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German Chancellor Schröder comes to the aid of Bush
By Ulrich Rippert
4 March 2004
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For the first time in two years, German Chancellor Gerhard
Schröder was received last weekend at the White House. Following
a one-hour talk, he was invited to a joint luncheon with President
Bush. Interviewed by the press, he stressed that the president
and he had resolved to settle past differences in order to focus
on the present situation and the future.
In reply to a question by the Washington Post, Is
the war between you and President Bush over? Schröder
said, We never had a war. What we had was a difference of
opinion... As far as Iraq is concerned, both of us are interested
in seeing a stable and democratic Iraq.
In the same interview, Schröder emphasized that Germany
was already actively supporting the occupation of Iraq on a number
of fronts. First, we contribute to the reconstruction of
the country by investing in infrastructure and restoring its water
supply. In March, we will begin to train Iraqi police officers
in the United Arab Emirates with Japan and France.
In addition, Schröder pointed to the strong German engagement
in Afghanistan, which the US president had expressly acknowledged.
The two leaders had agreed, moreover, on the need for some
international burden sharing in relation to Iraq and Afghanistan.
He was, Schroeder said, very satisfied with his visit.
German commentators, who all use virtually identical, standardized
formulations about the end of the transatlantic ice age
and the return to normality in German-American relations,
miss the real content of Schröders servile pilgrimage
to Washington. Eight months before the US presidential elections,
the conduct of the German chancellor amounts to active support
for the re-election campaign of a government representing the
most reactionary and even criminal elements within American politics.
Why? It would have been entirely possible for Schröder
to tell Bush, Rumsfeld and Co. some unpleasant truths. The reasons
they gave to justify their attack on Iraq one year ago have all
been exposed as intelligence fabrications or outright lies. Iraq
did not possess any weapons of mass destruction and posed no military
threat. There has never been a trace of evidence that Baghdad
gave support to Al Qaeda. It was only during and after the war
that Al Qaeda fighters were able to cross the border into Iraq
and assist Islamic fundamentalist elements there.
Democracy and prosperity, which the bombs and tanks were supposed
to bring to Iraq, are today further away than ever before. The
countrys infrastructure has been all but destroyed, and
the main purpose of the reconstruction program is to generate
fabulous profits for American and British firms.
In addition, there was the US presidents outrageous intervention
into German domestic politics during the last national elections,
in the autumn of 2002. Bush openly promoted the extreme right
wing of the conservative Christian Democrats, led by Roland Koch,
while violating the most elementary conventions of international
diplomacy in his conduct toward Schröder, the chancellor
and leader of the Social Democrats.
So Schröder did have some cards up his sleeve when he
arrived in Washington. It would have been entirely possible for
him to make clear that he regarded Bush as a lame duck
president and was expecting a regime change in Washington.
Instead, Schröder decided to lick the boots that had kicked
him.
In politics, character and personality play a not insignificant
role. Gerhard Schröder and his foreign minister, Joschka
Fischer of the Green Party, belong to that section of their generation
that never had to conduct a serious fight for anything, never
stood up for principles or political convictions, and always followed
the line of least resistance. In all areas of politics, they observe
the motto: Crawl before the bigwigs and bully the underlings.
However, certain political and social developments have the
effect of intensifying this organic inclination towards opportunism.
The Iraq war was such a development. The original opposition of
the German government to military intervention in Iraq was not
based on considerations of principle, such as a rejection of neo-colonial
conquest or defence of Iraqs right to sovereignty. Quite
the opposite: the governments in Berlin and Paris feared for their
own economic interests, which they had fostered in Iraq, with
its rich natural resources, over the preceding years. Their rejection
of the war was half-hearted from the very beginning. At no point
did the German government even consider blocking American military
bases in Germany or denying US war planes the use of German airspace.
When it became clear that the Bush administration would be
deterred neither by UN resolutions nor by diplomatic manoeuvres,
and that the US government was prepared to ride roughshod over
international law and international institutions, European politics
was thrown into crisis. Neither Paris nor Berlin was prepared,
or was in a position, to confront Washingtons aggression.
On the other hand, they could not allow themselves to be reduced
to the role of Americas vassals. This dilemma intensified
when the Bush administration began to actively intervene into
European politics, organizing its allies and isolating its critics.
The effects of the Iraq war on European politics were much
deeper than might be thought at first glance. In the period following
World War II, the economic and political unification of Europe
was, for a long time and to a high degree, an American project,
aimed at creating a strong bulwark against the Soviet Union in
the context of the cold war. Under these conditions, the process
of European integration was bound up with a policy of social balance
and reforms. Social and regional antagonisms were, to a certain
degree, ameliorated by numerous structural arrangements and regional
funds of the European Community.
The end of the Soviet Union, and the trans-Atlantic tensions
that have been intensifying ever since, fundamentally changed
the situation in Europe. Under the mounting pressure of the US,
the old, unresolved conflicts and rivalries between the European
powers are beginning to re-emerge, at the same time that social
tensions are growing.
At his first stop, Schröder, speaking before businessmen
in Chicago, warned of any further intensification of conflicts
over trade and monetary policy. One day later, European economic
sanctions went into effect that are to be tightened every month
if the American government does not intervene to halt tax loopholes
for US firms that contradict international regulations. There
are many indications that in economic and trade policy, too, the
Bush administration is renouncing international collaboration
and is leaning towards protectionism.
All European governments, including the German, react to this
economic and political pressure by intensifying their attacks
on the social and democratic rights of their own populations.
This is the key to understanding the reasons for Schröders
grovelling before Bush.
Foreign policy cannot be separated from domestic policy. Even
last year, at the height of the conflict between Berlin and Washington,
Schröder was careful not to identify too closely with the
powerful protests and mass demonstrations against the Iraq war.
Meanwhile, the German government, in line with most of its European
counterparts, has declared a virtual war on its own population.
All areas of social policy are ravaged by cuts unprecedented since
the 1930s. At the same time, large corporations and the wealthy
elite are granted one tax cut after another.
Under these conditions, the most reactionary and corrupt elements
are expanding their influence in European politics. In those countries
where the Social Democrats still hold power, they pave the way
for these forces and collaborate with them whenever possible.
This is the message sent by Schröder from the US capital.
Nothing would be more misleading than the notion that Schröders
handshake in the oval office meant a return to trans-Atlantic
stability. Rather, the Bush administration will be strengthened
by his support, and will be encouraged to launch new, unexpected
attacks. It would not be the first time that a bootlicker was
rewarded with a kick in the teeth.
See Also:
Paris and Berlin consider
military intervention in Iraq
[28 January 2004]
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