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A handshake and a cowardly speech
German Chancellor Schröder rushes to the aid of Bush
By Ulrich Rippert
27 September 2003
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Iraqi resistance to the US occupation of their country is growing
daily. The reasons given by the US and Britain for going to war
have been exposed as outright lies; and the Bush government is
facing its worst crisis since coming to office three years ago.
Under these conditions, German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder
used his attendance at the United Nations General Assemblys
annual debate in New York to demonstratively back the American
president.
In a 40-minute personal discussion with Bush, the German chancellor
repeatedly stressed that the differences of opinion between Berlin
and Washington on going to war with Iraq were a thing of the past.
Now, Schröder maintained, it was necessary to look to the
future, and his government was ready for a close and trusting
collaboration with the US.
Schröder emphasised that the German government was very
interested in the stabilisation of relations in Iraqwhich
in plain terms means German support for the military occupation
and exploitation of the country. He promised financial help and
repeated his previous offer of German aid in training Iraqi police
and military forces.
Also attending the discussions in New York were German foreign
minister Joschka Fischer and US secretary of state Colin Powell.
It was the first direct discussion between Schröder and Bush
in 16 months.
Following the meeting, Schröder gave an impassioned speech
to the UN General Assembly in which he spoke about the need for
more international collaboration and the high
value of international law. He refrained, however, from
the slightest criticism of the flagrant breach of international
law carried out by the Bush government in launching its war against
Iraq.
Schröders and Fischers behaviour in New York
has far-reaching international implications, and can only be described
as politically criminal. Having formerly warned of the disaster
that is now unravelling in Iraq, and under conditions in which
all the claims regarding weapons of mass destruction have been
revealed to be nothing less than a pack of lies, the German government
is now rushing to support Washington.
Instead of using his speech to the UN to accuse Bush, Cheney
and Rumsfeld of carrying out an illegal war of aggression, Schröder
chose to extend his hand in a demonstration of conciliation.
In doing so he is strengthening reactionary political forces
in the US and across the globe and encouraging them to undertake
further military adventures. Not only has the German chancellor
struck a blow at the oppressed Iraqi masses and the millions who
demonstrated against the war worldwide; he has also sought to
stabilise a government that is encountering growing opposition
to its policiesincluding from inside the American political
establishment itself.
At the same time, his cowardly adaptation to the Bush government
only ensures that the killings on a daily basis of Iraqi civilians
and American soldiers continue. If Schröder had said the
truth about the war policy of the American governmentthat
it is a flagrant breach of international law and a war crimehe
would have strengthened and encouraged the growing popular opposition
to the war inside America itself.
Instead, his speech to the UN assembly was full of high-sounding
generalities and evasions. He praised the UN as a community of
peoples and described its future with the words: It is the
way to a universal order based on law and human dignity by responsible
governments, and enables participation in the wealth of the world
by all of its people. One is forced to ask: How many lies
is it possible to pack into one sentence? In fact, the universal
order based on law was summarily thrown into the garbage
bin with the beginning of the Iraq war, when the Bush government
defied the most important tenets of international law.
The US administration refuses to recognise the International
Criminal Court in The Hague, precisely because it knows its own
actions are of a criminal character. And the issue of universal
human dignity begs the question: Does this apply to the
prisoners in Guantanamo Bay, who are held without charges under
concentration-camp-like conditions? Does it also apply to the
refugees and asylum-seekers currently detained in German prisons
while awaiting deportation?
The fact that the US government felt encouraged by this new
tone from Berlin was already clear one day earlier, when Bush
made his own speech to the UN assembly. Flying in the face of
all available evidence, he repeated his claims of a threat of
weapons of mass destruction in relation to Iraq and defended his
occupation of the country as a means as guaranteeing freedom and
democracy.
With their actions at the UN General Assembly, Schröder
and Fischer made patently clear that their initial rejection of
the Iraq war was never of a principled character. Their starting
point was the immediate economic and political interests of the
German bourgeoisie. In the 1980s, Germany and France had become
Iraqs most important trading partners, and business organisations
in both countries had urged both the German and French governments
to do all they could to prevent the US from undertaking its latest
war against Iraq. Having proven unable to prevent the war, however,
the same interests are now demanding that the US not be allowed
to take over as the hegemonic power in Iraq and the region.
