Germany may sell subs to Pakistan
BONN (Agencies) - Germany may approve the sale to Pakistan of three naval submarines made by ThyssenKrupp AGs HDW unit, ignoring the concerns of opposition lawmakers who claim the step might help stoke an arms race in the Indian Ocean, reports Bloomberg.
Chancellor Angela Merkels arms export council needs time to decide whether to go ahead with the sale, according to a government statement on the German parliaments Website.
The decision will take account of unrest in Pakistan as the country prepares for Feb 18 elections, as well as potential human rights abuses and economic interests, the government said.
Navy material generally cannot be misused for internal repression or human rights infringements and the regional conflict with India doesnt have a naval component, the government said.
Though a decision on the sale is still pending, such a step would help secure jobs at Kiel-based HDW for several years, it said.
The opposition Green Party fears that selling the U214 submarines will help push tension between India and Pakistan to the seas. Powered by silent fuel-cells, the deep-diving U214s are difficult to detect and their acquisition may spur a new arms race by forcing a potential foe to upgrade interception technology, the Greens say.
Merkels government has indicated to Pakistan that it will approve the sale and will provide a Hermes export guarantee worth 1.3 billion euros ($1.9 billion) for HDW, the Greens said in a preamble to the government statement. Merkels export council, comprising Cabinet ministers, convenes in secret.
The submarine exports would not comply with Germanys foreign and security policy interests and would infringe arms export rules, the lawmakers said. U214s sold by HDW to foreign governments are not equipped to fire missiles, the government said.
The submarine has eight torpedo tubes and is technologically 15 years ahead of the three French-made Agosta-class submarines operated by the Pakistani navy, said the Greens Party.
Germany fundamentally recognises the right of other states to arm their forces with appropriate conventional means, exercising their right of self-defence, the statement said, adding that in Germanys view Pakistans naval forces see modern submarines as a classic means to build their main deterrence against a blockade or an attack by a stronger opponent.
The Nation