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German government sends more troops to Afghanistan
By Ulrich Rippert
4 September 2003
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The recent decision by the German government to increase the
number of German troops deployed in Afghanistan and transfer 250
soldiers to the city of Konduz in the north of the country is
directly bound up with increasing Afghan resistance to the American
occupation.
Armed conflicts with the Taliban and Al Qaeda fighters, some
of whom have evidently allied themselves with the rebel warlord
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, have been growing. Last weekend two US soldiers
were killed in a shootout in the south of the country. Two months
ago, four German soldiers were killed and another 29 injured,
many seriously, in an attack on German troops in Kabul.
At present, Germany has around 2,000 troops stationed in Afghanistan
and up until now has limited its intervention to the capital city
of Kabul. The decision by the so-called security cabinet
of the German chancellery to expand the German military presence
in Afghanistan means that the German army will, at least indirectly,
become part of Operation Warrior Sweepthe name
given to the military offensive by the US army to repulse Afghan
resistance. German relief of the US army in the north of the country
is aimed at allowing US troops to intensify their military offensive
in the south. At the same time, German reinforcements in Afghanistan
enable the US to free up troops for its war in Iraq.
At the end of last week, however, both German Chancellor Gerhard
Schröder (SPDGerman Social Democratic Party) and Foreign
Minister Joschka Fischer (Green Party) sought to play down this
connection. Both men emphasised the civilian character of the
German intervention, declaring that the purpose of the mission
in the north was to set up civilian assistance in Konduz for the
reconstruction of roads, schools and hospitals, as well as to
train police. The job of the German army, they said, would be
to protect civilian aid workers. In this connection, the German
chancellor referred to a reconstruction dividend which
had to make itself felt for the people of Afghanistan.
This was the only way to prepare and ensure the success of elections
planned for Afghanistan next year.
The chancellors propaganda, however, cannot conceal the
real aim of German military expansion. When asked at a press conference
if the German mission was aimed at helping free up American troops
in the troubled regions of eastern and southern Afghanistan to
fight in Iraq, the chancellor responded that one can answer
this with no. Schröder went on to add that there could
be no doubt that US troops will remain active in the country.
According to journalists for the newspaper Tagesspiegel,
the chancellors defensive assertion that US troops would
remain in Afghanistan was an indication that the German government
does in fact see a very close connection between efforts to establish
stability in both Afghanistan and Iraq.
There has been some speculation in German newspapers about
an agreement between Berlin and Washington to increase German
military involvement in Afghanistan to relieve US troops. In return
the US would take into account German interests in Iraq. This,
however, has not been officially confirmed. What is clear is that
the government of Schröder and Fischer is doing everything
it can by way of offering support to the Bush administration,
which urgently needs assistance following a series of setbacks
in both Iraq and Afghanistan. At the same time, the German government
is using the situation to put pressure on Washington and is seeking
a new UN resolution to break the US monopoly in Iraq.
Remarks by the American president two weeks ago praising the
great work of the German army in Afghanistan were
greeted with considerable satisfaction in Berlin. The German chancellery
and foreign office also welcomed similar comments made just a
few days ago by the head of the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
Richard Lugar. Following these comments, Schröder pushed
ahead with his plans. He instructed the German defence minister
to prepare plans for an expanded intervention in Afghanistan and
instead of waiting for the scheduled meeting of the German cabinet,
drummed together his security cabinet to make public
the intention to increase German military presence.
In fact, the security cabinet is a non-elected
body called together by the chancellor when necessary in
light of the security or political situation (German government
homepage). In addition to the chancellor and the interior and
foreign ministers, leading military figures can also be invited
to attend the meetings of the cabinet. On this occasion, the meeting
was attended by the German minister for economic collaboration
and development, Wieczorek-Zeul, who afterwards travelled on to
Afghanistan. The speed of the entire operation testifies to Schröders
readiness to demonstrate his collaboration with Washington and
improve his bargaining position prior to a likely personal discussion
with the American president at the end of September at a scheduled
United Nations gathering.
The German front in Konduz
The northern province in Afghanistan selected for the intervention
of the German army plays an important role in the continuing war.
The region, which is dominated by Pashtun tribesmen and surrounded
by Tadchiki and Uzbek militias, is known to be a hiding place
for Taliban fighters. The final unequal battle between the US
military and the Taliban took place in Konduz at the end of November
2001. After the battle of Konduz, American troops occupied the
fortress of Qala-i-Janghi, killing hundreds of Taliban in the
process.
According to eyewitness accounts, several thousand Taliban
fightersfigures vary between 3,000 and 8,000who had
surrendered to US and allied forces supported by troops led by
local warlord General Raschid Dostum, were subsequently tortured
and killed.
Instead of taking up the issue of these war crimes and demanding
that those responsible be brought to justice, the German government
responded by supporting the American army in occupying and colonising
the country.
One and a half years after the official end of the war in Afghanistan,
all of the propaganda used to justify the invasion after the terror
attacks of September 11, 2001 has long since been disproved. Instead
of improving conditions for the people of Afghanistan, as promised,
the situation with regard to housing and food has deteriorated.
Instead of the promised democratic reforms, Afghanistan is dominated
by feuding local warlords and clan chiefs, who finance their activities
with drug dealing, prostitution and bribery.
