INS Magen Israeli Navy
The Israeli Navy corvette INS Magen fires a C-Dome counter-rocket missile during tests (photo date unknown).Israel Defence Forces

Germany pauses weapons exports to Israel over Gaza concerns

Merz questions Israel's military approach
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Germany is to suspend exports of weaponry that could be used in the Gaza Strip because of Israel's plan to expand its operations there - the first time united Germany has acknowledged denying military support to its long-time ally.

In a statement, Merz acknowledged Israel's right to disarm Hamas and seek the release of Israeli hostages, but said the Israeli decision, "makes it increasingly difficult to see how these goals can be achieved".

Germany is Israel's second biggest weapons supplier after the US, and has long been one of its staunchest supporters, principally because of historical guilt for the Nazi Holocaust - a policy known as the "Staatsraison".

But an opinion poll in June indicated that 73 per cent of Germans want tighter controls on arms exports, including 30 per cent who favoured a total ban.

"This is the right decision. The humanitarian suffering in Gaza is unbearable," said vice chancellor and finance minister Lars Klingbeil of the Social Democrats, who govern alongside Merz's conservatives.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office and the Israeli foreign and defence ministries did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Germany provided 30 per cent of Israel's major arms imports in 2019-2023, primarily naval equipment including Sa’ar 6-class frigates (MEKO A-100 light frigates), which have been used in the Gaza war.

Merz said the release of hostages and ceasefire negotiations were Germany's top priorities, along with civilian suffering. He also urged the Israeli government not to take any further steps towards annexing parts of the West Bank.

Members of Netanyahu's coalition have been pushing for a total takeover of Gaza, though the military has warned this could jeopardise the lives of surviving hostages.

Germany's parliament reported in June that export licences for €485 million ($564 million) of military equipment for Israel had been granted between the day of the Hamas terrorist attack that triggered the Gaza war, October 7, 2023, and May 13, 2025.

In the months after the Hamas attack, Germany increased its arms exports to Israel roughly tenfold. Human rights activist groups launched legal challenges, saying the weapons could be used in the Gaza war, but none has succeeded so far.

(Reporting by Kirsti Knolle and Riham Alkousaa, additional reporting by Miranda Murray; Editing by Ludwig Burger and Kevin Liffey)

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