Ahead of the planned end of a United Nations peacekeeping mission in Mali, Germany is looking to pull its soldiers out earlier than the announced date of 2024.
Defence Minister Boris Pistorius during an interview on Wednesday, said, “For us, this means that we will try to get out even faster, to get out of Mali but in an orderly way” he said. During the mission’s duration, Germany’s defense ties with Mali have seen several obstacles.
As Mali refused to allow a commercial plane carrying German troops to enter its airspace, the government declared last year that it was halting its involvement in a United Nations peacekeeping mission there. German troops were meant to remain in Mali for another year, according to a decision last month by the German parliament (375 to 263).
The majority of the 1,000 German troops assigned to the town of Gao in northern Mali have been entrusted with performing reconnaissance for the UN peacekeeping mission, MINUSMA.
The United Nations ten-year-old peacekeeping mission in Mali will finish on June 30, according to diplomats, before the Security Council votes on a draft resolution that will give the operation’s 13,000 members six months to leave.
The end follows years of hostilities between the United Nations and Mali’s military regime, which reached a breaking point this month when Abdoulaye Diop, the country’s foreign minister, demanded that the force depart “without delay.”