Berliner Boersenzeitung - Taciturn Scholz under fire for hesitant Ukraine stance

EUR -
AED 4.272706
AFN 80.277121
ALL 97.263968
AMD 445.385554
ANG 2.082293
AOA 1066.868798
ARS 1581.221574
AUD 1.792628
AWG 2.09418
AZN 1.974867
BAM 1.945654
BBD 2.342436
BDT 141.561828
BGN 1.955962
BHD 0.438635
BIF 3433.291644
BMD 1.163433
BND 1.49296
BOB 8.052185
BRL 6.295574
BSD 1.162762
BTN 101.76802
BWP 15.560196
BYN 3.930653
BYR 22803.292516
BZD 2.332607
CAD 1.611675
CDF 3336.72608
CHF 0.936756
CLF 0.028549
CLP 1119.956271
CNY 8.320297
CNH 8.322922
COP 4683.691574
CRC 585.459708
CUC 1.163433
CUP 30.830982
CVE 110.701007
CZK 24.555132
DJF 206.765441
DKK 7.46364
DOP 73.005295
DZD 150.867546
EGP 56.41244
ERN 17.451499
ETB 164.624
FJD 2.636458
FKP 0.864164
GBP 0.863849
GEL 3.135462
GGP 0.864164
GHS 12.797526
GIP 0.864164
GMD 83.185593
GNF 10098.600703
GTQ 8.915777
GYD 243.268796
HKD 9.087589
HNL 30.708857
HRK 7.54743
HTG 152.141238
HUF 397.271166
IDR 18934.004247
ILS 3.913382
IMP 0.864164
INR 101.927053
IQD 1524.097612
IRR 48936.917674
ISK 143.416617
JEP 0.864164
JMD 186.218964
JOD 0.824894
JPY 171.440619
KES 150.662086
KGS 101.649865
KHR 4660.714119
KMF 485.151864
KPW 1047.074341
KRW 1615.217622
KWD 0.355569
KYD 0.968968
KZT 622.515873
LAK 25153.427969
LBP 104191.268606
LKR 351.176341
LRD 235.013864
LSL 20.510786
LTL 3.435316
LVL 0.703749
LYD 6.293688
MAD 10.520925
MDL 19.441043
MGA 5188.912275
MKD 61.611962
MMK 2442.610375
MNT 4181.786015
MOP 9.355696
MRU 46.479006
MUR 53.110968
MVR 17.914432
MWK 2020.883783
MXN 21.726035
MYR 4.898181
MZN 74.401577
NAD 20.511527
NGN 1788.317619
NIO 42.825284
NOK 11.767866
NPR 162.828832
NZD 1.985841
OMR 0.447306
PAB 1.162777
PEN 4.095432
PGK 4.823304
PHP 66.053979
PKR 327.942723
PLN 4.259916
PYG 8427.057215
QAR 4.23577
RON 5.052094
RSD 117.121734
RUB 93.892714
RWF 1682.32454
SAR 4.365094
SBD 9.560008
SCR 16.440063
SDG 698.642243
SEK 11.141856
SGD 1.494506
SHP 0.914276
SLE 27.108909
SLL 24396.612048
SOS 664.900741
SRD 44.477482
STD 24080.720175
STN 24.897472
SVC 10.173948
SYP 15126.861809
SZL 20.511569
THB 37.776351
TJS 11.115871
TMT 4.083651
TND 3.356526
TOP 2.724874
TRY 47.710655
TTD 7.9007
TWD 35.436548
TZS 2914.401023
UAH 48.23314
UGX 4142.488062
USD 1.163433
UYU 46.59702
UZS 14368.400658
VES 162.009994
VND 30604.112737
VUV 140.096052
WST 3.154668
XAF 652.576584
XAG 0.030213
XAU 0.000346
XCD 3.144236
XCG 2.095446
XDR 0.811336
XOF 652.686367
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.427601
ZAR 20.48254
ZMK 10472.280474
ZMW 27.085346
ZWL 374.625045
  • CMSD

