Angela Merkel bids farewell with pledge to ‘always’ defend Israel

Outgoing German chancellor pays eighth and final visit of her 16 years in office

Outgoing German Chancellor Angela Merkel pledged that her country would preserve its post-Holocaust commitment to Israel, which hailed her as a “moral compass” for Europeans at times divided over its Middle East conflicts.

Making her eighth and final visit to Israel as she concludes her 16-year term, Merkel met Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and was scheduled to tour the Yad Vashem memorial to the six million Jews killed by the Nazis during the Second World War.

Germany has been a leading postwar European ally of Israel and Merkel has sought to cultivate security and economic ties, though she has differed with Israel on policies concerning the Palestinians and Iran.

“I want to use this opportunity to emphasise that the topic of Israel’s security will always be of central importance and a central topic of every German government,” she said during a meeting with Bennett.

Attending a session of Bennett’s cabinet, Merkel added: “It is a gift of history, to which Israel contributed much, that Germany can sit here at a table with you today since the history of the Shoah is a singular event for which we continue to bear responsibility in every phase of history, including in the future.”

Bennett praised his guest for fulfilling a special role in a relationship that rests on an enormous historical wound.

Bennett, a nationalist atop a cross-partisan coalition, opposes Palestinian statehood, putting him at odds with Western powers such as Germany.

“We sometimes disagree on questions such as whether there should be a two-state solution with the Palestinians, but we agree, I think, that there must always be a vision of a lasting democratic Jewish State of Israel,” Merkel told Bennett’s cabinet.

The visit had been planned for late August but Merkel postponed the trip, citing the tense situation in Afghanistan.

Following an inconclusive September 26 election, Germany’s Social Democrats are courting smaller parties to form a coalition that would replace a conservative grouping led by Merkel’s Christian Democrats.

Merkel, 67, plans to step down once a new government is formed.

 

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