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Bush in Berlin: illusion and reality
By Ulrich Rippert
28 May 2002
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It was a really significant speech, in some passages
even an historic speech. This was the reaction of
Chancellor Gerhard Schröder of the Social Democratic Party
(SPD) to the speech given by United States president George W.
Bush to the German parliament last week. Similar comments have
been made repeatedly by leading politicians and the German media
since Bush gave his speech last Thursday.
The truly significant aspect of Bushs Berlin speech at
the beginning of his week-long trip to Europe, however, was not
so much the string of hackneyed diplomatic phrases regarding the
apparent health of the trans-Atlantic alliance, but rather the
enthusiastic and, in some quarters, even euphoric reactions by
the German political elite.
The reaction to Bushs speech reflects an important change
in German foreign policy. Before the Bush trip, both German foreign
minister Joschka Fischer of the Green Party and Schröder
had stressed how they regarded a war against Iraq as misconceived
and would do everything in their power to dissuade the US government
from taking such a course.
Although in his speech Bush did not mention either Iraq or
Saddam Hussein, his repeated references to the trans-Atlantic
joint interest in the struggle against terror left no doubt
that preparations for a war against Iraq were central to his discussions
during his stay in Berlin. The standing ovation he
was given by parliamentarians and members of the government was
a signal of German agreement.
Of course we spoke about Iraq, said Fischer on
the floor of parliament following Bushs speech, adding that
the US president had emphasised a number of times that there were
no precise plans for a military attack. To journalists
Fischer remarked, I do not see Iraq on the top of the agenda
for the next period. The German newsmagazine Der Spiegel
concluded that his statement indicated that an agreement had been
reached behind closed doors that a war against Iraq should not
commence before September 22, the date of Germanys general
election.
Such an agreement allows the German government to make its
own preparations for war behind the backs of the German people
and, thereby, prevent demonstrations opposing military action
from disrupting the elections. Participation by the German army
in a US-led onslaught against Iraq would have to be agreed upon
by the German parliament and it is evident that such a debate
is entirely unwanted by the coalition partners in the run up to
elections.
There are a number of reasons for the change in policy by the
German government regarding a war against Iraq. Firstly, the last
few months have made clear in Berlin and other European capitals
that they do not have any influence over America anyway when it
comes to the issue of war, or indeed, any other issue. Secondly,
the German government is seeking to pursue its own imperialist
interests and does not want to be pushed out of the picture as
America strives to set up its own protectorate in one of the worlds
most important oil exporting countries. Thirdly, a war serves
to reignite German and European militarism and enable the government
to press ahead with a programme of rearmament that has already
been agreed upon.
The applause for Bush is an expression of a turn to the right
by the European parties, reflecting their reaction to growing
social problems and conflicts for which they have no real solution.
Under conditions of mounting unemployment, poverty and growing
social tensions, the European political elite feel increasingly
threatened and are closing ranks against the threat they perceive
emanating from the working class. Americas warlike policies,
applauded in the Reichstag, are not only directed against foes
abroad but also at home.
An air of unreality
The gulf between official politics and the broad masses of
the population was palpable during the course of the Bush visit.
It was expressed not only in the stark contrast between the tens
of thousands taking part in demonstrations and protest meetings
under the slogan, We do not want your wars, Mr. President!
and the standing ovation in parliament for Bush. It was also glaringly
apparent that in the course of his entire stop in Berlin, during
which he repeatedly spoke of policies in the interests of
the people and freedom and human rights; he
did not meet a single ordinary German citizen.
During his speech Bush evoked former times, when the former
President John F Kennedy visited Germany and, to the applause
of thousands, drove through the streets of West Berlin in an open
limousine with Chancellor Willy Brandt; or even Ronald Reagan
who in 1987 uttered his well-known phrase before a huge crowd
assembled at the Brandenburg Gate, Mr. Gorbachev, tear down
this wall! In contrast Bush was totally isolated from any
contact with the German people. There were too many fears that
his welcome would not be restricted to only eggs and tomatoes.
For the first time in the history of the city, a large part
of the centre surrounding the Reichstag was hermetically sealed.
