German court allows army to operate inside country

German court allows army to operate inside country
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Summary German government can call upon the army to use force inside the country in exceptional cases.

The Federal Constitutional Courts decision relaxes the rules for domestic military operations, which have been tightly controlled because of Germanys history of militarism.Previously, the government could mobilize the army to support law enforcement authorities, but the use of military force inside Germany was forbidden.The court ruled in a majority decision that the army can use force but only in exceptional situation of catastrophic proportions.The deployment of armed forces and the use specifically of military means are also only permissible as a last resort in such a situation, the judges said.They specifically excluded demonstrations as a possible reason for military force. Adolf Hitler ruthlessly used paramilitary organizations to suppress dissent and persecute enemies during his 12-year dictatorship from 1933 to 1945.The courts decision didnt change a 2006 ruling that the shooting down of hijacked airplanes is illegal.The government had argued at the time that it was necessary to give the military the power to fire at planes that were being used as terrorist weapons like in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in the United States.But the judges said shooting down a hijacked plane breached the right to life of passengers and crew aboard the aircraft.Germanys army was given a strictly defensive role after World War II, but successive governments have gradually eased the rules on military operations abroad to meet the demands of the countrys NATO allies. Such deployments still require approval by Parliament and the army is forbidden from taking part in offensive operations.
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