
BERLIN(RAHNUMA): German Chancellor Friedrich Merz urged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday to end fighting in southern Lebanon and engage in direct peace talks with the Lebanese government, a spokesman said.
Merz also expressed his “grave concern” about developments in the Palestinian territories in a telephone conversation with Netanyahu and demanded that there “must be no de facto partial annexation of the West Bank,” the German government spokesman said.
The spokesman said Merz offered Germany’s continuing support for efforts “to reach a diplomatic understanding between the United States and Iran” in the war launched by Israel and the US on February 28.
Merz initially welcomed the US-Israeli attacks, but has shifted to alarm as the potential global economic fallout became more serious and Iranian retaliatory strikes against Gulf states threatened to turn the conflict into a regional war.
On Monday, Merz told Netanyahu that “Germany is prepared to contribute to ensuring freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz” — but only following the “cessation of hostilities” and “provided the necessary conditions are met,” according to the spokesman’s summary of the conversation.
Shipping through the Strait of Hormuz — a crucial waterway for about 20 percent of the world’s oil supplies before the war — has been largely halted by Iranian threats to strike tankers.
US President Donald Trump has declared a partial naval blockade of the strait after negotiations with Iran over the weekend broke down.




