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Munich Security Conference: Imperialists close ranks
By Peter Schwarz
8 February 2006
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Against the background of the American military quagmire in
Iraq and intensified conflicts with Iran, the US and the European
powers are closing ranks. This was very apparent at this years
Munich Security Conference, held last weekend in the Bavarian
capital.
For more than four decades, the conference has provided an
annual forum for high-ranking military officers, cabinet members,
politicians, military experts and journalists to discuss military
and geo-strategic questions. The conference is dominated by delegates
from NATO member-countries, but guests from other countries are
also invited.
Just three years ago, the conference was the scene of public
disputes between the US secretary of defence, Donald Rumsfeld,
and then-German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer of the Green
Party over the imminent Iraq war. This time around, transatlantic
harmony prevailed. The tone for the proceedings was set by the
German chancellor, Angela Merkel (Christian Democratic UnionCDU),
who opened the conference.
Merkel avoided any reference to controversial issues, such
as the origins of the Iraq war, illegal US renderings
or the US detention camp in Guantánamo. Instead, she heaped
praise on the transatlantic partnership.
In a speech that could have been dictated by the Bush administration,
the chancellor declared that the symmetrical threats of
the Cold War have been superseded by a completely new kind of
asymmetrical threat. She went on to cite the erosion
of state structures, terrorism, weapons of mass destruction in
the hands of unreliable regimes.
Merkel continued: This is a situation we must face up
to.... Let me clearly state that in this regard united Germany
is prepared to take on responsibility, indeed greater responsibility,
beyond NATOs boundaries in the cause of safeguarding freedom,
democracy, stability and peace in the world.
NATO, she stressed to the obvious delight of her American listeners,
assumes a primacy in this task. The necessary
political consultations would have to be carried out and
the required measures taken. In particular, she said,
the situation in the Middle East and Iran had to be
discussed. Saying the necessary political will had
to be summoned up, she declared that to be able to take
action, we, of course, need the right military capabilities.
Merkel made clear that her governmenta grand coalition
of the conservative CDU, the Christian Social Union (CSU) and
the Social Democratic Party (SPD)had shifted from the stance
of its predecessor, a coalition of the SPD and the Green Party,
which had maintained that under international law only the United
Nations was empowered to make decisions on military action.
She referred directly to the National Security Strategy of
the US, which envisages preemptive strikes and has been used to
justify the Iraq war. Together with the European Security Strategy
and NATOs Strategic Concept, the US policy provides a
suitable foundation on which to conduct more intensive dialogue
on the form of our common security agenda, she said.
Merkel stressed the remarkable degree of agreement
between the three strategies. It is fascinating to see that
things are moving in the same direction, she declared.
Press commentaries unanimously assessed Merkels speech
as a shift towards the US. The attending American politicians,
both Republicans and Democrats, were enthusiastic about the German
head of government, on whom they base their hopes for pragmatism
and reliability, wrote the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.
Munich 2006 could become the beginning of a new collaboration.
The weekly Die Zeit commented: Contrary to her
predecessor, the chancellor leaves little doubt about where the
Federal Republic belongs in the new world order. It is in the
West.
Merkel did not limit herself to general remarks about NATO.
With pointed threats against Teheran, she assumed a prominent
position in the current campaign of agitation against Iran.
By resuming its nuclear program, she said, Iran has willfully...and
knowingly overstepped the line. She then indirectly drew
a comparison with Germanys Nazi regime. A president
who questions Israels right to exist, a president who denies
the Holocaust cannot expect Germany to show any tolerance on this
issue. We have learned the lessons of our past.
The newspaper Die Welt assessed this remark as a qualified
threat of war, and wrote: The conclusion of this line of
thinking, which rejects appeasement, as Merkel said,
would logically be a readiness to intervene militarily.
The newspaper added, With respect to the Iranian nuclear
program, whoever recalls the path followed by Adolf Hitler in
the 1930s may be required to turn words into deeds.
The newspaper concluded: With Merkels speech and
reply it now appears that Germany has committed itselfclose
to the side of the US, whose defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld,
later expressly referred to and raised the military option.
