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German Chancellor Merkels state visit to Poland: you
scratch my back, Ill scratch yours
By Marius Heuser
13 December 2005
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After making appearances in Paris, London and Brussels, German
Chancellor Angela Merkel went on to pay her first official visit
to the Polish capital of Warsaw on December 2. Owing
to persistent tensions between Berlin and Warsaw in recent years,
the visit aroused considerable interest.
Since the Warsaw government declared its open support for the
war in Iraq and supplemented the US occupation with its own troops,
Poland has become the flagship of the pro-American new Europe
and consequently the leading opponent of the German-French-dominated
old Europe. The strategic partnership
with Moscow, energetically promoted by Merkels predecessor
Gerhard Schröder, aroused distrust in Warsaw and resurrected
longstanding historical tensions between the two nations. Poland
protested fiercely against the construction of a Baltic Sea pipeline
finally agreed upon early this year. The project was designed
to bypass Poland, linking Germany directly to the Russian natural
gas network. The pipeline has been seen as an attempt to cut Poland
off from energy supplies from Russia. At the very least, it would
give Russia political leverage over Poland.
Merkel has repeatedly announced that she wants to improve relations
with the US. At the same time, however, she has expressly used
her inaugural speech to promote a strategic partnership with Russia,
firmly insisting she will not yield to Polish objections to the
construction of the Baltic Sea pipeline.
During the Polish parliamentary and presidential elections
in early autumn, the extreme nationalist law-and-order party,
Law and Justice (PiS)which went on to gain victories in
both pollsadopted a tough anti-German and anti-Russian line.
Previously, in 2003, the recently elected President Lech Kaczynski
had backed the slogan Nice [referring to the EU agreement
worked out in the French city] or death, and Poland allowed
the European Union (EU) referendum negotiations to collapse. As
mayor of Warsaw, he had demanded Germany pay reparationtendering
specific cost estimatesfor the capitals destruction
in the Second World War. He also expressed his opposition to Polish
participation in formal observances in Moscow marking the 60th
anniversary of the end of the war, claiming that the Red Army
had occupied rather than liberated Poland. In the election campaign,
he characterised Russia and Germany as the main threats to Poland.
During Merkels visit to Warsaw, there were no longer
any signs of such tensions. The mood surrounding the meeting between
Merkel and her Polish counterpart, Kazimierz Marcinkiewicza
member of the PiS and trusted associate of Kaczynskiwas
extremely relaxed. She declared that Poland and Germany must find
their way back to a trusting cooperation. It was most necessary
for us to pay Poland a visit very soon after the formation of
the new government because we want to continue our friendly relations
and because we naturally want to improve them, she said.
For his part, the Polish prime minister spoke of how the hour-long
meeting had opened up a new chapter in bilateral relations between
the two countries. The lady chancellors visit to Warsaw
has been very successful, he claimed, later adding, We
agreed that it was necessary to increase dialogue in relation
to economic issues in order to accelerate growth in both countries.
Merkels talks with President Lech Kaczynski also took a
generally conciliatory course.
Merkel assured Marcinkiewicz that she would support Poland
in its dispute with Britain over the EU budget. Moreover, she
promised to establish a working group to oversee construction
of the controversial Baltic Sea pipeline and ensure that countries
like Poland could also benefit from the project.
The friendly climate surrounding the meeting between the two
government leaders, however, failed to conceal underlying tensions.
It also cast a revealing light on the new governments in Poland
and Germany.
Despite all of its nationalistic demagogy, the Polish government
wants to avoid spoiling relations with Berlin and Brussels. Not
least among its reasons for this strategy is that Polandalready
set to become the greatest net receiver of Brussels EU fundsneeds
Germanys support in future wranglings over the EU budget.
Germany is the greatest net contributor and has until now opposed
British efforts to reduce financing for the new EU members states
in eastern Europe.
Both the previous Polish government under the post-Stalinist
Democratic Left Alliance (SDL) and the present one led by the
PiS have pushed for Polands integration into the EU and
the world market. The PiSs fanning of Polish nationalism
is strictly for domestic consumption. It is not directed against
the dominance of German, European and international companies
and banks over the Polish economy and society. Instead, it is
used to channel discontent about the devastating social consequences
of this hegemony into reactionary channels and to divide Polish
workers from their fellow labourers in Germany and Russia. This
nationalism enjoys the official blessing of the Catholic Church
and extends to all aspects of Polands backwardness: anti-Semitism,
homophobia and intolerance.
