Germany updates: Defense Minister Pistorius heads to US - DW - 07/14/2025
July 14, 2025
High-speed train services are scheduled to resume on the route between the Bavarian city of Munich in the south and the capital, Berlin, in the northeast after a week of repairs to fire damage at an underpass, national railway operator Deutsche Bahn has said
It warned, however, that some delays might still occur.
The line was closed more than a week ago after a fire broke out in a railway underpass in the southern town of Hirschaid.
Trains were rerouted, leading to considerable delays on the busy route.
Investigations into the blaze are considering the possiblity of arson, though there is so far no indication that the fire was deliberately lit.
The fire might also have been caused by negligence connected with wooden construction materials stored in the underpass, authorities said.
https://p.dw.com/p/4xQKi
July 14, 2025
Chancellor Friedrich Merz has reiterated that his Christian Democrats (CDU) will uphold its decision not to work together with either the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party or the socialist Left Party.
In the traditional interview before the summer break with broadcaster ARD, Merz said the ban on cooperation would remain in place "in the east, in the west, in the south and in the north."
At the same time, Merz conceded that the previous strategy for coping with the AfD, which has been seeing rising popularity throughout Germany, particularly in the east, had failed.
"We want to confront it on concrete issues and also come to terms with it as a party," he said. "Ignoring it and believing it would disappear in the long rund has obviously not worked."
Instead, he said, the government had to solve the problems that were driving the party's popularity, partly by ensuring that economic development the eastern states progressed once more and by dealing with the issue of migration.
"These seem to be the two biggest topics used by the AfD to drive its political agenda," he said.
Merz also voiced concern about an apparent rightward shift in the political attitude of young people, attributing this in part to disinformation on social media.
Although he stressed the importance of freedom of opinion, he said that freedom ended at the point where false news was being disseminated, adding the same rules had to apply in the digital world as in the analogue world.
https://p.dw.com/p/4xQ81
July 14, 2025

German backpacker Carolina Wilga, who had gone missing in Australia for 12 days, released a statement detailing how it all happened.
Wilga said she had lost control of her car and rolled down a slope and abandoned it there even though it had food, water and clothing.
In the crash, she said she hit her head significantly and left her car in a state of confusion. Wilga spent 11 nights in the remote Australian Outback before she was found by a member of the public, Tania Henley, in a chance encounter.
Wilga described Henley as being her "rescuer and angel" and thanked the people of Western Australia, where she went missing, for their efforts to locate her.

Wilga's tale of survival is a remarkable one since the remote reserves of Western Australia are particularly rough because of the rugged terrain and harsh temperatures.
Wilga wrote in the statement that: "Previously, I didn't know where my place was in a culture on the other side of the world to my own, but now, I feel a part of it."
"Western Australia has taught me what it really means to be part of a true community. Here, humanity, solidarity, and care for one another are what truly matter — and in the end, that's what counts most," she said.
WIlga wrote she was certain she survived because of the "incredible outpouring of support" and thanked the German consulate as well as medical services for their help. "I am simply beyond grateful to have survived," she added.
Read more about how Wilga was rescued after being lost in the wilderness in Australia here.
https://p.dw.com/p/4xQ7D
July 14, 2025

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has marked the fourth anniversary of deadly floods in western Germany by calling for more emergency aid capacity to help victims of natural catastrophes.
"Four years ago, there was a catastrophe in the Ahr Valley. Its consequences can be felt and seen to this day," he wrote on X.
The Ahr is a tributary of the Rhine River that runs through the western states of North-Rhine Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate.
"In future, we must make sure that those affected are helped more quickly and effectively. We owe this to the victims whom we are commemorating today," he wrote.
Merz's post drew much criticism, with commentators alleging that his government was taking too little action to combat climate change,which scientists have cited as a likely major factor in the flooding.
At least 136 people in Rhineland-Palatinate were killed during the floods overnight from July 14 to July 15, 2021, while thousands of buildings and much infrastructure were damaged or destroyed in the Ahr Valley.
https://p.dw.com/p/4xQ3A
July 14, 2025

