War in Afghanistan
Deutsche Welle reported on June 25:
"German Defense Minister Jung has insisted that Germany is not fighting a war in Afghanistan, rejecting calls for such an admission after three German soldiers died in the country this week. The parliamentary commissioner for the armed forces, Reinhold Robbe, on Wednesday called on the German government to recognize it was fighting a war in Afghanistan...
"Around 700 German troops are based in the Kundus region in the north of Afghanistan, a region previously considered relatively safe. Taliban fighters have become increasingly active in a region around Kundus known as Char Dara, where Tuesday's attack took place. In June alone there were 30 Taliban attacks on German soldiers, putting the soldiers under daily fire...
"Germany has the third-largest contingent in the NATO-led force in Afghanistan, with about 3,380 troops. Despite US pressure to contribute troops to the more restive southern provinces where members of NATO and US soldiers have been fighting the Taliban since the 2001 invasion that ousted the group from power, the German army has focused on the Regional Command North..."
Der Spiegel Online wrote on June 25:
"Germany's military presence in Afghanistan is deeply unpopular at home. But even after spending seven years there and losing 35 soldiers, many German politicians still refuse to call it a 'war.' German commentators argue Thursday that the government is afraid to tell the truth...
"The center-left Süddeutsche Zeitung writes: '... Afghanistan is the Bundeswehr's first wartime deployment...'
"The Financial Times Deutschland writes: '... There is no doubt that the number of people in Germany who disapprove of the mission in Afghanistan is very high... When the Bundeswehr is getting into firefights with Taliban militants on an almost daily basis, and when soldiers are dying in these exchanges, then that is war... The fact that the government still refuses to acknowledge this isn't merely disrespectful to the soldiers putting their lives on the line in the Hindu Kush to defend Germany. It's also completely useless in terms of political strategy.'
"The left-leaning Berliner Zeitung writes: 'It would help if the Defense Ministry would just... be clear for once about why it is so adamant about not using the term "war"... the government's insistence on using vague terminology makes it sound like it's afraid of the truth.'"



