Armed
Soldiers To Replace Cops On Danish Streets
29
September, 2017
Even
as Europe's political establishment professes its liberal ideals by
accepting - or in the case of the ongoing spat between Brussels and
Central Europe, forcing others
to accept - as many refugees as humanitarian virtue signalling
will require, the true face of Europe is gradually emerging behind
the scenes, and according
to The Local.de,
starting today armed soldiers from the Danish Armed Forces
(Forsvaret) will replace police officers at both Denmark’s southern
border to Germany and
at potential terror targets in Copenhagen.
According
to the Danish National Police (Rigspolitiet) and Copenhagen Police,
160 soldiers will patrol the border and take over guard duties at
Jewish institutions including the Great Synagogue in central
Copenhagen.
The synagogue has been under constant police protection since a Danish-born terrorist of Palestinian descent shot and killed 37-year-old Dan Uzan, a volunteer security guard, outside the building in February 2015. The gunman, Omar El-Hussein, had earlier in the night opened fire with an automatic rifle outside a cultural centre hosting a free speech event, killing 55-year-old Finn Nørgaard and injuring police officers. El-Hussein was later shot and killed by police.
The soldiers’ role at the German border was described as ancillary and will not entail actively checking the IDs of those entering the country. That role will still be filled by police officers and members of the Danish Home Guard (Hjemmeværnet), which has been active in border checks since April 2016.
The
plan to put armed military soldiers at the border and potential
terror targets has been under discussion for well over a year, or not
long after Europe realized the consequences of the great welcome
party thrown by Angela Merkel in 2015. The official explanation is
that it is being implemented as a way "to ease the workload of
an overworked and undermanned police force." The unofficial, of
course, is that the police desperately need help against an ongoing
influx of potential terrorists.
The
160 soldiers will relieve the police force of the equivalent of 128
full-time police officers. According to news agency Ritzau, police
currently use the equivalent of 456 full-time officers on border
controls and patrolling potential terror targets.
Meanwhile,
Denmark has long since lost the idealistic illusion it is a noble,
humanitarian home welcoming the world's refugees. As theWaPo
wrote last year,
"as Europe walls itself off, the continent is left to reckon
with what’s become of its long- cherished humanitarian beliefs. And
to many in Denmark, the chasm between reputation and reality looks
particularly gaping.
“We’re
losing respect for the values upon which we built our country and our
European Union,” said Andreas Kamm, secretary general of the Danish
Refugee Council. “It’s becoming very hard to defend human
rights.”
This Scandinavian nation of compulsively friendly people is celebrated by U.S. presidential candidate Bernie Sanders as a social-welfare utopia, one that was recently judged the world’s happiest place. Ranking high in the country’s pantheon of heroes are those who protected Jews during the Holocaust or who helped the oppressed escape from behind the Iron Curtain during the Cold War.
But
when it came to those fleeing 21st-century conflicts on Europe’s
doorstep, Denmark went into overdrive to broadcast its hostility.
While Germany continued to welcome asylum seekers, and other European
countries such as Sweden held their doors open for as long as they
could, Denmark took a hard line almost from the beginning. The
government slashed refugees’ benefits, then advertised the cuts in
Lebanese newspapers. It
enabled police to confiscate refugees’ valuables, including cash
and jewelry. And authorities made it far more difficult for those
already here to reunite with their families, upping the wait time
from one year to three.
And
now, just in case the measures were insufficient, heavily armed
soliders will be there to make sure there are no more casualties as a
result of Angela Merkel's "shared" generosity.
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