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Weapons exports significantly decrease under Gabriel

February 9, 2015

Economic Affairs Minister Sigmar Gabriel has called Germany's role in the global weapons trade a "disgrace." His stance has resulted in a clear reduction of export licenses, and therefore profits, for the arms industry.

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Symbolbild Waffenexporte Deutschland Panzer Kritik
Image: Ronny Hartmann/AFP/Getty Images

The number of licenses granted for military equipment exports has decreased significantly under Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel, according to a report by Germany's Süddeutsche Zeitung on Monday. The Social Democrat, who is also economic affairs minister, had promised upon taking office in 2013 to reduce Germany's role in the global weapons trade.

"It is a disgrace that Germany is one of the largest weapons exporters in the world," he said last year, around the time he blocked the delivery of up to 800 Leopard 2 battle tanks to Saudi Arabia by refusing to grant licenses for the essential German parts needed for a Spanish firm to build the tanks.

Falling revenues under Gabriel

Revenue from weapons export licenses was 3.97 billion euros in 2014, down from 5.8 billion in 2013, according to the report, which is based on information the opposition Left party had requested from the Economic Affairs Ministry. Even so-called collective licenses granted for politically unproblematic exports fell in value in 2014, down to 6.52 billion euro, although the proportion of grants to requests for non-EU and non-NATO countries remained constant at 60 percent.

Weapons exports had boomed under Christian Democrat (CDU) Chancellor Angela Merkel and her former coalition partners in the neoliberal Free Democratic Party, but Gabriel has taken up the cause of reducing arms exports, citing his party's coalition agreement with the CDU when faced with criticism.

Despite Gabriel's negative stance on the export of military equipment, especially when it comes to supplying non-EU and non-NATO countries with weapons, last week Germany's Federal Security Council approved the delivery of shooting-simulation systems to Saudi Arabia and tanks to Kuwait, though both nations have received extensive criticism for their human rights records.

es/mkg (dpa, Reuters)