Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said diplomacy was the top priority to prevent the use of chemical weapons in Syria, but Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen said a “credible deterrent” was also needed.
The German government said it was in talks with the United States and other allies about possible participation in military intervention in the event of such an attack in Idlib, the last major opposition-held enclave, which is under heavy bombardment.
Germany, the world’s fourth largest economy, is under pressure from the United States to boost military spending and shoulder more responsibility within NATO.
It did not participate in military strikes by US, French and British forces on Syria in April after a chemical weapons attack - which the United States has pledged to surpass if Assad regime uses chemical weapons again.
To join such action, Merkel and her conservatives would need to win over Maas’s more pacifist Social Democrats (SPD), junior partners in the ruling coalition, and overcome poll numbers that indicate 74 percent of Germans oppose such action.
Maas told the news agency dpa that Germany would decide autonomously whether to participate in any military action in line with its constitution and international law, and any action would be discussed with lawmakers.
But Merkel told the Bundestag on Wednesday that Germany could not just reject military intervention out of hand, saying:
“It cannot be the German position to simply say ‘No’, no matter what happens in the world.”
After categorically rejecting any military action on Monday, SPD leader Andrea Nahles appeared to soften her position, telling lawmakers her party would not agree unless the United Nations authorised such action.
Washington last month asked Berlin about its willingness to participate in military action together with France and Britain, if another chemical weapons attack took place. A leaked report about the query has triggered emotional debate in a country whose Nazi past keeps military action a sensitive issue.
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