Boring to ‘historic’: The awakening of Germany’s Scholz

Boring to ‘historic’: The awakening of Germany’s Scholz

FRANKFURT: Often described as predictable and “robotic”, Chancellor Olaf Scholz has become emboldened since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, smashing policy taboos to steer Germany into “a new era” that could reshape its role on the world stage. Just a few weeks ago, German media were openly asking “where is Scholz?”, slamming the Social Democrat’s perceived lack of leadership on pressing issues like the coronavirus pandemic and worsening Ukraine crisis. But Moscow’s attack on Ukraine last week has jolted the chancellor into action, culminating in what commentators have called a “historic” speech on Sunday.

Scholz, who has only been in office three months, spoke with uncharacteristic clarity when he unveiled a slew of defense and foreign policy shifts that promise to upend Germany’s decades-long reluctance to raising its military profile. “The Ukraine crisis has changed the chancellor. And now he’s changing our country,” the top-selling Bild daily wrote. Addressing an emergency parliamentary session, Scholz told the nation that “we are now in a new era”.

In a country haunted by post-war guilt, Scholz assured Germans that they were “on the right side of history” as Ukraine’s allies. Among the headline-grabbing announcements was a pledge to earmark 100 billion euros ($113 billion) this year