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Munich Security Conference
Schröder demands role for Germany as world power
By Peter Schwarz
18 February 2005
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From a formal point of view, the 41st Munich Security Conference
was characterised by conciliatory gestures, but increasing transatlantic
tensions nevertheless made themselves felt at the assembly held
last weekend in the Bavarian capital.
For military and defence officials and experts, the Munich
Security Conference plays a role similar to that played by the
Davos World Economic Forum for economists and politicians. It
is a gathering at which high-ranking politicians and advisors
engage in informal discussions, in the course of which the debate
occasionally exceeds the strict framework dictated by diplomatic
protocol. It was at the Security Conference two years ago, for
example, that US Secretary of Defence Donald Rumsfeld made his
provocative remarks about old and new
Europe.
High-ranking delegations from both sides of the Atlantic were
in attendance at this years conference. Speakers included
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan, Rumsfeld, US senators
Hillary Clinton and John McCain, NATO Secretary-General Jaap de
Hoop Scheffer, European Union foreign policy head Javier Solana,
and, from Germany, Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer and Defence
Minister Peter Struck. The leader of the German opposition party
CDU (Christian Democratic Union), Angela Merkel, also took part.
Two weeks before the planned trip to Europe by US President
Bush, the American delegation strove to continue Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rices recent charm offensiveadopting
a friendly conversational tone and offering mutual consultation,
but making no concessions in terms of actual US policy. There
was never so much superficial harmony at a security conference,
was the comment from the Suddeutsche Zeitung.
This was also expressed in the external form of the conference.
The military and political top brass assembled under the slogan
peace through dialogue, and the Bavarian prime minister,
Edmund Stoiber, welcomed delegates as participants in the Munich
peace conference.
German President Horst Köhler, who as a former head of
the International Monetary Fund bears a major responsibility for
worsening poverty in so-called developing countries, opened the
conference by lecturing delegates about the benefits of development
aid. Kofi Annan reacted to increasing pressure from Washington
by advocating zero tolerance against terrorism and
the employment of force, and was rewarded for his
efforts with a peace medal created specifically for
the occasion.
When questioned by a French journalist on his distinction between
old and new Europe, Rumsfeld grinned amiably
and declared: That was old Rumsfeld.
These attempts to create a harmonious atmosphere could not,
however, disguise the fact that transatlantic and, in particular,
German-American tensions, which emerged during the Iraq War, continue
unabated. This became particularly clear in regard to two questions:
continuing differences over Iranthe handling of Iran
has become the transatlantic acid test, Angela Merkel
declaredand the open demand by Chancellor Gerhard Schröder
that Germany be allowed to exercise increased power and influence
in global affairs.
Schröders speech
On the eve of the conference, Schröders speech was
leaked to the Suddeutsche Zeitung, which made
it the basis for its editorials on Saturday. As it turned out,
Schröder was unable to personally deliver his speech due
to illness, and it was read out by Defence Secretary Struck.
Schröder openly criticised the United States. The criticism
was not directed, however, at US actions in Iraq. Schröder
said nothing about the lies used as a basis for the war, nor did
he mention the US doctrine of preventive war. He also refrained
from raising the treatment of prisoners in Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo,
which contravenes international law. He praised the Iraqi elections,
organised under the military repression of the occupation forces,
as an important step on the way to setting up democratic
political structures.
Schröders criticism, which was interpreted by many
participants as reflecting doubts about the role of NATO, was
exclusively aimed at Washingtons failure to sufficiently
take into account German and European interests.
The principle remains, said Schröder, that
close transatlantic ties are in German, European and American
interests. But the application of this principle in practical
policy cannot use the past as a point of reference, as has so
often been the case in transatlantic oaths of loyalty.... In recent
years there have been misunderstandings, burdens, distrust, even
tensions across the Atlantic. These emerged, he said, because
the adjustment to a changed reality has not yet sufficiently
been carried out.
He described this changed reality as follows: Europe no longer
needs to fear a military attack on its borders. Therefore,
the military presence of American troops does not have the priority
for security of earlier times. The strategic challenges
lie today beyond the old mutual assistance zone of the North
Atlantic Treaty. In the form of China and India, two
new world powers are developing, whose weight will shape not only
their own regions, but world politics as a whole. And the
enemies are no longer non-functioning states with a defined
territory, but the new global risks.
As a result, according to Schröder, the relationship between
the United States and Germany has changed. The role of America
in the world has changed in recent years, but, in addition, my
country has also changed its understanding of its international
role. Germany regards itself as jointly responsible
for international stability and order in the European Union,
and demonstrates this responsibility by active commitment
in numerous crisis regions of the world.
This was followed by the demand for a permanent seat for Germany
on the UN Security Councila demand that has been forcefully
pursued by the government for some time. From joint responsibility
follows the right to a share in decision-making, said Schröder.