In particular, German and French big business are seeking to
ensure that the privatisation of the major Iraqi factories planned
by the US occupation authorities should not take place without
them playing a role and having a share in the proceeds. In addition,
they fear the repercussions on their own oil-dependent economies
as Washington secures its stranglehold over Iraqi oil and gas
reserves.
Behind the debates and discussions on the formulation of a
new United Nations resolution on Iraq, including the differences
over the timetable for elections, etc., the major powers are competing
for influence in the region. All of them are prepared to undertake
the colonial exploitation of a country already devastated by war
and sanctions.
The heavy losses suffered in past months by German firms with
extensive interests in the US are an additional economic factor
in the conciliatory German stance. The multinational DaimlerChrysler
has been forced to scale back its production in the US over the
past period. With the German economy continuing to stagnate, there
is a growing chorus demanding an improvement in transatlantic
relations.
However, the fact that the German government is now prepared
to demonstratively side with Bush cannot be explained merely on
the basis of immediate economic interests. A number of important
political factors are also at work.
First, the governments in Berlin and Paris are concerned about
the threat of a complete collapse of any sort of authority in
the Middle East coupled with the prospect of popular uprisings.
They fear that the growing US terror in Iraq, which is currently
averaging a daily toll of 60 deaths of Iraqi civilians and US
soldiers, will lead to insurgency throughout the region that will
prove impossible to contain.
This was why the German government abstained in the recent
vote on a UN Security Council resolution criticising the call
by members of the Israeli government for the execution of the
elected leader of the Palestinians, Yasser Arafat. This abstention
makes a complete mockery of Schröders talk at the General
Assembly of universal human dignity. The German government demonstrated
that it is prepared to support the most brutal forms of repression
and violence to combat an uprising by the Palestinian masses.
Second, the German government is encountering increasing problems
in relation to its policies for a United Europe. The recent massive
vote in Sweden against the introduction of the European joint
currency, the euro, made clear the extent of popular opposition
to the path towards European integration undertaken by the major
European governments in alliance with big business.
In all of the leading European countries, measures undertaken
to streamline the country along American
linesthe dismantling of the welfare state, the mass introduction
of cheap labour combined with tax policies aimed at favouring
big business and the richhave met with widespread opposition.
Intent on introducing American conditions throughout
the continent, the German bourgeoisie is seeking to close ranks
with its former Atlantic partner in order to concentrate on intensifying
its attacks on social and democratic rights at home and throughout
Europe.
Third, in supporting American imperialism in the Middle East,
the SPD is following a long social democratic tradition of lining
up with the strongest imperialist power against its own working
class and oppressed nations. The appeasement and capitulation
undertaken during the first half of the 20th century by German
and other European social democratic parties to the forces of
reaction in Germany and abroad led Leon Trotsky to comment: The
most rotten part of rotten European capitalism is social democracy.
However, it would be a mistake to think that Schröders
conciliatory stance in New York will in any way appease the appetite
of American imperialism and the Bush administration. Nor will
it serve to repair the rifts in the transatlantic alliance. As
he made clear in his own UN speech, Bush remains determined to
exclude the UN and its constituent nations from any meaningful
role in Iraq.
In addition, the derogatory comments made by Bush about France
in the course of his attendance at the General Assembly, together
with his rather more favourable treatment of Schröder, demonstrate
the readiness of the US administration to play off one major European
power against another. Despite the German governments strenuous
efforts to present a public image of harmony and conciliation
in New York, this years General Assembly debate made clear
that differences inside the UN are rapidly reaching the breaking
point.
See Also:
Bush at the UN--a war criminal takes
the podium
[24 September 2003]
Chancellor Schröder moves
toward a German military mission in Iraq
[22 August 2003]
Berlin meeting on Iraq war:
A turning point in international politics
[9 June 2003]
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