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Schröders policy of closing his eyes to reality
The German government seeks closer relations with the US
By Peter Schwarz
16 May 2003
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Never explain; never complain. I want to use our time
together with you, to cast our eyes forward. These were
the words used by Chancellor Gerhard Schröder to describe
German foreign policy after the Iraq war. He was speaking on May
9 to the American Chamber of Commerce in Berlin, which was celebrating
the hundredth anniversary of its foundation.
Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer expressed similar sentiments
in an interview with the magazine Die Zeit. Referring to
the Iraq war, he said, There is no point now carrying out
yesterdays discussions... Now its a question of the
future.
After the tensions and conflicts of the past months, the German
government is evidently intent on acting as if nothing had happened.
How it hopes to look to the future while at the same time closing
its eyes to the past and the present remains a mystery.
In Berlin, Schröder invoked the common values
that unite Germany and the US in a vital friendshiprespect
for basic human rights, the recognition of freedom
and democracy, international law and an international
system of legal institutions. His speech made no reference
to the war against Iraq in which the US brutally disregarded all
of the values he cited.
Schröders silence cannot hide the fact that this
war represents a profound turning point in international relations.
The US government ignored international law and the will of the
majority of the United Nations Security Council, and made unmistakably
clear that in the future it intends to disregard any authority
other than its own interests and military strength.
Under these conditions, the stance now taken by Schröder
and Fischer is equivalent to retrospectively awarding legitimacy
to the war and occupation of Iraq. Although in his Die Zeit
interview Fischer denies that this is his standpoint, he immediately
goes on to add, Whatever position one took towards the war
with Iraq: as soon as the first shot was fired, the success of
the efforts to establish a new order was of decisive importance
for European security. The headline for his interview read:
Saddam Husseins overthrow is a cause for celebration.
In practice, the German government has already made considerable
concessions towards the US. Berlin has indicated its muted agreement
to the UN resolution with which Washington is seeking to sanction
the transformation of Iraq into a virtual US protectorate. Last
week, the US State Department sent its special ambassador Kim
Holmes to Berlin to review the details of the US draft resolution
for the UN.
In the course of the summit of the French-German-Polish governments
in Breslau last Friday, Schröder made clear that he was prepared
to take over the role of mediator and seek to secure the agreement
of Paris and Moscow for the US resolution. This was the desire
of Germany, he made clear, and the government was working for
its implementation.
France and Russia, which both have veto powers on the UN security
council, have expressed their own misgivings about US plans for
the occupation of Iraqnot least because of the direct threat
to the interests of French and Russian oil companies, which had
made long-term trade arrangements with the government of Saddam
Hussein.
On Friday, May 16, Schröder is due to meet US Secretary
of State Colin Powell in Berlinthe first meeting between
the chancellor and a member of the American government for months.
It is expected that the meeting will also arrive at a further
closing of positions regarding the US resolution for the UN.
In the meantime, there have even been reports of a possible
deployment of German troops in Iraq. According to Der Spiegel
magazine, the German defence minister, Peter Struck, is said
to have assured his American counterpart Donald Rumsfeld, in secret
talks, that Berlin had no objections to participating in the occupation
of Iraq. Last week, Struck visited Washington. In his discussions
there, he left open the issue of German army involvement in Iraq,
which would have to be decided by the German parliament. According
to Der Spiegel, however, the sending of German troops
is no longer a matter of principle, merely an issue of timing.
There are no fundamental objections to such a move.
The anti-war stance adopted by the SPD and Greens last September,
which was decisive in securing the governments autumn electoral
victory, is proving more and more farcical. With its move to retrospectively
legitimate the war and US occupation of Iraq, the German government
has only strengthened the hand of the hawks in the American administration
for whom the next war is just a question of time. Equally, the
retreat undertaken by the German government is a stab in the back
for all those who expressed their opposition to the warin
America and all over the world.
In any event, German hopes for reconciliation with the US government
are illusory. At every opportunity, Schröder and Fischer
emphasise that they are in favour of the unity of Europe alongside
an alliance with the US and see no contradiction between the two
objectives.
The close German-French friendship and collaboration
is as indispensable for all of Europe as it is for Europes
transatlantic partnership, Schröder said in Berlin.
Nobody should try to pose Germany with making the senseless
choice between its friendship with France and its friendship with
the US. A united and powerful Europe is also in the
interests of the US. It is not a problem in our partnership
of too much America, rather that there is too little Europe.
Fischer used very similar language in Die Zeit. The
economic strength of the EU has not led to a situation where
one side confronts the other, the power of Europe against America,
he remarked.
However, if anything has become clear over the past few weeks,
it is that Washington is not prepared to tolerate any rivals on
an equal footing. It has ruthlessly used its influence in Europe
to split the continent. With its cosying up to the US administration,
the German government is only serving to exacerbate this process.
See Also:
American war, German realpolitik and
international law
[10 May 2003]
The attorney generals legal fictions:
Cover-up for German complicity in Iraq war
[7 May 2003]
US bases in Germany critical
to assault on Iraq: Schröder government complicit in war
[7 April 2003]
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