
Germany has raised the prospect of a military involvement in securing a potential ceasefire in Ukraine during a meeting of Kiev's allies in Paris.
"This could include, for example, us registering forces for Ukraine on neighbouring NATO territory after a ceasefire," Chancellor Friedrich Merz said following the meeting.
"The nature and scope of a German contribution must and will be decided by the federal government and the German Bundestag as soon as the conditions mentioned have been clarified," Merz said.
"I want to say for myself and also for the federal government: We are not ruling anything out in principle."
This could mean that even the deployment of Bundeswehr soldiers in Ukraine itself is not ruled out.
For months, allies have been discussing how to secure a possible ceasefire and protect Ukraine from new attacks by Russia. France and Britain have been the driving forces behind this effort.
Germany, on the other hand, has taken the position that the question will only arise once the terms of a ceasefire have been clarified.
Now Merz is changing course: He has declared his fundamental willingness for Germany to participate militarily; However, it remains unclear how many German soldiers would be involved and what tasks they would take on.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Brazil judge orders government to add JBS subsidiary to 'dirty list' for slavery - 2
6 Top Computer game Control center - 3
American Airlines Flight Attendant Disappears Amid Layover in Colombia, Authorities Investigating - 4
7 Popular Vacation destinations In China - 5
Poll: By a 2-to-1 margin, Americans say Trump has done more to raise prices than lower them
Would you ever turn to AI for companionship? 6% of Americans say they could — or already have.
4 Excellent Remote Headphones of 2024
Father and son spending Christmas together after health scares
We may have one thing in common with jellyfish, new research finds
The most effective method to Guarantee Scholastic Honesty in Web-based Degrees
The Reduced Portage Horse: An Inheritance Reconsidered for Present day Experience
Cyprus urges hotels to open up, pours funding into tourism
2026 will be the year NASA astronauts fly around the moon again — if all goes to plan
Arctic is again the hottest it's been in 125 years, with record-low sea ice, NOAA report says