Konduz lies at the heart of the north-south axis of the country
connecting the capital Kabul to the former republic of Tajikistana
significant route for trade. Trade between the two countries was
an important source of finances for the Northern Alliance during
its resistance to the Taliban. Today the region is mainly characterised
by opium growing. Heroin ... now under the protection of
the German army?this was the provocative question
posed by the former defence minister Willi Wimmer (CDUChristian
Democratic Union) in a letter to his current counterpart Peter
Struck (SPD), warning of the consequences of a military intervention
in Konduz.
Political power in the northern province rests in the hands
of the Afghan defence minister, Mohammed Fahim, a key figure in
the Northern Alliance whose militias were the first to press into
Konduz two years ago. On a series of important issues Fahim has
stood up to Afghan President Hamid Karzai only then to arrive
at a series of high-priced compromises.
Berlins interests in Afghanistan
The expansion of German military intervention in Afghanistan
is aimed not merely at supporting American troops and improving
Berlins standing with the Bush administration. It is also
directed at advancing Germanys own substantial interests
in the region. For some time, German foreign and military policy
has paid considerable attention to the extraordinary strategic
importance of the country lying between the Indian Ocean and Central
Asia and sharing borders with three former Soviet republicsTurkmenistan,
Uzbekistan and Tajikistanas well as Iran, Pakistan and China.
In the last century, the region had central significance for German
colonial policy.
At the beginning of the First World War, foreign ministry diplomats
sought unsuccessfully to win over Afghanistan to Germany in its
war against the British presence in India. Following the establishment
of diplomatic relations between Germany and Afghanistan in 1921,
a cultural agreement was concluded between the two countries that
led to the foundation of a German school in Kabul, the construction
of railways and the dispatch of German technicians to the country.
Close economic links towards the end of the 1920s meant that Germany
was the single most important western economic and trading partner
of Afghanistan.
In March 1933, Adolf Hitler declared his readiness to allow
favourable terms for Afghan orders to German companies and guaranteed
credits amounting to nearly 2 million reichsmarka figure
which later increased. This was followed by a 15 million mark
credit to Afghanistan for military purposes
In December 1939, the National Socialist foreign ministry drew
up a general plan for all sectors of the Afghan state and pledged
to make German officials available to the Afghan government. In
addition, German police officers undertook the reorganisation
of the Afghan police and secret intelligence services.
On February 17, 1941, the supreme commander of the German army
noted in his diary: The Fuhrer desires a detailed plan for
a deployment in Afghanistan against India to commence at the end
of Operation Barbarossa (the Nazi invasion of the Soviet
Union). A short while later, Afghanistan was the theme of a discussion
in the German general staff, and from the spring of 1941 on the
German foreign ministry intensified its preparations for a military
offensive in Afghanistan. Only defeat and the end of the war prevented
the realisation of German plans.
Following the foundation of the Federal Republic of Germany
in 1949, the German concern Siemens-Schuckert received a major
contract to complete work on the power station in Sarubi in the
east of Afghanistan. Work on the project had already commenced
before the war. In 1950, the Federal Republic awarded its first
trading credits and one year later the Afghan trade representation
was founded in Munich. In 1952, a trading agreement was struck
between the two countries.
Between 1962 and 1967, Bonn increased its financial support
for Afghanistan in order to win the country to the western alliance
in the course of the Cold War. Germany made available credits
and loans of 260 million marks. The Afghan head of government
at the time, Yussuf, even contemplated an association between
his country and the European Economic Community (EEC).
The close economic collaboration was disrupted by the Soviet
invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979, but economic and political
relations were again intensified following the capture of Kabul
by the Taliban in September 1996. At the end of 1998, it was announced
that Siemens had been in discussion with the Taliban leadership
for some time regarding the installation of a new telephone system.
The representative of the Taliban in Germany, Nek Muhammad Nekmal,
declared that Siemens and the major German chemical concern Hoechst
had informed him of their considerable interest in close economic
collaboration.
As a consequence, an international consortium was established
under German directionthe Afghanistan Development Co. The
consortium then sent experts to the region south of Kabul to explore
for copper and other mineral deposits. In 1998, with the approval
of the German government, the Taliban was able to open up a so-called
diplomatic representation in Frankfurt am Main, which issued visas,
passports and also spied on the activities of opponents of the
regime.
Upon taking power in 1998, the current SPD-Green Party government
continued the policy of its conservative predecessor and, according
to the television news magazine ARD-Weltspiegel, secret
talks took place two years ago in the summer of 2001 between government
officials and representatives of the Taliban government. This
information was made public by the journalist Matin Baraki, who
has also written a book on German-Afghan relations (Die Beziehungen
zwischen Afghanistan und der Bundesrepublik Deutschland 1945-1978,
Frankfurt/M. 1996).
The expansion of German military operations to Konduz is directly
bound up with German business interests and is part of a neo-colonial
policy being pursued by Chancellor Schröder and Foreign Minister
Fischer under the guise of humanitarian assistance. Irrespective
of their previous criticism of the US-led war against Iraq, they
are prepared to recklessly plunge into a military adventure when
it serves the political and economic interests of German big business.
See Also:
Chancellor Schröder moves
toward a German military mission in Iraq
[22 August 2003]
The mountain troops and
their victims
How the German army celebrates its past
[2 July 2003]
Four German soldiers killed
in Kabul attack
Victims of Social Democratic/Green government policies
[19 June 2003]
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