Germany has joined 18 other nations in the "Talisman Sabre" military drills in Australia and in neighboring Papua New Guinea — the first time activities related to the exercise have been conducted abroad,
The drills, which started on Sunday and will take place over three weeks, began in 2005 as a two-yearly exercise between Australia and the US.
Other countries taking part include Canada, Fiji, France, India, Indonesia, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, South Korea, Singapore, Thailand, Tonga, and the United Kingdom, with Malaysia and Vietnam as observers.
Defense Industry Minister Pat Conroy said China was likely to monitor the exercise with surveillance ships and that the drills would be conducted accordingly.
The exercises started a day after Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese began a six-day visit to China, where he is expected to meet with President Xi Jinping on Tuesday.
In 2023, four Australian army crew members were killed when their helicopter crashed into the sea off Queensland during the drills.
https://p.dw.com/p/4xPt0
July 14, 2025
The trial of a palliative care doctor who is suspected of murdering at least 15 people opens in Berlin on Monday.
The Berlin public prosecutor's office is also investigating whether the 40-year-old could be involved in dozens of other cases.
The suspect, who has not been publicly named in line with German privacy laws, is accused of murdering terminally ill patients while working for a nursing service in the German capital.
Although his alleged victims were all terminally ill, their deaths had not been expected imminently.
According to the 255-page indictment, he is accused of administering "a lethal mixture of various medications," including an anesthetic and a muscle relaxant, to 12 women and three men "without their knowledge or consent" between September 2021 and July 2024.
His first alleged victim was the youngest, a 25-year-old woman, and the oldest is a 94-year-old woman.
The trial is expected to run until at least January 28, 2026.
The physician first came to the attention of police during arson investigations into fires he allegedly set to cover up the murders.
The married father of one has not yet commented on the allegations, according to both the defense and the prosecution. He has also refused to speak with a psychiatric expert.
The suspect reportedly wrote a doctoral thesis at university in 2013 titled "Why do people kill?", in which he examined homicides committed in Frankfurt am Main from 1945 to 2008.
https://p.dw.com/p/4xPov
July 14, 2025
German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius is to meet with US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth on Monday, with Europe's security a likely focus of talks amid growing Russian territorial aggression in Ukraine.
His visit — his first since Donald Trump returned to the White House in January — comes after Germany loosened its constitutional rules on debt to allow massively increased defense spending in line with NATO demands.
The talks are expected to center on Berlin's offer to pay for American Patriot air defense systems for Ukraine, which Chancellor Friedrich Merz announced weeks ago.
Trump said on Sunday he would send Patriot missiles to Ukraine, saying the EU would reimburse their cost.
Pistorius will also try to establish whether Washington is still planning to temporarilydeploy long-range missiles to Germany from 2026, as agreed under former US President Joe Biden.
Another topic is likely to be the mooted cuts to the deployment of US forces worldwide, which European leaders fear could bring a drawdown of the number of US soldiers in Europe, including some 40,000 in Germany.
European allies are urging Washington to ensure that any such moves are coordinated to avoid leaving gaps in the continent's defense capabilities that could be exploited by actors such as Russia.
https://p.dw.com/p/4xPoh
July 14, 2025
Guten Morgen from the DW newsroom on the banks of the Rhine in Bonn!
We'll be bringing reports on Defense Minister Boris Pistorius' visit to Washington at a time when the US' defense commitment to Europe seems to be wavering under the Trump administration.
A trial in a case that has shocked the country is also getting underway in Berlin, with a 40-year-old doctor accused of killing 15 patients.
We will bring these and other stories, along with explainers and analysis from across DW's departments, as we cover the big topics that are the focus of talk in Germany at the moment.
https://p.dw.com/p/4xPnk
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