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Germany: Brandenburg intelligence service slanders the World
Socialist Web Site
Statement by the WSWS Editorial Board
20 October 2003
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The intelligence service of the east German state of Brandenburg
(Verfassungsschutz) has published an article on its web
site accusing the World Socialist Web Site (WSWS) of promoting
violence. The article claims that the WSWS is part of a milieu
of violent left extremism. The Editorial Board of
the WSWS completely rejects this slanderous accusation and reserves
the right to take legal action to force the intelligence service
to retract its report and to publish a reply from the World
Socialist Web Site.
The intelligence services article is a malicious slander
of an online publication that pursues socialist and democratic
aims. It is an attack on freedom of speech by a department of
the state that is supposedly obliged to uphold the German constitution.
The intelligence service justifies its insinuation on the basis
of a WSWS article published two and a half years ago that it says
was found at the scene of an attack on an immigration office in
the city of Frankfurt (Oder). Someone had broken the offices
windows in the early morning hours of September 16 and tossed
a foul-smelling liquid inside. In addition, glue was inserted
into the outer doors and slogans spray-painted on the outside
of the building.
The WSWS article was a political critique of the German governments
refugee policies. The intelligence service was compelled to concede
that it was legally unassailable. Nevertheless, it
cites the article as evidence of an extreme leftist background
to the deed. It goes on to assert that the article can be
ranked alongside a number of similar publications which
taken together promote or produce a propensity for violence.
They conclude with the words: The road to criminal acts
is paved with such texts.
The following must be said about these allegations:
1. The World Socialist Web Site is
a socialist and not a left extremist publication.
It is published by the International Committee of the Fourth International
and its section in Germany, the Socialist Equality Party (PSG).
It stands for a socialist orientation and the defence of democratic
and social rights. The PSG has repeatedly taken part in German
elections and is officially recognised as a party by the German
electoral commission. It rejects as a matter of principle the
methods of individual violence.
2. The article that was allegedly found at
the scene of the attack, published by the WSWS on February 24,
2001 (March 8, 2001, in English), under the title The deadly
consequences of Germanys refugee policy, criticises
German state policy towards foreigners. The article is correct
in both its presentation of the facts and its political evaluation.
It criticises the outrageous conditions confronting immigrants
and gives concrete figures on the number of victims who have died
or been injured as a result of police actions on the German and
European borders. It bases itself on generally accessible sources
of information that can be easily checked, including the ARD television
programme Monitor, the Antiracist Initiative Berlin
(ARI) and the daily newspaper tageszeitung. The article
castigates the double-speak of the German federal government,
which routinely condemns the violence against foreigners
when the violence is committed by neo-Nazis and racists on the
street, while the message communicated by the anti-refugee
actions of the German state reinforces the neo-Nazi calumny that
the lives of unwanted foreigners are worthless.
3. The Brandenburg Intelligence Services
claim that the publication of such an article promotes or produces
an inclination toward violence has broad implications. It places
any criticism of government policy in the orbit of illegal activity.
If this is accepted, it is sufficient for a confused person or
provocateur to break a few windows to provide the pretext for
silencing political opponents of the government. With the same
argument, any critic of the German governments Agenda
2010 program of social cutbacks could be made responsible
for the actions of a desperate unemployed person who runs amok.
Or one could accuse any opponent of the introduction of the euro
in Sweden of paving the way to the murder of Swedish
foreign minister Anna Lindta prominent advocate of the eurowho
was stabbed to death at the height of the referendum campaign.
4. This sort of argumentation recalls the
darkest days of German history. There have been decades of experience
here of police statesboth fascist and Stalinist. The police
regimes of such states always maintain that political criticism
of the government is equivalent to support of violenceand
thereby justify the suppression of political opponents. The right
to free speech guaranteed in the German constitution, on the other
hand, expressly includes the right to criticise a government without
in any way making oneself liable to prosecution.
5. The intelligence service justifies its
claim of left extremism with regard to the WSWS with an amalgam
of half-truths and falsehoods. On the one hand, it maintains that
the text published in the WSWS proves the left extremist
background to the deed. On the other hand, it substantiates
the left extremist nature of the article by the fact that it was
allegedly found at the scene of the attack. This is obviously
a circular argument.
Unable to find anything in the article that could in any sense
be interpreted as the advocacy of violence, the intelligence service
foists its own statements on it. They write: In many left
extremist publications it is argued that through its own activities
the state directly encourages the extreme right wing to deal violently
with foreigners and refugees. Thereby the state shows its realfascistface.
This is why anti-fascists must regard the state as their enemy.
Once again, the intelligence service employs a circular argument.
It maintains that the article by the WSWS is left extremist
and then goes on to demonstrate this by introducing statements
from fictitious left extremist publications. Such
statements are nowhere to be found in the already mentioned WSWS
article, or any other article published on the WSWS. The statement
that the state shows its realfascistface,
echoing the banal language of the Red Army Faction (RAF), is foisted
on the WSWS, although it is nothing but an invention of the intelligence
service itself.
6. It is a matter of public record that the
German intelligence services work with the methods of infiltration
and provocation. They have extensively penetrated extreme right-wing
circles, and undercover agents of the intelligence services have
on occasion taken part in acts of violence by these groups.
As early as the end of the 1970s, secret service agents blew
a hole in the wall of the prison in the town of Celle, in order
to fake a violent attempt to free an apparent member of the Red
Army Faction. In the spring of this year, attempts to legally
ban the neo-Nazi NPD (National Democratic Party of Germany) collapsed
when it was revealed that one in seven leading members of the
organisation was on the payroll of the German secret service.
The extent of infiltration of the NPD led one constitutional judge
to comment that many of the activities of the party could be regarded
as organised by the state. There are a series of known
cases where the Brandenburg Intelligence Service has employed
right-wing extremists with a history of violence. The left radical
milieu has also been penetrated by state agents in a state whose
interior minister, under conditions of widespread right-wing violence,
regularly warns of the danger of underestimating left extremism.
In light of this situation, it is necessary to pose the question:
Were agents of the intelligence services involved in the attack
on the Frankfurt immigration offices on September 16? Does the
Brandenburg intelligence service know more than it is saying?
Was it directly involved in planting the WSWS article at the scene?
There is a strange disparity between the accusations levelled
against the WSWS and the official investigation into the attack
on the Frankfurt immigration office. According to the state attorney
in charge of the case, two weeks of investigation into the attack
have proven fruitless. There is apparently little effort being
made to further the probe. For its part, however, the Brandenburg
Intelligence Service has published shortly after the attack an
article devoting just a few lines to the actual assault and four
fifths of its content to an attack on the WSWS.
See Also:
The deadly consequences
of Germanys refugee policy
[8 March 2001]
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