In Germany Die Linke MP
Nicole Gohlke has argued that "the Palestinian people’s suffering appears to be of no interest to the political establishment in Germany." On 12 November 2023, German Chancellor
Olaf Scholz rejected calls for "an immediate ceasefire or long pause" in Israel's war against Hamas in Gaza, saying it would "mean ultimately that Israel leaves Hamas the possibility of recovering and obtaining new missiles". In March 2024, Scholz confronted EU foreign policy chief
Josep Borrell over his months-long criticism of Israel, saying Borrell did not speak for Germany. In October 2024, CDU leader
Friedrich Merz successfully urged the German government to resume weapons deliveries to Israel, including spare parts for tanks. He proposed stripping people with dual citizenship of their German citizenship for protesting against Israel. Merz criticised the
International Criminal Court's (ICC) decision to
issue an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu for alleged war crimes during the Gaza war. In February 2025, one day after the
2025 German federal election, he announced his intention to invite Netanyahu to Germany, "as an open challenge" to the decision of the ICC. On 11 January 2024, while visiting
Sderot near the Gaza strip, German Vice-Chancellor
Robert Habeck called the lawsuit
South Africa v. Israel (Genocide Convention) to be one of the biggest absurdities () one could come up with. On 23 October 2023, German Foreign Minister
Annalena Baerbock blocked a declaration by EU ministers calling for "an immediate humanitarian cease-fire" to help civilians in the Gaza Strip.
Francesca Albanese, incumbent
UN Special Rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territories, criticised Baerbock following a speech by the Foreign Minister in the German Bundestag on 7 October 2024, in which Baerbock alluded to
Israeli attacks on Palestinian civilian sites as "self-defense" and said that "that's what Germany stands for" to much applause. In 2024, the co-leader of the far-right
AfD,
Tino Chrupalla, criticized what he considered to be "exclusive declarations of solidarity" and "one-sided partisanship" with regards to Israel and called for a stop on both German arms exports and "blanket Islamophobia". This drew criticism from some other members of the AfD parliamentary group, suggesting a continued internal divide on the issue. According to a poll by the German
Forsa Institute on behalf of the newspaper
Die Welt conducted in December 2023, 45% of respondents in
Germany agreed and 43% disagreed with the statement: "Israel's military action in the Gaza Strip is all in all appropriate." In the immediate aftermath of the Hamas attack on Israel, 44% of Germans said Germany has "a special obligation towards Israel." In December 2023, that number dropped to 37%.
Abroad , European Union Foreign Affairs Representative
Kaja Kallas and European Commission President
Ursula von der Leyen, accused of promoting the
Gaza genocide, 1 September 2025. In January 2024, President
Hage Geingob of
Namibia called Israel's actions in Gaza "genocidal and gruesome" and sharply criticized Germany's decision to back Israel in
South Africa v. Israel, saying that Germany had an "inability to draw lessons from its horrific history". On 1 March 2024,
Nicaragua initiated proceedings against Germany at the
ICJ under the
Genocide Convention, concerning Germany's support for Israel in the Gaza war. In August 2025, over 100 Israeli academics have written a letter warning that if Germany does not pressure Israel, it could result in further
Israeli war crimes in Gaza. In January 2026, the
Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention wrote that German civil society has perpetuated
Gaza genocide denial. They called on "public authorities in Germany to immediately halt all active financing, dissemination, and legitimation of genocide denialist propaganda masked as critical expertise." == See also ==