The German government says it's lifting restrictions on exports of military equipment to Israel
Germany has lifted its military export ban to Israel, a change prompted by the recent ceasefire in Gaza. With the policy set to take effect on November 24, the German government will review export requests on a case-by-case basis while urging all ...

Chancellor Friedrich Merz said in early August that Berlin wouldn't authorize any exports of military equipment to Israel that could be used in Gaza "until further notice." That was a response to a decision by the Israeli Cabinet to take over Gaza City.
A spokesperson for Merz, Sebastian Hille, said that the restrictions will be lifted from Nov. 24.
"Since Oct. 10, we have had a ceasefire in Gaza and it has fundamentally stabilized," Hille told reporters at a regular government news conference. "That is the basis for this decision."
"We expect everyone to keep to the agreements that were reached - that includes the ceasefire holding, that includes humanitarian aid being provided on a large scale and the process continuing to run in an orderly way, as agreed," he added.
Hille declined to comment on whether there had been Israeli requests for equipment in the period since the restrictions were imposed, or whether anything had been held back.
Once the restrictions are lifted, Germany will examine military exports on a case-by-base basis, as is its standard practice with such exports, he said.
Merz's decision in August was a remarkable move by a country that is a particularly staunch ally of Israel. The Israeli foreign minister welcomed its lifting Monday in a post on social network X.
"I call on other governments to adopt similar decisions, following Germany," Gideon Saar wrote.
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