Questioned at a joint press conference with Merkel about his
anti-German tirades in the election campaign, Marcinkiewiczwho
studied at university with a German scholarshipsimply denied
ever having made them.
For her part, Merkel is well aware of the symbolical meaning
of these nationalistic tirades. Nevertheless, she avoided any
criticism of the reactionary character of the Polish government,
which bases itself on extreme right-wing and transparently anti-Semitic
forces.
After a record 60 percent abstention rate in the parliamentary
elections, the PiS received just 27 percent of the ballots cast,
thereby coming to power with the support of a mere sixth of those
entitled to vote. It went on to form a minority government, supported
in the Sejm (Polish parliament) by the right-wing populist rural
party Samoobrona (Self-Defence) and the clerical-nationalist League
of the Polish Family (LPR). The LPR emanates from the ultra-right-wing
Radio Maryja and has become the focal point for extremism in Poland.
It demands the integration of the Catholic Church into the Polish
state and regards Russians and Germans on the same level as Jews,
homosexuals and blacks as enemies of such a state. Fascist organisations
like All-Polish Youth (Mlodziez Wszechpolska) are active along
lines similar to those of the LPR.
The PiS also defends extreme right-wing viewseven compared
to the politics of other conservative parties in Europe. It had
its origins in the right wing of the Election Movement-Solidarity
(AWS) that formed the government from 1997 to 2001. It aims to
establish an authoritarian state and promotes reintroduction of
the death penalty. During the election campaign, designated President
Lech Kaczynski and his identical twin brother and chairman of
the PiS, Jaruslav Kaczynski, heralded the arrival of a Fourth
Republic that would finally overcome communism. Lech
showed what they mean by this when, as mayor of Warsaw, he banned
a demonstration by homosexuals and criticised the police for protecting
the demonstrators from attacks by neo-Nazis.
The fact that the PiS is now following a course similar to
that of the LPR is a clear sign of the advancing destruction of
democratic rights. The less support Polands elite receives
from the population, the more aggressive and authoritarian its
rule becomes. Fifteen years after the so-called democratic
revolution, democracy has sunk to the level epitomised by
the LPR. The new government also recently announced its intention
of establishing an anti-terror authority to centralise and coordinate
the fight against terrorismwhich will entail
a further dismantling of democratic rights, as in the US, Britain
and Germany.
When Austrias Christian Democrats invited Jörg Haiders
ultra-right Freedom Party (FP) to join the government at the beginning
of 2000, there was still international protest. The 14 members
of the EU at the time suspended bilateral relations with Austria,
and Nicole Fontaine, president of the European parliament, declared
that the European community should manifestly dissociate itself
from the insulting, xenophobic and racist remarks of Jörg
Haider. Of course, such statements are not to be taken seriously
in view of the EUs own hostile policies towards foreigners,
and the sanctions were largely symbolic. Nonetheless, they did
express a degree of concern within the European political elite
that the participation of the Freedom Party in the Austrian government
could lead to political destabilisation.
Scarcely six years later, Poland is being ruled by a party
that far exceeds Haiders FP in its right-wing demagogy and
its authoritarian ideology. It is a party that bases itself on
forces even further to the right, and one whose dismal election
results render it devoid of democratic legitimacy. Nevertheless,
not a single European government has protested against it.
That Angela Merkel, like her European colleagues, completely
ignores these facts says a lot about the state of European politics.
Because social tensions are increasing at an alarming rate in
every European country, Haiders methods have become acceptable
everywhere. French Interior Minister Sarkozy calls rebellious
young people in the suburbs scum and rabble,
while former German Trade and Economics Minister Clement refers
to the unemployed as parasites. Basic democratic rights
are being demolished by the new anti-terror laws in Britain, while
a state of emergency is being enforced for three months in France.
Merkel herself has only become chancellor through a political
conspiracy in which the highest organs of state disregarded the
provisions of Germanys constitution.
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