Did Germany lose its UNSC seat because of support for Israel?
Germany failed to secure a temporary seat on the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) on Wednesday, with Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul suggesting that Berlinโs support for Israel may have cost the country crucial votes. The UNSC consists of 15 members, including five perman
Germany failed to secure a temporary seat on the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) on Wednesday, with Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul suggesting that Berlinโs support for Israel may have cost the country crucial votes.
The UNSC consists of 15 members, including five permanent members and 10 elected members serving two-year terms. Germany was competing with Austria and Portugal for two seats allocated to the โWestern Europe and Othersโ group, with the two other countries ultimately securing the positions instead.
Wadephulโs bid won 104 votes in the UN General Assembly, falling 23 short of the two-thirds majority required for election.
This is the first time Germany has failed to win a rotating seat on the Security Council after decades of successfully securing one of the Western European seats every eight years. Hereโs what we know.
Wadephul travelled to New York last week to personally lobby for Germanyโs candidacy for the UNSC, reportedly meeting around 80 ministers and ambassadors at the UN and hosting a reception on Monday evening.
But as the votes came in, the defeat immediately fuelled criticism at home of Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who entered office promising to restore Germanyโs influence in Europe and on the world stage.
Alice Weidel, co-leader of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), described the result as an โembarrassmentโ, while Adis Ahmetovic, foreign policy spokesman for the Social Democratic Partyโs parliamentary group, said the vote was โa gauge of how [Germany] is perceived internationallyโ.
Germanyโs foreign minister attributed the defeat to the countryโs positions on both Ukraine and Israel. โWe have always taken a clear stance on certain issues, and these are positions that not all member states share,โ Wadephul told reporters, adding that it was โno secretโ that Russia had worked to generate opposition to Germanyโs candidacy.
