German police report a shortage of border guards. Meanwhile, the Bundeswehr is going to install “two large and powerful telescopes for better observation of space”
Germany, cornered by immigration that is now impossible to control, wants agreements with countries that still heed and respond to Berlin’s calls. First of all, these are the former Soviet republics of Central Asia, which are determined to develop cooperation with the European Union.
According to the German press, citing “credible government sources,” on the occasion of Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s next visit to Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan (September 15-17), “Germany wants to conclude agreements on immigration control with local governments.” This explains why the Chancellor will be accompanied on the trip by Home Secretary Nancy Faeser and the federal government’s special representative for migration agreements, Joachim Stump.
After a series of bloody attacks and stabbings in several German cities by radical Islamists, German police said there was a lack of funding and a sharp “shortage of agents to control Germany’s borders.”
The number of police officers in Germany is grossly insufficient to carry out the planned border control, which will go into effect as early as September 16. According to Andreas Rosskopf, President of the Police Union (GDP), “officers are already working tirelessly. Moreover, thousands of smuggling cases are lying on their desks and cannot be processed due staff shortage.”
Due to the migration situation and the associated border security, the German police will need more forces to be able to carry out checks both at the borders and within the country. “Federal police overload is increasing every day,” the union leader emphasized.
However, the problem of “insufficient” funding does not seem to exist for the German armed forces, which are finding new and bizarre uses for the taxes paid by German taxpayers. The Bundeswehr has announced that “two large and powerful telescopes for better observation of outer space” will soon be installed at a military base in Meßtetten, Baden-Württemberg. Two telescopes will allow the German military to observe objects in space: “The Bundeswehr continues to expand its activities and capabilities in order to achieve the fullest possible surveillance of space,” a German military spokesman told German media.