    0.0700

    24.02

    +0.29%

  • BCE

    -0.2700

    25.22

    -1.07%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.8

    +0.21%

  • BCC

    -1.2400

    89.98

    -1.38%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.43

    -0.15%

  • RBGPF

    2.0800

    76

    +2.74%

  • AZN

    -1.3100

    79.66

    -1.64%

  • NGG

    -0.9200

    70.49

    -1.31%

  • SCS

    -0.1100

    16.39

    -0.67%

  • RIO

    -0.3600

    62.33

    -0.58%

  • BTI

    -0.7100

    57.8

    -1.23%

  • RELX

    -0.6500

    47.79

    -1.36%

  • GSK

    -0.5500

    39.64

    -1.39%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    11.87

    -0.42%

  • RYCEF

    0.1400

    14.2

    +0.99%

  • BP

    0.2300

    34.97

    +0.66%

Taciturn Scholz under fire for hesitant Ukraine stance
Taciturn Scholz under fire for hesitant Ukraine stance / Photo: LISI NIESNER - POOL/AFP

Taciturn Scholz under fire for hesitant Ukraine stance

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz was under growing pressure on Wednesday over his perceived lack of leadership over the war in Ukraine and his dogged refusal to send heavy weapons to the country.

Text size:

Almost two months after he responded to Russia's invasion of Ukraine by promising a "turning point" in German defence policy, critics say the chancellor has failed to take enough concrete action.

Scholz has sent defensive weapons to Ukraine and announced extra military aid in recent weeks but has so far not agreed to directly send heavy weapons -- leaving Germany increasingly out of step with European and NATO allies.

"We believe that the Bundeswehr (German army) would be capable of supplying us with the weapons we need right now," Ukraine's ambassador to Germany, Andriy Melnyk, told the ZDF broadcaster on Wednesday. "We do not know why this is not happening."

Army general Markus Laubenthal said the Bundeswehr was simply not in a position to send the weapons Ukraine wants, as this would "considerably weaken (Germany's own) defence capability".

The chancellor also said in a speech on Tuesday evening that Germany does not want to "go it alone" and send heavy weapons without the backing of its allies.

But with the United States, Canada, Britain, the Netherlands and others all stepping up their deliveries in recent days, Die Welt newspaper said "the German government's position is increasingly a case of going it alone" in the other direction.

And the Bild daily reported on Wednesday that the government had deliberately withdrawn armoured vehicles and tanks from a list of equipment German arms manufacturers were offering to make available to Ukraine at the end of March -- slashing the inventory from 48 to 24 pages.

- 'What is Germany doing?' -

"Germany's reputation is being damaged" and "valuable time is being lost", opposition leader Friedrich Merz told the WDR broadcaster.

"There are NATO partners who are well ahead of Germany" and "already delivering heavy weapons to Ukraine", Merz said, leaving people at home and abroad asking: "What is Germany doing?"

Scholz has also faced criticism from within his own coalition government, a partnership between his Social Democrats (SPD), the Green party and the liberal FDP.

Anton Hofreiter from the Greens accused him of failing "to show enough leadership", while Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann of the FDP called on him to finally "take the baton in his hand and set the rhythm".

Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine, several members of Scholz's SPD have come under fire over the party's close historic ties with Moscow, including President Frank-Walter Steinmeier and former chancellor Gerhard Schroeder.

The Handelsblatt daily said the SPD was under "increasing pressure" over the war and in danger of creating the impression it "has not broken with its Russia policy of past years".

- 'Destructive for Europe' -

Famous for his calm stoicism and taciturn demeanour, Scholz won last September's election in Germany with a campaign that played on his reputation as a safe pair of hands.

But his strategy of being "calmness personified" may finally have reached its limits, the Sueddeutsche Zeitung suggested on Tuesday.

"Either Scholz will deliver an answer to Germany's 'turning point' and Russia's crimes in Ukraine with his trademark stoicism, or his stoic calmness will see him fail horribly," it said.

Many Germans agree, according to a recent survey for Der Spiegel magazine. Asked whether they saw Scholz as a strong leader, 65 percent of respondents replied with either "not especially" or "not at all".

"The German chancellor is never the first and often even the last when it comes to responding in this war," Der Spiegel said, pointing to Scholz's hesitancy on cutting Russia off from the SWIFT banking payments system as well as his reluctance to ban Russian gas.

"If the course of the past few months has shown one thing, it's that Scholz doesn't make decisions until he has no other choice," it said.

Catherine de Vries, a Dutch professor of political science at Bocconi University, said Scholz was continuing the legacy of former chancellor Angela Merkel by offering the "smallest possible concessions at the last possible moment".

This approach was perhaps understandable from a domestic point of view, she wrote on Twitter, but "destructive for Europe".

(B.Hartmann--BBZ)