Our desire to see Germany as a permanent member of the security
council of the UN arises from the necessity to legitimise this
connection.
The transatlantic partnership, Schröder continued, has
thus far inadequately considered such changes. NATO is no longer
the primary place where transatlantic partners consult and
coordinate their strategic conceptions. The dialogue between
the European Union and the United States corresponds in
its current form neither to the increasing weight of the European
Union, nor to the new requirements of transatlantic cooperation.
He called for the establishment of an independent commission to
make suggestions for a fundamental reform of transatlantic ties.
Never in the post-war period has a German chancellor so forcefully
demanded from the United States that Germany no longer be treated
as a junior partner, but instead be accorded equal power. Schröders
remark that the structure of transatlantic relations should no
longer consider the past as point of reference is significant
in this regard.
Past relations were shaped by the result of the Second World
War. Emerging as the victorious power, the US played the dominant
role in the transatlantic alliancea role that was neither
seriously questioned nor challenged. Schröder is no longer
prepared to accept such a role. This is what he means by an adjustment
to a changed reality.
Under conditions in which the US openly asserts itself as an
imperial power, Schröder demands the right to sit as an equal
at the table of the imperialists.
Schröders message was understood in Munich and provoked
considerable opposition. In particular, NATO Secretary-General
Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, a Dutchman, abruptly rejected Schröders
demands for a reform of transatlantic institutions. NATO
grows, prospers and flourishes, read his answer to Schröders
criticism.
Rumsfeld stated a similar position. NATO, the best alliance
in the history of mankind, is in excellent condition, he
said. At the same time, he reiterated the American line that the
tasks must determine the coalition, and not the coalition the
tasks. Rumsfeld and Bush used this formula to justify the unilateral
actions of a coalition of the willing against Iraq
in the face of substantial reservations inside NATO and the UN.
On Sunday, the German government tried to dampen somewhat the
hubbub caused by Schröders speech. Foreign Minister
Fischer said Schröders remark that NATO was no
longer the primary place where transatlantic partners consult
and coordinate their strategic conceptions was not meant
to suggest a break with NATO. It was, rather, a critical description
of conditions that need to be changed.
Then Fischer enumerated the contentious points that had to
be debated in relation to the future role of NATO before a new
strategic consensus could be formed: the death penalty,
the international criminal court, and the Kyoto protocolall
questions at which America and Europe are at loggerheads.
While Schröders initiative was met by many commentators
with irritation and criticism, there was also open agreement.
Thus, the conservative French newspaper Le Figaro wrote:
The idea is good, interesting and deserved a better reception....
But the meeting in Munich will probably go down as a missed opportunity
because US Defence Secretary Rumsfeld is still convinced of his
favourite idea that the intervention determines the alliance,
rather than the other way round. To put it another way: when necessary,
Washington will bypass NATO and proceed as it did in Iraq with
willing partners.
The Frankfurter Rundschau also responded positively
to Schröders speech. Martin Winter wrote: Global
conditions have radically changed for Europe and America since
the end of the cold war.... Even if there is still much grinding
of the teeth on the part of the community, Washington cannot ignore
two facts: first of all, the time is past when the European Union
could prosper only under the military protection of the US. Today,
the European Union provides for its security through an increasing
network of contractual connections with its large and small neighbours
from Russia to Morocco. Secondly, collected together in the European
Union is a political, economic and military force that is of increasing
importance for overcoming problems all over the world.
Conflict over Iran
Winter identifies the key issue when he refers to economic
power. Economic conflicts between American and European capitalismaccess
to oil, gas and other raw materials, the struggle for markets
and cheap labour, the competition between the dollar and the euroare
the root source of transatlantic conflicts. They will inevitably
continue to develop and fuel military conflicts around the world.
Despite the attempts to put on a show of harmony, these conflicts
dominated the Munich conference. This was particularly clear in
relation to the sharply contrasting positions on Iran. While US
representatives, assisted by NATO Secretary-General Scheffer,
continued to threaten the country in a manner that recalled the
run-up to the Iraq war, Schröder pleaded for security guarantees
for Iran.
Contrary to all legal principles, Scheffer said Iran had to
prove it was not carrying out a nuclear weapons program. It is
not we who have to demonstrate that they are undertaking
one, he declared. The burden of proof rests
with the accused. He cynically referred to Iraq, where Saddam
Hussein had similarly been required to prove that he had no weapons
of mass destruction.
Ex-CIA director James Woolsey went a step further. He maintained
that there was not the least doubt that Iran was conducting
a nuclear weapons program.
Schröder agreed with US representatives that Iran had
to do without a nuclear weapons program, but argued for a diplomatic
approach. It is necessary to overcome the substantial isolation
of Iran, he said. Iran will in the long term refrain
from a nuclear option only if, along with its economic interests,
its legitimate security interests are protected.
See Also:
International Security
Conference in Munich exposes growing NATO tensions
[7 February 2002]
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