WAR ON GAZA
2 min read
Majority of Germans reject military support for Israel, call for stronger diplomatic pressure: Poll
The survey also found that 60 percent of Germans reject the notion that the country has special responsibility towards Israel due to its history and the Holocaust.
Majority of Germans reject military support for Israel, call for stronger diplomatic pressure: Poll
The Forsa polling institute conducted the representative survey between September 15 and 26, interviewing more than 1,500 Germans. / Reuters
November 25, 2025

Most Germans oppose their government's military support for Israel, according to a new poll released on Tuesday.

The representative survey commissioned by Korber Stiftung found that 82 percent of Germans rejected their country's military support to Israel for its brutal war in Gaza. Only 15 percent expressed support.

Nearly three-quarters (73 percent) said the German government should exert stronger diplomatic pressure on Israel.

The survey also revealed a fundamental shift in how Germans view their historical obligations, with 60 percent rejecting the notion that Germany bears special responsibility for Israel due to its history and the Holocaust. Just 38 percent supported this traditional stance.

The Forsa polling institute conducted the representative survey between September 15 and 26, interviewing more than 1,500 Germans. It was the latest in a series of polls in recent months revealing a widening gap between the government's position and German public opinion on the Middle East conflict.

Strong supporter of Israel

Germany has been one of the biggest arms suppliers for Israel in recent years. From October 7 2023, to June 5 2025, Germany authorised arms sales to Israel totaling more than €492 million ($567 million).

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, a strong supporter of Israel, ordered restrictions on arms exports to Israel in August amid growing public pressure. The restrictions halted approval of new export licenses for weapons that could be used in the Gaza war.
However, these restrictions were lifted this week.

According to the German government, the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas has remained in place since October 10 and has stabilised in recent weeks.

The government also pointed to efforts toward sustainable peace and increased humanitarian aid in Gaza.

Meanwhile, Riyad Mansour, Palestine’s envoy to the UN, told the Security Council on Monday that the Israeli army has been killing two Palestinian children daily since the ceasefire took effect on October 10 in Gaza, as the number of injured and killed has risen to 1,000.

According to Palestinian Health Ministry in Gaza, at least 342 Palestinians have been killed and nearly 900 injured by Israeli army fire since the ceasefire began.

RelatedTRT World - Majority of Germans oppose arms exports to Israel: poll
SOURCE:AA