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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Iraq war splits NATO
By Peter Schwarz
13 February 2003
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The Atlantic alliance is facing the deepest divide in its 50-year
history. In the course of the past few days the positions of the
opposing parties have become more and more entrenched. While the
US and Britain are pressing for a military strike against Iraq
as soon as possible, France and Germany are setting all wheels
in motion to diplomatically outmanoeuvre the US.
The accusations hurled by both camps at one another are becoming
more acrimonious with each passing day. On Tuesday, US Secretary
of State Colin Powell, testifying before the Senate Budget Committee,
warned that NATO might break apart if Germany, France and Belgium
did not drop their resistance to military support for Turkey.
The Wall Street Journal, mouthpiece of the most aggressive
and reactionary factions within the US establishment, posed the
question on a fundamental level and asked whether NATO continued
to serve the interests of the United States. The newspaper
accused Germany of following an agenda aimed less at defusing
war than at actively promoting American defeat. If NATO
does not change course, the editorial said, it has outlived
its usefulness. It concluded by declaring: What President
Bush calls a coalition of the willing will become
Americas new security alliance.
France and Germany, whose criticisms of US war plans until
now were generally passive and muted, have taken several diplomatic
initiatives in recent days in a last minute attempt to avert a
military strike against Iraq.
On Monday, French President Jacques Chirac and his Russian
counterpart Vladimir Putin, who had just visited Berlin, presented
a joint declaration by Russia, Germany and France in Paris. The
statement called for extended weapons inspections in Iraq. There
still is an alternative to war. The use of violence can only be
the last resort, the statement declared, in clear opposition
to the remarks of US President Bush, who earlier this week said,
The game is over.
On the basis of this joint declaration, the three powers may
seek to block a British draft resolution to be presented to the
UN Security Council on February 14. The US-backed resolution would
effectively give Washington a green light for a military strike.
Chirac and Putin said they were confident that the majority
of Security Council members agreed with them. Since Secretary
of State Colin Powells speech to the Security Council on
February 5, Chirac has intensified his efforts to find support
in the council, speaking to the heads of state of China, Mexico,
Chile, Syria, Cameroon and other countries.
On Monday, NATO representatives from Belgium, France and Germany
vetoed military preparations for the protection of Turkey in case
of an Iraq war. Such preventive military planning, they argued,
could send a wrong signal and subvert any peaceful
solution of the Iraq conflict. If we bowed to this request,
we would embark on the logic towards war, Belgian Foreign
Minister Louis Michel commented.
This veto prompted indignant rebukes from US Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld, who described it as a shame and a
terrible mistake. He declared: Whoever prevents
the Alliance from taking even the most minimal provisions for
the defence of Turkey threatens to undermine its credibility.
President Bush publicly accused Berlin, Paris and Brussels of
damaging NATO.
Belated insight
The efforts by Germany and France to impede US war plans are
motivated by their belated recognition that international institutions
and agreements will not prevent the Bush administration from pursuing
its interests in a unilateral and aggressive manner.
Washington decided on the military occupation of Iraq a long
time ago. The debates in the Security Council, the weapons inspections
and the fake proofs of weapons of mass destruction merely serve
the purpose of deceiving the public.
Former secretary of state Henry Kissinger recently admitted
in an interview with the German newspaper Welt am Sonntag
that the US government has always regarded the UN resolution that
forced Iraq to accept renewed weapons inspections as a mere pretext
for war. No government that talked to President Bush or
his advisers since Resolution 1441 was passed in November 2002
could have any doubt that within a few months the Americans would
announce a material breach of this resolution as well as retaliatory
measures.
Given the fact that more than 100,000 American soldiers had
already been deployed in the region, Kissinger said, any retreat
without a regime change in Iraq would be tantamount to catastrophe.
Retired US General Wesley Clark, NATOs chief of staff
during the war in Yugoslavia, said in an interview with the same
newspaper that the decision to direct the Iraq issue towards
war had already been taken in late 2001. Following the defeat
of Saddam Hussein, there would be a massive American presence
in the region and a military administration in Iraq.
Clark proceeded to name the next military targets of the US: Syriawithin
12 monthsand then Iran.
With regard to their long-term interests, Germany and France
cannot possibly accept such a hegemonic position for the US in
the Middle East. It would bring Europes energy supplies
and large export markets under the total control of its biggest
economic rival. In addition, they fear that a war against Iraq
will destabilize the entire region and radicalize Muslim immigrants
who live in Europe in large numbers. The Afghanistan conflict,
they further fear, could be rekindled by a war on Iraqa
situation for which German soldiers in Kabul are utterly unprepared.
