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Germany: Push to use military for domestic policing
By Marius Heuser
25 April 2003
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Over the last few years fundamental legal rights in Germany,
such as the division of power between the police and secret services,
data protection and the use of torture, have been increasingly
put into question. Now a traditional demand of the conservative
right in Germanythe use of the army for domestic purposesis
being advanced in parliament by parties across the board. In general,
fundamental legal issues are being ignored with the debate concentrating
on such issues as possible exceptions to the internal use of the
army.
How did the debate develop?
For years representatives of Germanys conservative right
have been calling for the army to be used for domestic purposes.
This debate took new and more concrete forms after the terror
attacks of September 11, 2001. After the attacks the prime minister
of the state of Bayern, Edmund Stoiber (CSU), called for a change
to the German constitution to enable the army to be utilised in
the struggle against terrorism inside the country. It was foreseen
that the army would be put under the control of the police, which
itself is subject, under German law, to the authority of the individual
states.
The conservative union parties (Christian Democratic UnionCDU,
Christian Social UnionCSU) continued their calls for a change
to the constitution during German elections in autumn of last
year. In the Bild am Sonntag, the union candidate for chancellor,
Stoiber, said that should he win the chancellorship he would push
forward with plans for the domestic use of the army. In future
the German army must be implemented domestically to supplement
the policefor example to protect airports against attack,
he said.
At the conference of state interior ministers held in Bremen
at the beginning of December 2002 the interior ministers of Bayern
and North-Rhine Westphalia, Günther Beckstein and Fritz Behrens,
introduced an appropriate draft proposal. The draft was rejected
at that time by other SPD (German Social Democratic Party)-led
states.
Up until this point the SPD and Green parties had signalled
their opposition to such a proposed law. The main argument used
by the SPD and the Greens was that existing law was sufficient
when required to permit the use of internal operations by the
army. On this basis, for example, as it became clear the United
States was intent on a war with Iraq at the end of last year,
the German government assured the US that German soldiers would
take full responsibility for the protection of American bases
in the country and partial responsibility for the defence of US
civil institutions.
The Frankfurt glider incident
The debate on this issue was reignited by what was on the face
of it a trivial incident. At the start of this year a mentally
confused 31-year-old flew a glider over the city of Frankfurt
for two hours and threatened at one point to fly into a banking
office tower block. In the ensuing debate on the incident, readers
sent letters to local newspapers stating they were more fearful
of the two German air force tornados, which were scrambled to
observe and possibly shoot down the small plane, than they were
of the glider itself.
In fact nobody disputes that existing law covers the possible
use of the army to support local authoritiesfor example
to oppose a real terrorist threat. Nevertheless, the incident
in Frankfurt was used by some politicians to reinforce the case
for a change of law.
Most notable is the change of stance by members of the governing
coalition. In addition to the union politicians Angela Merkel,
Friedrich Merz and Edmund Stoiber, German Defence Minister Peter
Struck (SPD) also joined the debate. According to Struck there
was not an appropriate law to allow air force pilots
to shoot down the Frankfurt plane. A report in the Spiegel
magazine revealed that Struck has instructed officials in
his department to draw up new defence policy guidelines,
including a clarification of the constitution for
the expanded use of the German army inside the country.
Afterwards a vigorous debate developed over this demand. The
Interior and Justice ministries together with Chancellor Schröder
himself rejected a change of the constitution. It was notable,
however, that the discussion concentrated on formal issues. There
was no reference to the possible dangers arising from the merging
of the police and intelligence services, with arguments restricted
to the issue of whether the existing legal situation was sufficient
to allow the army to intervene domestically.
The general secretary of the SPD, Olaf Scholz, has declared
that in his opinion a change of the constitution is not imperative.
The legal clarification of this question is an entirely
open process, he stated. The SPD would prefer a solution
which avoided a change to the constitution. The home affairs speaker
of the SPD parliamentary faction, Dieter Wiefelspütz, stated
in the Passauer Neue Presse that the constitution permits
the intervention of armed forces against terror attacks when it
is adjudged that political means are insufficient to deal with
the problem.
The reaction of the Green Party has been less muted. Green
leader Angelika Beer said that in principle her party does not
approve of changes to the constitution. However for the problem
of airplanes which take off from inside Germany and then threaten
targets inside the country it was necessary to come up with a
legally equitable solution.