It was impossible to penetrate the police barricades. Those living
in the area cordoned off by the police were force to endure hours
of body searches before they could return home. Police helicopters
circled overhead and snipers were posted strategically on rooftops
across the city centre. Berlin citizens were visibly disturbed
by the disruption, with an elderly woman commenting to cameras,
When he is so afraid of the people, why does he bother to
come here?
Perhaps the most interesting remark made by Bush was not part
of his carefully prepared official speech. It came in a statement
to journalists when he commented on the artificial atmosphere
surrounding his visit: I am living in a balloon.
The air of unreality was not limited to purely external factors,
but also characterised Bushs speech. Virtually every sentence
stood truth on its head. At one point, and with special pathos,
Bush emphasised that he cared for, and was interested in, every
human life: This from a man, who as governor of Texas, personally
authorised more than one hundred and fifty executions.
In long passages Bush referred to German-American friendship
and emphasised joint values and interests, although
everyone knows that such close relations have faded long ago.
Conflicts and clashes of interest on all levels have marked the
most recent period.
The suppression of reality was not limited to Bush. It was
also reflected in those applauding his speech. Green party deputy
Cem Özdemir declared of Bush, He said that which Europeans
have been waiting for. His party friend Winfried Herrmann,
regarded as a left-winger and a man who voted against German army
participation in the war in Afghanistan, was even more fulsome:
This was no hardcore-Bush. How easy it is to impress
the Green party politicians.
It has seldom been so obvious that the ruling elite no longer
dare to look the truth in the face, confronted with problems for
which they have no solution.
Growing trans-Atlantic tensions
Facts, however, are stubborn things. Neither Bushs appeals
regarding past German-American friendship and cooperation, nor
the courteous applause and hopes for sufficient consultation on
the part of Washington by politicians in Berlin can disguise the
reality of growing conflicts between the US and Europe.
It has been clear for some time that with the war in Afghanistan
and its current preparations for military action against Iraq,
the US government is following its own independent geo-strategic
interests. Right-wing think-tanks have been arguing for the military
occupation of Central Asia for years. In 1997 the former US security
advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski wrote, in a book containing a foreword
written by Fischers predecessor as German foreign minister
Hans-Dietrich Genscher, that Central Asia is the chessboard
which will decide in future who dominates the globe. In
early May US television channel NBC revealed that already on September
9, two days before the hi-jacked planes crashed into the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon, a war plan for the crushing of
Al-Qaeda lay on the desk of the president awaiting his signature.
It was just a question of putting the plan into action.
The most recent example of the violent clash of European and
US interests is to be found in the Middle East. Israeli attacks
on Ramallah and other towns resulted in the destruction of the
infrastructure of the Palestinian Authority that was almost entirely
financed with European donations.
Washingtons recent punitive measures against European
steel imports have also lead to sharply critical reactions in
Europe. In order to protect its domestic steel industry, the US
has virtually closed its borders to imports since March this year.
The commission of the European Union (EU) has reckoned the losses
for European steel at $2.4 billion per year and trade commissioner
Pascal Lamy has already announced European counter-measures in
the form of restrictions on US imports.
A further conflict is looming on the horizon. Recently the
US Congress decided to increase its subsidies to domestic agriculture
at a time when European countries are reducing subsides as part
of the preparation for EU expansion. Some press reports are already
speaking of the possibilities of a trade war.
Additional sources of trans-Atlantic tensions include the recent
announcement by the US of its unilateral termination of the Anti-Ballistic
Missile Treaty (which pledged the Great Powers to limit their
weapons systems); the American rejection of proposals for an international
court of human rights, as well as its refusal to agree to the
so-called Kyoto Agreement aimed at reducing carbon monoxide emissions.
Under such circumstances, German and European politicians are
confronted with a dilemma. With conflicts developing, the overwhelming
military superiority of the US, which it is prepared to utilise
in a ruthless manner, leaves Berlin and Brussels holding the short
straw. Nevertheless the ruling elite in Europe is doing its best
to catch up in both the economic and military spheres.
Behind the chorus of friendly words and mutual congratulations,
a period of vigorous trans-Atlantic conflicts has opened up, which
threatens increased instability on a world scale.
See Also:
Tens of thousands march against Bush
in Berlin
[23 May 2002]
Europe on rations: the Afghan
war and the dilemma of European capitalism
[19 March 2002]
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