NewsRising support for Russia unites Germany's extreme left and right

Rising support for Russia unites Germany's extreme left and right

The anti-Ukrainian front in Germany is gaining strength. The populists want friendship with Russia.
The anti-Ukrainian front in Germany is gaining strength. The populists want friendship with Russia.
Images source: © Getty Images | Jens Schlueter
Marcin Lewicki

2 September 2024 22:59

German experts are sounding the alarm. Extreme right and extreme left groups are gaining influence among our western neighbours. These groups, although vastly different from each other, both agree on desiring friendship with Russia and ending support for Ukraine. On this issue, extreme fronts have reached a consensus.

At the beginning of the war between Ukraine and Russia, the German government hesitated to support Kyiv, but it has since changed its stance on the conflict. Chancellor Olaf Scholz is a strong advocate for supporting Ukrainians, as evidenced by the numbers.

Germany is the EU leader in supporting Ukraine. Since the beginning of the war, they have provided over £40 billion in arms, humanitarian aid, and economic assistance. However, some German parties are not as supportive of aiding Kyiv.

Scepticism towards Ukraine and even calls for friendship with Russia unify the extreme left and right in Germany. The alliance of Sahra Wagenknecht (BSW) and Alternative for Germany (AfD) calls for ending support for Ukraine and resuming economic relations with Russia.

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This is striking because both sides differ dramatically in their views, yet they have found consensus here. This is very important because both parties achieved significant success in state elections in eastern Germany, German analyst Ales Moiseenko warns in an interview for Nexta.

The analyst explains that according to the extreme left and extreme right, conducting talks with Russia, which wants peace, is better than supporting Ukraine, which seeks further escalation of the conflict.

It should be noted that the AfD won local elections in Thuringia and Saxony, securing over 30 percent of the vote in total. This is Germany's first extreme right-wing party to win elections since World War II. Olaf Scholz has called on moderate political forces to avoid forming local coalitions with the Alternative for Germany.

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