BERLIN (AP) — Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Cabinet decided Wednesday to pull German troops and reconnaissance aircraft out of Turkey’s Incirlik air base after Turkish officials refused to let lawmakers visit them.
The troops and planes participating in the international coalition against the Islamic State group will redeploy to Jordan. Merkel portrayed the move as allowing Germany and Turkey to put aside one of many problems causing friction between the two NATO allies.
Germany has about 270 troops stationed at Incirlik, near the Syrian border, with six Tornado reconnaissance aircraft and a refueling plane.
It pledged to do what it can to limit disruption caused by the move to a base in Jordan. The Defense Ministry said that the relocation would take the refueling plane out of service for two to three weeks, and the reconnaissance planes for two to three months.
Merkel said that Berlin will consult with its allies on “replacement capabilities” during that time, and the move “will be conducted as quickly as possible under the provision that the anti-IS coalition is able to work.”
German deployments abroad require parliamentary approval, and German leaders say it’s essential that lawmakers be able to visit troops when they want.
Turkey blocked the latest Incirlik visit request in anger over German authorities’ decision to grant asylum to soldiers and other individuals that Turkey accuses of participating in last year’s failed coup.
A previous standoff over Incirlik last year was eventually resolved. But Germany’s foreign minister failed to break the current impasse during a visit to Ankara Monday.
Ties have also been soured by issues such as the jailing in Turkey of two German journalists and by German local authorities banning planned campaign rallies by Turkish ministers earlier this year.
The relocation would mean that Germany no longer has to argue constantly with Turkey over lawmaker visits to troops, Merkel told reporters in Berlin.
“We can then concentrate in our talks on other issues,” she said. “There are enough difficult things, but I don’t see in this step a situation in which things have worsened.”
Pointing to issues such as migrant flows and economic ties, she said that Germany has many “common interests” with Turkey and the two countries need to keep talking.
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Frank Jordans and David Rising contributed to this story.
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