title>
      <link>http://www.german-foreign-policy.com/en/fulltext/58530</link>
      <description>(Own report) - The German Foreign Ministry is strengthening Berlin's anti-China position in Southeast Asia, through a new training program for employees of several of Myanmar's ministries. If one seeks to "roll back" the influence of the People's Republic of China, Myanmar is "a very interesting partner," affirmed a specialist on Southeast Asia at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP) in Berlin. The German government is expanding cooperation with that country accordingly, and in addition to broadening cooperation on political projects, seeks particularly to enhance its economic influence. The EU recently lifted the economic sanctions imposed on Myanmar due also to German pressure. The German Ministry of the Economy is supporting new business deals. Critics' indications that the economic opening of the country serves western enterprises and the local elite in the entourage of its military rulers, have as little effect as the human rights organizations' protests, accusing the government in Naypyidaw of tolerating pogroms against the Muslim minority. They have been demanding - to no avail - that the EU take appropriate measures.</description>
      <pubDate>2013/05/03</pubDate>
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      <title>The Dangers of Repression</title>
      <link>http://www.german-foreign-policy.com/en/fulltext/58528</link>
      <description>(Own report) - German specialists in foreign policy are expressing their misgivings about Berlin's intensive cooperation with the Arabian dictatorships at the Gulf, particularly with Qatar. According to a recent analysis published by the German Institute of Global and Area Studies (GIGA), this cooperation could prove useful on an economic level. However, on a political level, it should be taken into consideration that, until now, Qatar has proven extremely resistant to outside influence. This is not only the case of Berlin and Brussels' aspiration of concluding a free trade agreement with the Gulf States, but also in questions of human rights and of embedding the population using parliamentary democracy. The GIGA analysis points out that even the Qatari ruling clan does not exclude the possibility of domestic upheavals on a long term - and therefore refuses to sign international human rights agreements. The German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP) also points to the limits of shoring up repressive regimes, as had become evident, most recently, during the overthrow of the presidents of Tunisia and Egypt. According to the SWP, the Bahraini opposition's repression - which is supported by Qatar - runs the risk, sooner or later, of seeing the local unrest spreading to other countries, particularly to Saudi Arabia - with serious consequences. Berlin, however, is supporting this repression with its delivery of tanks to Saudi Arabia and Qatar.</description>
      <pubDate>2013/04/30</pubDate>
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      <title>In Rebel Territory (III)</title>
      <link>http://www.german-foreign-policy.com/en/fulltext/58527</link>
      <description>(Own report) - The German government is reinforcing its insistence that state structures be rapidly established in the rebel-controlled regions of Syria. The "moderate forces" of these regions must be strengthened and the "reconstruction" advanced with determination, the Foreign Ministry declared. This is particularly in response to the growing influence of the fanatical Islamist militias, such as Jabhat al Nusra, an alliance with ties to al Qaeda in Iraq. The close ties to that neighboring country facilitate Jabhat al Nusra's control over a majority of Syria's oil reserves, which, to a large extent, are located near the border with Iraq. According to reports, this fanatical Islamist militia is financing itself to a growing extent through the exploitation of oil deposits, which other militia groups of Syrian insurgents are now also trying to gain control. The EU's recent decision to lift the embargo on Syrian oil from the non-Islamist, "moderate" insurgent groups is designed to strengthen the standing of these factions in their opposition to Jabhat al Nusra and similar alliances. However, this will further fuel the civil war between the rebel groups.</description>
      <pubDate>2013/04/29</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>A Ring of Fire Around China (II)</title>
      <link>http://www.german-foreign-policy.com/en/fulltext/58526</link>
      <description>(Own report) - Berlin's main think tank for military policy has announced "war game exercises" for military confrontations with China. This year's "Trier China-Dialogue," to be convened in Berlin at the beginning of June by the Federal College for Security Studies, will focus on analyzing the "combat capabilities" of the Chinese armed forces. The forum will be concluded with two "hypothetical practical tests," to learn whether the Peoples Republic of China's military can "take over" and "hold onto" Taiwan or islands in the South China Sea. The conflict with Taiwan, as well as that over various islands in the South China Sea, impinges upon China's vital interests. In both cases, the USA has adopted the position of China's adversary as its own, therefore, in the case of armed conflict, NATO - and therefore, the rest of the West - could become directly involved. A supplementary objective for the "war game exercises" is the West's rapidly expanding military presence in east and Southeast Asia. In the wake of the stationing of US troops, Germany is also strengthening its military cooperation with China's potential adversaries in Southeast Asia and intensifying arms exports into the region.</description>
