By Katrin Bennhold
Chancellor Olaf Scholz of Germany gets right to the point when asked why his country will not send battle tanks to Ukraine: It is “a very dangerous war,” he said.
Ukraine has made gains recently against Russia, which invaded the country in February, and has been asking the West for reinforcements. But Germany has declined to lead the way in sending that aid.
“We are supporting Ukraine,” Scholz said last week in an hour-long interview with The New York Times. “We are doing it in a way that is not escalating to where it is becoming a war between Russia and NATO because this would be a catastrophe.” For Scholz, a Social Democrat who took over as chancellor from his longtime predecessor Angela Merkel less than a year ago, the way Germany has assisted Ukraine militarily has become something of a litmus test of his — and his country’s — ability to lead Europe through the continent’s most significant security crisis since World War II.
Scholz is not the only one concerned about the danger of escalation. After President Vladimir Putin of Russia last week announced a mobilisation of roughly 300,000 reservists and his intentions to annex parts of eastern Ukraine, and after he implicitly threatened the use of tactical nuclear weapons, worries about a direct Russia-NATO clash have begun to rise among Ukraine’s Western backers, making it harder to reconcile the twin goals of avoiding such a confrontation and continuing to strengthen Ukraine’s hand in the battlefield.
In the early days after Russia’s attack on Ukraine on February 24, Scholz, a former finance minister with little foreign or defence policy experience, won widespread applause when he announced a rearmament programme worth around $100 billion and overturned a ban on arms exports to conflict zones, breaking with decades of German pacifism. It was a revolution in a country, now Europe’s biggest democracy, whose Nazi past had long made it reluctant to invest in military power, something Scholz was not shy to claim credit for.
“We changed that, and since then, we delivered a huge mass of very effective weapons to the Ukrainians,” he said. Germany, he said, was “really doing a lot”.
Scholz certainly has come a long way since the eve of Russia’s invasion, when his government offered Ukraine 5,000 helmets and a field hospital. But it took months and the threat of a parliamentary vote before he approved any shipments of heavy weapons.
So far, Berlin has pledged about $678 million, to Ukraine, including a modern air defence system. It has also sent multiple rocket launchers, sophisticated artillery and dozens of anti-aircraft guns, which contributed to Ukraine’s stunning recent advance on the battlefield, when in the space of six days its forces took back more territory than Russia had grabbed in six months.
But Scholz has refused to provide Ukraine with Leopard battle tanks or Marder infantry fighting vehicles, which Ukrainian officials have repeatedly asked for. As they pivot from a defensive posture to an offensive one in the south, Ukrainian forces need tanks to break through defensive lines and recapture more territory before winter.
Scholz’s refusal has earned him noisy and near-unanimous criticism among Germany’s Eastern European neighbors, not least in Ukraine. Commanders along the front say the Germans’ reluctance to provide battle tanks points to a policy of seeking a negotiated settlement along existing lines, rather than a Ukrainian success in pushing out the Russians. “Not a single rational argument on why these weapons can not be supplied, only abstract fears and excuses,” Kuleba said recently on Twitter. “What is Berlin afraid of that Kyiv is not?” Pressed on that question in the interview with the Times, Scholz bristled.
“Leadership does not mean you do what people ask you,” he said. “Leadership is about taking the right decisions and to be very strong. And this is what I’m doing.”
This month’s battlefield gains by Ukrainian forces have added to the pressure on Scholz, whose government has cited different reasons at different times for not sending tanks. After Scholz’s defence minister, Christine Lambrecht, said this month that Germany had to hold onto its tanks to fulfill its obligations to NATO, the alliance’s secretary-general, Jens Stoltenberg, said that arming Ukraine was more important. “By ensuring that Russia, that President Putin, does not win in Ukraine, we are also increasing our own security and strengthening the alliance,” Stoltenberg said. Scholz’s caution was also evident during the interview in his reluctance to detail his own vision for how the war might end, preferring instead to cite a guest essay by US President Joe Biden that the Times published in May. In the essay, Biden quoted President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine, who at the time had said that ultimately the war would “only definitively end through diplomacy”. “I very much appreciated what President Biden wrote in The New York Times,” Scholz said.
The announcement that Putin made last week that he was calling up roughly 300,000 reservists and was moving ahead with annexing part of eastern Ukraine showed that he was “desperate,” the chancellor said, adding that it also showed that Putin had underestimated Ukraine’s ability to fight back and the West’s unity in supporting Kyiv. “It’s obvious that Putin does not know how to get out of this,” Scholz said. “It’s obvious that he will not win the war and Russia will not win the war.” But he would not utter the word “victory” at all, let alone define it. Did he want Ukraine to win? “Russia can’t win,” was as far as he would go.