http://www.dw.de/germany-clears-tank-sales-to-indonesia/a-16797615

 
Arms Exports
Germany clears tank sales to Indonesia
An opposition politician has told DW that the German government has approved 
the sale of 164 tanks to Indonesia. The country joins Saudi Arabia, Qatar and 
the United Arab Emirates on a contentious new export list. 

Green party parliamentarian Katja Keul told Deutsche Welle and other news 
outlets on Wednesday that the contentious tank deal was going ahead. Keul had 
submitted a formal request for clarification to Chancellor Angela Merkel's 
government.

Under the deal, German military manufacturer Rheinmetall was given government 
approval to sell 164 tanks to Indonesia. The deal comprises 104 Leopard 2 
tanks, 50 of the older Marder 1A2 infantry fighting vehicles, four tanks 
specialized for mountain terrain, three mobile bridge-layers and three armored 
earth-movers, called "pioneer tanks" in Germany. The price is not known.

Indonesia had officially requested the deal during Angela Merkel's visit in the 
summer of 2012, with Reuters previously reporting that it was likely to be 
approved.

German military exports must be cleared by a special security council made up 
of Merkel and most top government ministers, including the defense, foreign, 
finance and development ministers.

Indonesia had also sought to procure Leopard tanks, considered among the most 
modern on the market, from the Netherlands, but the deal was stopped in the 
country's parliament. Indonesia's questionable human rights record helped 
explain the Dutch decision.

DW.DE
Controversial arms exports to Saudi Arabia
The Middle East is one of the most highly militarized regions in the world. 
Germany is among those supplying weapons to governments there. Because of human 
rights issues, that's controversial. (15.02.2013)

The opposition Green and Left parties had voiced concerns that the weapons 
might be used against ethnic minorities in the country.

The US has recently announced plans to export military equipment to the Asian 
country, a part of heavy investment since 2010 in modernizing its military.

Contentious customers

Indonesia is number 100 on Transparency International's corruption index and 
sits in 139th place on Reporters Without Borders' Press Freedom Index. The 
country resumed capital punishment in March this year after four years without 
the death penalty.

Germany has approved a number of similar deals in recent months, with Spiegel 
consistently reporting on the issue. One December issue of the weekly magazine 
featured a doctored image of Merkel in a military uniform with the cover 
headline "German weapons for the world." Saudi Arabia and Qatar are the two 
most notable examples for armored vehicle exports in recent months, with the 
United Arab Emirates a comparatively recent trading partner for automatic 
weapons and ammunition.

This February, the Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper reported that German arms 
exports just to the Gulf region more than doubled in 2012 compared to the 
previous year, rising from a total of 570 million euros ($746 million) to 1.42 
billion euros.

Traditionally, Germany's weapons export policies have been comparatively 
cautious, especially for land-based equipment. Hans-Dieter Genscher, foreign 
minister for almost two decades, once famously said that "whatever floats is 
ok, whatever rolls is not," referring to the difficulty of using naval weaponry 
to suppress internal conflicts compared to tanks and other land-based military 
equipment.

msh/jm  (AFP, dpa, Reuters)


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