      <pubDate>2013/04/24</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>"Policy of Historical Memory"</title>
      <link>http://www.german-foreign-policy.com/en/fulltext/58525</link>
      <description>(Own report) - Tensions, between the German government and several countries victimized by Nazi crimes, are casting a shadow over the commemorations of the mass deportations and murders carried out during "Operation Reinhard" seventy years ago. In 1942 - 43, the Nazis murdered within the framework of "Operation Reinhard" around two million west and east European prisoners in the Treblinka, Chelmno, Majdanek, Bełżec, and Sobibór extermination camps. In Sobibór, alone, by July 1943, the Nazi terror regime had murdered more than 34,000 Dutch Jews, including German emigrants. By early January, Berlin had still refused to contribute to the costs of this year's scheduled Sobibór memorial services of the Netherlands, Slovakia, Israel, and Poland. Berlin also does not intend to contribute to covering the costs of the other "Reinhard" memorial sites. As its proprietor, the German government is allowing the Deutsche Bahn AG to charge tariffs for the commemorations of the Sobibór victims. A citizens' initiative seeking to hold commemorations at stations along the route of deportation, in May and June, for those who were murdered must expect to pay the costs. This financial "boycott" is reportedly in concert with the German Ministry of Transport, under CSU minister Ramsauer, according to a press statement by the "Train of Commemoration." The citizens' initiative is appealing for donations to commemorate the victims of Sobibór at several German train stations.</description>
      <pubDate>2013/04/19</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Protesting Elections as Tactic</title>
      <link>http://www.german-foreign-policy.com/en/fulltext/58524</link>
      <description>(Own report) - The German CDU-affiliated Konrad Adenauer Foundation has classified the protests of alleged electoral fraud by the Venezuelan opposition as a tactical maneuver, aimed at the long-termed delegitimization of the country's new president, Nicolás Maduro. The foundation explained in a recent statement that electoral fraud is extremely unlikely, due to the scrupulously regulated electoral process. By encouraging turmoil, the opposition seeks to spread the idea that the newly elected head of state lacks "legitimacy." This German foundation is well informed on the strategies, in particular, of those of the oppositional "Primero Justicia" party - for which the narrowly defeated Enrique Capriles had been their presidential candidate. The Adenauer Foundation has been counseling it for years, also in "political communication." Primero Justicia, and Capriles, himself, had been receiving support from the Adenauer Foundation back in 2002, when they were involved in a putsch to overthrow President Hugo Chávez. Statements made by the head of the foundation's branch office in Venezuela, at the time, indicated intimate knowledge of the putschists' objectives. Capriles is considered a leading political representative of the traditional Venezuelan elite, who has always cooperated closely with the West. However, since Chávez came to office, the elite has been pushed back, to the advantage of previously underprivileged social sectors.</description>
      <pubDate>2013/04/18</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>In an Alliance with the Dictatorship</title>
      <link>http://www.german-foreign-policy.com/en/fulltext/58523</link>
      <description>(Own report) - The Prime Minister of Qatar, who is also the country's Foreign Minster, is arriving in Berlin today for talks on the war in Syria and on strengthening economic cooperation. Since some time, this Persian Gulf dictatorship has been one of Germany's closest allies in the Arab world. As in the 2011 war on Libya, it is supporting Islamist rebels today in Syria, who are seeking to topple a government combated by the West. Berlin's cooperation with Qatar on matters of foreign policy is being consolidated by economic cooperation. German companies benefit from lucrative Middle East contracts, while the Qatari ruling clan buys a significant amount of shares in major German companies, such as Volkswagen and Siemens. Qatar has been linking its financial support in France, to a large-scale public relations campaign in the suburban slums. German involvement in the war in Syria, will most likely also be a topic in these talks with Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jabir al Thani in Berlin. A German Navy "reconnaissance" vessel is, currently, cruising again off the Syrian coast. Experts believe that Syrian insurgents are also profiting from information retrieved by this espionage.</description>
      <pubDate>2013/04/15</pubDate>
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