On the basis of these legal arguments the German minister of
the interior, Otto Schily (SPD), indicated at the end of January
this year that he was planning a change to the air-policing law,
in order to regulate military support for the police. On March
1, the dpa news agency reported that there was widespread agreement
in government circles over such a law.
In the newspaper Die Welt the SPD home affairs expert,
Dieter Wiefelspütz, spoke in favour of a draft law to article
35 of the constitution to regulate the internal use of the German
army for official assistance. An air-policing law would
be insufficient, he said. The defence expert of the union
parliamentary fraction, Christian Schmidt (CSU), said that the
union parties would not vote in favour of the Schily draft: It
is not possible without a change to the constitution: The
Schily proposals do not go far enough because there will
still remain no rules regarding the use of the army for the tackling
of dangers on the ground and at sea.
It is highly doubtful that parliament will approve a revamped
version of the air-policing law. What is clear is that there will
be a broadening of the law regarding internal use of the army.
The argument given by all parties is that such a measure is
necessary for the struggle against terrorism, although such attacks
as those of 9/11, or even the glider affair in Frankfurt, could
not have been prevented by the army. At present the paramilitary
Federal Border Police is employed throughout the country as a
matter of course. How is the army supposed to support these forces?
These are questions which are not even discussed. As is the case
in the US, the catch phrase terrorism is used in Germany
to intimidate and justify wide-reaching attacks on democratic
rights.
The whole debate inevitably brings to mind the discussions
which took place in the 90s regarding interventions abroad
by the German army. At that time there were endless debates about
whether or not to change the constitution in order to permit the
German army to intervene in areas outside of NATO territories.
Today, without any change to the constitution, Germany has more
soldiers on active service abroad than any other country apart
from the United States.
The significance of the internal use of the
army
Arising from the experiences of German history there are good
reasons for the limitations placed at the end of the Second World
War on the use of the German army.
Under the rule of Emperor Wilhelm II at the end of the nineteenth
and beginning of the twentieth century not only was the army used
against striking workers, but in addition the military command,
largely drawn from the ranks of the conservative Prussian Junker,
played a considerable and disastrous role both at home and abroad.
As a result, the German army was subject to strict and massive
limitations by the victorious great powers at the end of the First
World War. Even so, the remaining military structures together
with paramilitary elements from the defeated German army were
instrumental in suppressing revolutionary revolts, employing terror
against working class organisations and undertaking their own
putsches against elected governments.
Hitlers SA and SS storm troopers were mainly drawn from
the ranks of the German army Freikorps and had close links
to the official military apparatus. Their job was to secure public
order through terror, intimidation and violence. With the official
swearing of loyalty by the German army to Hitler on August 2,
1934, the militarization of every aspect of German society was
complete. The fascist state was only able to secure power and
destroy the working class with the assistance of the German army.
Based on these experiences, which had a profound effect on
popular consciousness, the discussion on the rearmament of the
Federal Republic in the 50s revolved around definite limits
governing the use of the army. The German army could only be mobilised
for defensive purposes against an external foe and was never to
be employed against the German people. There had already been
vigorous opposition to the establishment of a paramilitary-type
federal border police force ( Bundesgrenzschutz).
Since 1960 attempts have been made to weaken the established
limits and through the passing of so-called emergency laws enable
the internal employment of the army. Emergency laws were eventually
passed in 1968 by a grand coalition of the union parties and the
SPD in the midst of student protests. The laws established the
basis for the use of the army against the population as a wholefor
example in the case of mass strikes.
In the current discussion such questions as the significance
of the fundamental legal requirement of a division of powers between
police and military are not even raised. Instead there is much
empty talk of a confused glider pilot. Under conditions where
the government is intensifying its attacks on the social conditions
of the broad masses and intends to substantially increase the
defence budget, basic democratic rights are being continually
eroded. The German state is preparing to deal with the emergence
of popular resistance and discontent.
Just as was the case in 1968 it is no accident that such proposals
for alterations to the law should be greeted with broad support
across the political spectrum at a time when masses of people
are beginning to intervene actively in political lifemost
recently in mass demonstrations against the Iraq war.
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