For many months the German and French governments expected
that they would be able to come to an agreement with the US on
a joint policy. They placed their hopes on more moderate sections
of the political elite in America. However, after leading Democrats
expressed their unreserved support for Bushs war plans and
the so-called doves led by Secretary of State Powell turned out
to be hawks, these hopes were dashed.
Powells speech to the UN on February 5, in which he raked
up long-refuted propaganda lies instead of presenting serious
evidence as promised, shattered the remaining illusions about
a more moderate wing within the US administration.
The political establishment in Germany has grown embittered
over the efforts of the American government to split Europe on
the issue of Iraq. The statement of solidarity with the US, drafted
and signed by eight European states at the suggestion of the Wall
Street Journal, was an open attack on European endeavours
to arrive at a joint foreign policy. Since then, the tone has
turned notably harsher on both sides of the Atlantic.
At a meeting of the Social Democratic members of parliament
on Monday, German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, to loud cheers
from his audience, spoke of an historical decision for Germany.
The near future would show, he said, whether a multi-polar world
would prevail or whether all important decisions would be taken
unilaterallyin Washington.
French President Chirac expressed his opposition to a world
order in which the Americans would assume the role of prosecutor,
judge and executioner.
No principled opposition
It would, however, be a serious mistake to confuse the stance
taken by Berlin and Paris with a principled opposition to war
in Iraq. Both governments accept the myth of Saddam Husseins
alleged weapons of mass destruction, thus conforming to the declared
aim of US policy: the disarmament of Iraqa euphemism
for the countrys colonial subjugation. What they dont
accept is that this should take place under the exclusive control
of the US.
As the German news magazine Der Spiegel correctly noted,
the initiative of France and Germany for intensified weapons inspections
amounts to the establishment of a UN protectorate. This plan,
which is being distributed by the French UN delegation in the
form of a so-called non-paper, envisages doubling
or tripling the number of UN inspectors. They are to be accompanied
by armed units of a UN security corps, while American U2 and French
Mirage planes conduct constant air surveillance. This would effectively
extend the no-fly zones to the entire territory of
the country.
Should this project be put into practice despite American reservations,
it would be very easy to create some provocation as a pretext
for warwhich would then be supported by Germany and France.
Any obstruction or violent sabotage of this disarmament
mission would be met with an immediate military counter-strike,
Der Spiegel writes. And this strike would not be
based merely on the power politics of a single super power, but
on the world organizations right to use force as laid down
in Article VII.
The attempt by Germany and France to stifle the war plans of
the Bush administration by diplomatic manoeuvres is bound to fail,
because it does not take into account the roots of these war policies.
The aggressive foreign policy of the US government is a reaction
to the deep inner crisis of American society for which the ruling
elite has no solution.
The deep divide within NATO is neither a mere episode nor the
result of political misunderstandings. It is an inevitable consequence
of the internal contradictions of world capitalism, which find
their most developed expression within the US. The era in which
relations between the great powers could be regulated peacefully
is now past. As in the first half of the last century, every serious
economic and social crisis raises the danger of a world war.
The only viable answer to the danger of war is the international
mobilization of the working population on the basis of a socialist
program. The policy of diplomatic manoeuvres, on the other hand,
serves to exclude the mass of the people from political life.
In this respect, it is instructive to study the arguments brought
forward against Chancellor Schröder in Germany. On several
occasions, Schröder made rather undiplomatic statements on
US policy. He did so for purely domestic reasons, in an attempt
to raise his poor standing in the opinion polls by demagogic appeals
to the anti-war sentiment that is very broad and deep within the
German population. However, Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer (Green
Party) and even those sections of the media critical of the US
cautioned that he was going too far. They accused the chancellor
of isolating Germany internationally and eroding the countrys
diplomatic room for manoeuvre.
An editorial in the Süddeutsche Zeitung summed
up these criticisms. Public opinion, it said, was the greatest
threat to diplomacy: Diplomacy breaks down if its delicate
mechanisms are exposed to high voltagethe heavy currents
of public emotions. Since the collapse of Metternichs
Europe in 1848, this danger had become inevitable, the author
wrote with regret. From then on, he declared, foreign
affairs were no longer pure cabinet policy, but began to intertwine
with the sentiments of entire nations expressed in public opinion.
See Also:
Powells UN speech triggers countdown
to war against Iraq
[6 February 2003]
Bushs State of the Union
speech: the war fever of a ruling elite in crisis
[30 January 2003]
How to deal with America?
The European dilemma
[25 January 2003]
German government signals
support for Iraq war
[16 January 2003]
No to war against Iraq
Editorial of Gleichheit, magazine of the Socialist Equality
Party of Germany
[8 January 2003]
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