By Lisa Ferdinando DoD News, Defense Media Activity
BERLIN, September 10, 2015 — The chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff and his German counterpart met here today, with the refugee
crisis in Europe a focus of the discussions.
After today's talks with Gen. Volker Wieker, the chief of
staff of the German armed forces, U.S. Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey noted that
the "very complex" issue also will be a subject of NATO meetings
later this week in Istanbul.
The chairman said he and Wieker discussed whether NATO
should have a role in addressing the cause of the crisis.
Dempsey, who spoke to reporters after his meeting today,
said the refugee crisis stems from instability in the Middle East, Afghanistan
and North Africa, and economic conditions in the Balkans.
A Deluge of Refugees
Earlier this week, Germany said it expects to take in
800,000 refugees this year from Africa, Afghanistan, Syria and the Balkans.
The trickle of refugees suddenly became a deluge, Dempsey
said, noting that many of the refugees were young men. The sudden flow, he
added, possibly indicates a network of criminal activity is behind the influx.
"Somebody, somewhere in a very deliberate fashion has
established a network for profit to enable these young men to escape their
current conditions and into Europe," the chairman said.
The young men looking for a better life and economic
opportunities could be vulnerable to "those who would potentially seek to
radicalize them," he said. "We all have to be alert to that
possibility," Dempsey added.
NATO Meetings in Turkey
There are multiple, complex threats facing the alliance, he
said. One goal of the day of NATO talks Saturday is to have a conversation
about what each nation will do both unilaterally and as a member of the
alliance in response to issues such as Russia, the Islamic State of Iraq and
the Levant, and the refugee crisis, the chairman said.
While Turkey might not feel threatened by Russia, it is
important that each member of the alliance accept and concede there are
multiple threats facing NATO, Dempsey said.
"We've had many conversations with them about the
threat from violent extremist organizations and radical ideologies and their
vulnerability on their southern flank, which happens to be NATO's southeastern
flank," he noted.
Turkey, as the only Muslim country in NATO, can provide
valuable input to the alliance on issues evolving in the Middle East and North
Africa, Dempsey said.
Chairman Honored
During his visit to the German Ministry of Defense, Dempsey
laid a wreath in honor of fallen German soldiers and received the Knight
Commander's Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany.
In presenting the decoration, Wieker hailed Dempsey as a
close ally and friend who "enjoys the highest recognition around the
world" as the top U.S. military officer.
"The Federal Republic of Germany is grateful for your
outstanding contribution to the American-German friendship and your dedication
to all bilateral and transatlantic partnership," he told Dempsey.
The chairman said it was "quite a remarkable honor and
privilege" to receive the decoration.
"I accept it on behalf of the many, many, many
soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines who have served here in your wonderful
country," he said, noting he began his career as a young Army officer
stationed in Germany.
"I found it fitting and appropriate that I would end my
career where I began it," Dempsey said, who retires at the end of this
month after more than four decades of service.
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