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German government considers deploying air force in Afghanistan
By Peter Schwarz
27 December 2006
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The German coalition government is currently preparing a major
expansion of its military commitment to the war in Afghanistan.
To this point the government has claimed that the only role of
the German army in that country would be to help with reconstruction
and assure the security of the Hamid Karzai puppet regime. To
this end the German government limited the operations of its forces
to the nations capital and the relatively calm northern
part of the country. The recent decision to send six Tornado aircraft
to Afghanistan would thrust German forces into the violent fighting
taking place in the south.
The request from NATO arrived in Berlin on December 11, but
was only made public ten days later. No official decision has
yet been announced. The Süddeutsche Zeitung assumes,
however, that Chancellor [Angela] Merkel, Foreign Minster
[Frank-Walter] Steinmeier and Defense Minister [Franz Josef] Jung
have already decided that they cannot reject the request by NATO.
Official requests of this kind, the paper says are only
made when a positive answer has been given at a working level.
The request calls for the deployment of so-called Recce Tornado
airplanes, which conduct reconnaissance and can identify small
objects from the air. The maintenance of the highly complicated
and expensive machines requires approximately 250 soldiers, who
are likely to be stationed in the south of the country.
Even if the German Tornadoes were merely sent on reconnaissance
missions and did not drop bombs, their use nevertheless constitutes
a combat mission. They would identify targets for the American
and British NATO units, which are carrying out a bloody war against
rebels in the south of Afghanistan in a war that has claimed the
lives of many innocent civilians. The Süddeutsche Zeitung
commented, Whoever conducts reconnaissance is assisting
towards successful bombardment with all the consequencesup
to and including the ominous collateral damage, which one experienced
in the Kosovo war. Spiegel Online noted, The
Germans are allowing themselves to get deeper and deeper involved
in the Afghanistan conflict, and there is no end in sight.
The current debate centers on whether such a deployment requires
a new parliamentary mandate or is covered by the existing one.
However, even if it comes to a debate and vote in the Bundestag
(German parliament) the government is assured a majority, with
support for such a mandate expected from all of the grand
coalition partiesthe Christian Democratic Union (CDU),
Christian Social Union (CSU) and the Social Democratic Party (SPD).
Gernot Erler (SPD), a state minister in the Foreign Office,
told the radio station Deutschlandfunk that in his opinion there
existed fundamental readiness to make forces available for
such a reconnaissance function. The CDU defense expert Bernd
Siebert also signaled agreement from his side.
The opposition in the Bundestag will either do nothing to obstruct
such a deployment or little to effectively stop it. The free market
Free Democratic Party (FDP) promised a careful and impartial check
of the request. The Green Party protested that the Bundestag was
being bypassed but did not take a stance on the substantive issue.
Only the Left Party has declared it is prepared to vote against
such an expansion of the Afghanistan mandate.
At the NATO summit held in Riga at the end of November, German
chancellor Merkel (together with leaders from Italy, Spain and
France) resisted pressure from America and Britain to increase
the German contingent in Afghanistan and take part in the conflicts
in the south. The Europeans intimated that the US government was
itself responsible for the increase in violence because it had
concentrated its efforts entirely on military actions, at the
expense of political measures. This reproach was repeated many
times in the European media. Now the German government is intent
on military escalation.
What is behind this change of course? The principal reason
lies with the US debacle in Iraq.
For some time the European elites hoped for a change of political
course in America along the lines suggested by the Iraq Study
Group. Various European governments and officials had some time
before established close relations with the authors of the reportRepublican
James Baker and Democrat Lee Hamiltonand initially welcomed
their study, which recommended a return to more traditional methods
of diplomacy in order to concoct some sort of solution to the
disastrous situation in Iraq. Among other proposals, the report
called for closer co-operation with European governments and attempts
to integrate the regional powers Iran and Syria into the diplomatic
process.
It is now clear that the Bush administration has tossed aside
the report and its recommendations and is intent on further military
escalationwith what many European politicians think will
be catastrophic consequences; the danger exists that the entire
region, and not just Iraq, will sink into civil war and chaos.
This would not only damage US, but also European oil and business
interests in the region. This is behind European and above all
German attempts to seize the initiative.
The German government has undertaken intensive diplomatic activity
in preparation for taking over the presidency of the European
Union on January 1. German Foreign Minister Steinmeier has been
almost constantly on the move. He recently visited Syrian President
Bashar Assad and Russian President Vladimir Putin in an attempt
to revive the so-called Middle East quartet, which comprises the
US, the European Union, Russia and the United Nations. The aim
is to put pressure on Washington to play a role in an international
solution to the Palestine conflict.
The intensified role of the German army in Afghanistan is inseparably
bound up with these political initiatives. Ultimately, Germany
and Europe can only realize their own interests in the Middle
East through their own massive military intervention.
The role of the expanded German contingent in Afghanistan serves
two purposes: to increase German influence in the region and to
apply further pressure on Washington. Berlin, according to this
calculation, accedes to Washingtons request to relieve US
forces in Afghanistan and in return expects to play a more prominent
role in other Middle East issues.
Inexorably, Germany and Europe are being increasingly drawn
into the bloody war in the Middle East, although millions of Europeans
have taken to the streets to oppose the Iraq war.
Now the population at large must pay the pricein the
form of increasing military budgets and the lives of young soldiers.
The majority of the population rejects such military missions,
but for the German government that plays no role. When it comes
to the pursuit of its imperialist interests, the grand coalition
government is prepared to ride roughshod over democratic principles.
The fact that Bundestag deputies first learned of plans for the
new military deployment in the press is symptomatic of
the link between militarism and authoritarian forms of rule.
See Also:
German Social Democratic Party chairman
badmouths the unemployed
[23 December 2006]
Report exposes European complicity in
CIA torture flights
[22 December 2006]
Berlin Senate adopts new austerity measures
[22 December 2006]
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