Olaf Schultz rejected Trump’s deputy interference in German internal affairs
reports Mehr News Agency quoted by CNN, Olaf Schultz, German Chancellor, rejected” foreign “intervention in the country’s elections and insisted that the Germans would decide for their democracy.
The German Chancellor’s remarks in response to US Vice President GD Vanus’s remarks that he delivered a speech at the Munich Security Conference Friday and in which allies European accused its country of suppressing freedom of expression, losing control of immigration, and refusing to cooperate with hard -line right -wing parties in the government.
Munich Security Conferences were expecting Trump administration plans to end the war in Ukraine, but instead met with a speech by the US Vice President who told European leaders to speak to European leaders. That is the biggest threat to their security.
German Chancellor Olaf Schultz on Saturday rejected the statements of the US Vice President and insisted that Berlin would not accept foreign intervention in its domestic politics.
“The commitment to” never “is not compliant with the support of the right-wing Alternative Party for Germany (AFD),” said Schwell. We do not accept that aliens in our democracy, in our elections, interfere in the formation of democratic ideas in the interest of this party, and this should not happen especially among friends and allies.
Al-Arabiya report, Schultz on Saturday at the Munich Security Summit, emphasizing Berlin’s opposition to any interference in the country’s internal affairs, for Venus’s statements as well as Ilan Musk’s support , American billionaire criticized the Alternative Party for Germany.
Schultz warned in his remarks that democracy may be destroyed by non-myocratic parties. He also emphasized in an indirect reference to the Alternative Party for Germany that most of the Germans oppose those who praise the Nazis.
The German Chancellor emphasized his country’s commitment to failure to repeat the Nazi history and saw the support of the Alternative Party for Germany.