Policy pressure
August 28, 2011German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle's Free Democratic Party (FDP) denied reports on Sunday that they were seeking to replace the beleaguered minister.
"Rumors about an imminent replacement do not correspond to reality," FDP party sources told German news agency DAPD.
Westerwelle made a sharp U-turn on Sunday, acknowledging NATO's key role in Libya's struggle against Moammer Gadhafi.
Party pressure
In the Sunday newspaper Welt am Sonntag, Westerwelle offered long-awaited praise for the "help provided by the international military mission."
He had previously come under fire for preferring instead to credit Germany's support of UN economic sanctions for assisting the Libyan revolution.
FDP leader, Vice Chancellor and Economy Minister Philipp Rösler, confirmed that he had strongly urged the foreign minister to recognize the positive impact of military intervention.
Rösler himself became the first member of Merkel's center-right coalition to explicitly praise NATO on Friday.
Standing on the sidelines
Berlin opted to abstain from a UN resolution in March to initiate a no fly-zone in Libya, shocking NATO allies Britain, France and the US.
Former Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer described Westerwelle's opposition to the air campaign on Saturday as the biggest foreign policy mistake in Germany's post-war history.
Fischer's comments came after calls for Westerwelle's resignation on Thursday from former Interior Minister Gerhart Baum and former Rhineland-Palatinate Economics Minister Hans-Artur Bauckhage, both fellow FDP members.
Author: Charlotte Chelsom-Pill (Reuters, dpa, dapd)
Editor: Andreas Illmer