Merkel: “Well advised” to take Putin’s threats “seriously”

Germany former chancellor

Merkel on Putin’s threats – “We are well advised to take words seriously”

At a ceremony in Munich, Angela Merkel spoke about the war in Ukraine and Vladimir Putin's threats

At a ceremony in Munich, Angela Merkel spoke about the war in Ukraine and Vladimir Putin’s threats

Source: dpa/Sven Hoppe

Angela Merkel spoke again about the Russian war against Ukraine. At an event in Munich, the former chancellor warned against seeing threats from Vladimir Putin only as a bluff. A lasting peace is only possible with the involvement of Russia.

DFormer Chancellor Angela Merkel (CDU) warns against dismissing threats in the Russian war against Ukraine as a bluff. The attack on Ukraine was a “profound turning point,” said Merkel on Thursday evening at a ceremony marking the 77th anniversary of the “Süddeutsche Zeitung” in Munich. And one where “we are all well advised to take words seriously and deal with them seriously and not dismiss them as bluffs in the first place”.

She again emphasized that a lasting peace in Europe could only come about with the involvement of Russia. “As long as we haven’t really managed to do that, the Cold War isn’t really over either,” she said.

The 68-year-old Merkel was at the federal election resigned last year after 16 years as chancellor. Merkel had already described Russia’s war of aggression as “profound censorship” in February. She made a similar statement in a speech in June at the German Federation of Trade Unions.

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Merkel has only held a few public appointments since leaving office in December. Most recently, she performed at the city anniversary in Goslar in September. She wants to publish her memoirs in autumn 2024, as her publisher recently announced.

Merkel did not feel comfortable with “Kohl’s girl”.

The former chancellor gave an outlook on this at the “Süddeutsche Zeitung” in Munich: She did not feel comfortable with the term “Kohl’s girl” at the beginning of her political career. “It was hardly possible for me to be perceived as an independent person,” said Merkel. At the time, after 35 years in the GDR, she finally wanted to make her own opinion heard. “I found that to be quite depressing.”

At the beginning of her career, Merkel was Federal Minister for Women and Youth in the cabinet of then Chancellor Helmut Kohl (CDU) and was long referred to in the media as “Kohl’s girl”.

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One of the first articles about her that appeared in the “Süddeutsche Zeitung” in the 1990s was entitled: “Why don’t we know Angela Merkel?” It said: “She is the youngest minister Germany has ever had – maybe the nicest,” quoted Merkel. “Although I should quickly realize that being nice in politics is such a thing.”

According to “SZ” editor-in-chief Wolfgang Krach, there are now 40,000 articles about Merkel in the archive of his newspaper – 2,000 more than about Kohl and over 10,000 more than about her direct predecessor Gerhard Schröder (SPD).

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