Germany says it has no plans to send extra forces to Middle East

The statement said the anti-aircraft frigate "Sachsen" was currently taking part in NATO's Cold Response exercise in ⁠the Arctic. The statement from the ministry reiterated comments from Defence Minister Boris ⁠Pistorius, who ⁠declared in parliament: "Germany is not a party in this war.

Germany says it has no plans to send extra forces to Middle East
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  • Germany

Germany said on Thursday ​it had no plans to ​send additional military ‌support to ​the Middle East, after European allies announced plans to move forces to the eastern ‌Mediterranean following a drone strike at a British air base in Cyprus. Italian Defence Minister Guido Crosetto told parliament on Thursday that Italy, Spain, ‌France and the Netherlands would send naval assets to protect Cyprus ‌in the coming days.

Britain is also deploying a destroyer and additional helicopters with anti-drone capabilities to the region and is joining France and Greece in ⁠boosting ​air defences in ⁠Cyprus. Germany's navy participates in the long-running United Nations UNIFIL monitoring mission in ⁠Lebanon, but the defence ministry said the military's focus remained on NATO ​defence operations in eastern Europe.

"Germany is currently not planning any additional ⁠military capabilities beyond its existing contributions to international missions in the Middle East," the ⁠ministry ​said in a statement. The statement said the anti-aircraft frigate "Sachsen" was currently taking part in NATO's Cold Response exercise in ⁠the Arctic.

The statement from the ministry reiterated comments from Defence Minister Boris ⁠Pistorius, who ⁠declared in parliament: "Germany is not a party in this war. The Bundeswehr is not taking part in ‌this ‌war."

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