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German Chancellor Merkel covers up for illegal CIA practices
By Peter Schwarz
9 December 2005
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The German-American partnership is based on common democratic
convictions and values, and on the basis of these values
Germany and the US are seeking to master together the new
challenges and threats of the twenty-first century. These
were the words used by German Chancellor Angela Merkel (Christian
Democratic Union, CDU) as she welcomed US Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice on Tuesday during the latters stopover in Berlin. The
words used say a great deal about Merkel and the character of
the government she leads.
What are the values to which Merkel refers?
In the days preceding Rices arrival, the German and international
headlines were dominated by reports on the illegal activities
of the American intelligence service, the CIA. A series of new
details emerged over illegal arrests, kidnappings, renditions
and torture. The Berliner Zeitung summed up the
role of the American government in a comment: No other US
government has ever carved such a path of destruction through
international lawthe illegal war of aggression becomes the
legitimate means, statements extorted by torture the legal norm....
But on these issues Merkel had nothing to say. Instead, she
publicly welcomed the assurance by Secretary of State Rice that
the US acted in accordance with its international obligations
and abided by national and international law in its fight against
terrorisman assertion that completely defies reality.
One week previously, in her initial government statement, Merkel
said that she expected the US government to confirm whether reports
over secret prisons and prisoner transportation via European air
space were true. On Tuesday, the whole issue was forgotten.
For her part, Rice refused to give any concrete response, even
though she had assured the German foreign minister, Frank Walter
Steinmeier, during his recent visit to Washington that she would
clear up the issue. In ritual fashion, Rice merely repeated again
and again that the war against terror was being carried out in
accordance with American and international lawswithout ever
addressing a concrete question.
Merkels comment at their joint press conferenceWe
spoke about one case which was acknowledged by the government
of the United States to be an errordrew an angry response
from Rices staff. We are not exactly clear what the
chancellor was thinking of, one Rice staffer commented to
a Reuters correspondent during their subsequent flight to Romania.
Merkel was alluding to the case of the German citizen of Lebanese
origin, Khalid al-Masri, who had been seized by the CIA during
a vacation to Macedonia, abducted to Afghanistan and abused over
a period of five months. Al-Masri has lodged charges against his
kidnapping in a US court. Although his abduction is thoroughly
documented, Rice was not even prepared to concede an error in
this case.
Instead, she defended the practice of the illegal abduction,
declaring on a German news program: The attitude of the
US is that renditions are a legal practice to pick
up terrorists from the streets. Rendition is
the term used to describe the secret arrest of terror suspects
and their transfer to countries where they can be tortured.
In her government statement last week, Angela Merkel, who grew
up in the former East Germany (GDR), described the coming down
of the Berlin wall as the biggest surprise of my life
and a gift of freedom. She then went on to expressly
praise the virtues of democracy. Her friendly reception for Rice
shows the real meaning of her words one week ago. Although the
illegal machinations of the CIA overshadow in many respects the
crimes committed by the East German security police, Merkel has
either remained silent or covers up for such crimes.
This is not an issue of diplomatic protocol. In other cases,
far lesser offences would be sufficient to demand to see the ambassador
of a country and write a sharply worded note of protest. Merkels
behaviour shows what can be expected from her government when
it comes to adhering to democratic rights. The principal reason
for her silence arises from the fact that both the new and former
German governments were thoroughly informed on the illegal practices
and operated as accomplices.
To forestall European criticism prior to Rices trip,
the Bush administration made certain facts public. Thus, the Washington
Post published a report on the case of al-Masri, which makes
clear that the German interior minister at that time, Otto Schily
(Social Democratic Party, SPD), had been promptly informed by
the American ambassador about the case. It is alleged that a member
of the German intelligence forces was even involved in the interrogation
of al-Masri in Afghanistan.
The case of al-Masri, however, is only the tip of the iceberg.
According to the Neuer Zürcher Zeitung, the German
Intelligence Service (BND) regularly receives abbreviated protocols
of such interrogations from the CIA. For the German Intelligence
Service and other Western security agencies, the statements of
prisoners held by the CIA are among the most important sources
of information on the activities of Islamic dissidents. Berlin
thus profited from the anti-terror strategy of the US and is at
the same time indignant about the methods used, concludes
the NZZ.
The case of al-Masri shows the full extent of the complicity
of the German government. Although it concerns a German citizen,
the government did nothing to protect him or clarify his situation.
The Munich public prosecutors office, which is conducting
investigations against unknown persons involved in
the al-Masri kidnapping, has been groping in the dark for months,
although the relevant government agencies in Berlin were long
aware of the relevant facts.
Through its actions, the German government has made itself
liable to prosecution. The Süddeutsche Zeitung refers
to an abyss...because the facts are mounting in a manner
which one does not want to associate with a German government:
for example, torture, grievous bodily harm, committed by omission.
Or obstructing justice in office, because the clarification and
pursuit of a major criminal offence, i.e., kidnapping of a German
citizen, was prevented or at least obstructed while the relevant
public prosecutors office was being led by the nose.
In the meantime, the issue of al-Masri has assumed such proportions
that Merkel felt obliged to respond. She promised that Foreign
Minister Steinmeier will make a statement to the parliamentary
control committee (PKG) of the Bundestag. Steinmeier has since
admitted that he had already been informed in the summer of 2004
of the kidnapping by al-Masris lawyer. He probably knows
much more. As head of the chancellery of former chancellor Gerhard
Schröder, he maintained contact with the intelligence services
and coordinated the work of all ministriesand was therefore
informed about all important incidents.
Any statement made to the PKG, however, is aimed at covering
up, not clearing up. The committee meets secretly, and its members
are pledged to strict silence. It has not even been elected by
the incoming Bundestag because the conservative union parties
want to prevent a former High Court judge, Wolfgang Neskovic,
who supports the Left Party, from participating in the PKG.
In the meantime, however, there are increasing calls for a
public parliamentary committee of inquiry. The head of the neo-liberal
Free Democratic Party (FDP), Guido Westerwellea party that
held the leading posts in the foreign ministry and intelligence
services for a long period and is not known for its transparencyhas
described the abduction of al-Masri as a crime by a foreign
secret service that had to be cleared up in the eyes
of the public.
As a result, Foreign Minister Steinmeier could become the first
member of the new government to be swept into the vortex of a
public scandal. There is a certain irony in such a development.
Steinmeier is a close trusted friend of former Chancellor Schröder
and is regarded as the architect of the SPD-Green governments
Iraq policy, which at the time led to violent conflicts with Washington.
His appointment as foreign minister, which came about following
pressure from Schröder, was seen as a guarantee that the
Merkel government would not snuggle up too close to Washington.
If he should now fall over the CIA scandal, this would presumably
lead to closer relations between Washington and Berlin.
At this point, it seems unlikely that Steinmeier will lose
his post. Nevertheless, the recent exposures have made one thing
clear: the extent of involvement by the SPD-Green government in
the illegal practices of the Bush administration. The latest revelations
confirm that the Schröder governments rejection of
the Iraq war had nothing to do with legal or moral scruples, but
was entirely bound up with the interests of German imperialism,
which follows its own interests in the Middle East and Iraq.
See Also:
Bush, Rice defend US abductions, torture,
secret prisons
[7 December 2005]
Rice defends illegal renditions,
threatens to reveal European complicity
[6 December 2005]
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