*** ----> Merkel heir apparent joins cabinet in risky bid for power | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

Merkel heir apparent joins cabinet in risky bid for power

German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s heir apparent joined her cabinet yesterday as defence minister, a high-profile job often called a poisoned chalice in Berlin’s fraught political landscape. The surprise appointment of Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer late Tuesday came just hours after the current head of the German military, Ursula von der Leyen, was elected as the first woman to lead the European Commission.

The decision by AKK, as she is commonly known, to take charge of a sprawling administration widely seen as unwieldy and scandal-prone was described as a risky gambit to shore up political support. At a naming ceremony at the presidential palace in Berlin in Merkel’s presence, the 56-yearold formally accepted the portfolio from von der Leyen. “The men and women of the Bundeswehr (armed forces) deserve the highest political priority and my full commitment,” she said. “I am aware of my great responsibility and want to live up to it.”

Shakuntala Banerjee of ZDF public television said AKK was “stepping up and taking over the most difficult ministry”. “The chances to win big are there –- but the risk of failure is also greater.” News weekly Der Spiegel said the defence ministry, rocked by a series of mismanagement allegations on von der Leyen’s watch, could prove to be a “minefield” for AKK.

“But because that’s the case, the ministry also offers a chance for her to sharpen her profile, in an area where she lacks it: in foreign and security policy -- an area where a chancellor needs some experience,” said its commentator Philipp Wittrock. “The chancellery remains the big goal and the defence ministry can serve as a stage for her to prove herself.”

‘Abusing the Bundeswehr’

However opposition politicians seized on AKK’s lack of expertise in military affairs at a time when the Bundeswehr has suffered chronic equipment problems and accusations of underfunding, not least from US President Donald Trump. “The chancellor and the CDU have shown once again that the needs of the Bundeswehr don’t interest them at all,” Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann of the Free Democrats told the daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. “They are abusing the stricken Bundeswehr for their little personnel games.”