The FAZ came to a similar conclusion: The clear
words used by the chancellor in Munich with regard to Iran and
the anti-Israeli outbursts of its president have strengthened
the conviction of the Americans that this time round the Germans
will be on their side with regard to a robust, not necessarily
military action.
Merkel also made the future German relationship with Russia
dependent on the latters attitude towards Iran. While the
previous government led by Gerhard Schröder (SPD) had sought
a close relationship with Moscow as a counterweight to Washington,
Merkel now declared that Russias conduct on the issue of
Iran would be the acid test for future relations. The strategic
partnership between Germany and Russia will therefore have to
prove itself in the resolution of the conflicts with Iran,
she stressed.
American delegates exerted even more pressure on Russia. The
US deputy secretary of state, Robert Zoellick, accused Moscow
of seeking to control its neighbors and looking upon them on
basis of a standpoint from the 19th Century. Republican
Senator John McCain went so far as to raise the possibility of
a boycott of the next G-8 summit, due to be held this summer in
St. Petersburg.
Inter-imperialist conflicts
The closing of ranks between the European powers and the US
evident at the Munich Security Conference does nothing to lessen
the contradictions that were at the heart of differences over
the Iraq war three years ago.
Objections to the Iraq war raised, in particular, by Berlin
and Paris were directed not at the neo-colonial objectives that
lay behind the American invasion. Rather, Germany and France feared
for their own imperialist interests in the Gulf region should
the US establish a permanent military presence or destabilise
the entire region in its haste to secure increasingly scarce energy
resources and access to new markets.
Once the war had commenced, both countries acted to ensure
the success of the US military. They rendered logistical support,
relieved hard-pressed US forces in Afghanistan andas recent
reports make clearmaintained a close collaboration between
their respective secret services.
With her shift towards Washington, Merkel is reacting to the
US military debacle in Iraq and the increasing discontent of the
broad masses throughout the Middle East. Her new course has won
the unreserved support of the SPD, which holds the post of foreign
minister in Germanys grand coalition. The French president,
Jacques Chirac, has also joined the front against Iran and recently
threatened Teheran with nuclear attacks.
So far, it has been primarily reactionary Islamic forcesIranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Iran and Hamas in the Palestinian
regionsthat have been able to profit from the rising mass
discontent. These tendencies represent a wing of the native ruling
elite and are neither prepared nor willing to conduct any serious
struggle against imperialism. Nevertheless, the great powers regard
increasing instability in the Middle East as a threat to their
interests and are preparing violent counter-measures.
Their closing of ranks recalls the year 1900, when rival great
powers united to suppress the Boxer Rebellion in China. The influence
of the British Empire had already peaked, and Britain was being
pressed from all sides. Russia, Japan and Germany advanced into
China in order to secure their own share of control over this
enormous territory. However, in response to a national movement
that arose to repel colonial subjugation, the competing imperialists
did not hesitate in joining forces to drown the resistance in
blood.
It is within this context that one must consider the publication
of caricatures of Muhammad by the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten,
subsequently reprinted by newspapers in other European countries.
The publication of this material is nothing less than a deliberate
provocation aimed at creating the ideological basis for a new
imperialist offensive against Iran and other Muslim countries.
After the claims of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction were
revealed to be blatant lies and the US-led introduction of democracy
into the Middle East exposed as crude propaganda, a new military
offensive is being planned in the name of the clash of cultures.
The right-wing Jyllands-Posten has a record of agitation
against immigrants and has been instrumental in the political
advance of the xenophobic Danish Peoples Party. It played
a large role in the election victory of the right-wing head of
government, Fogh Rasmussen.
The newspaper deliberately published the caricatures in order
to provoke a violent response. Reviling the prophet Muhammad is
regarded as an offence by millions of Muslims all over the world
and it was clear that such a provocation would meet with considerable
opposition.
The demonstrations, including acts of violence, are now being
used by the media, including a number of left-liberal newspapers,
as proof of the intolerance of Islam and the incompatibility of
Western and Islamic cultures. In the name of freedom of
speech, the same media outlets that unreservedly supported
the Iraq war and all of the associated attacks on fundamental
democratic rights are now banging the war drum against Iran.
A comment in the Süddeutsche Zeitung makes clear
that this propaganda assisted in the closing of ranks between
imperialist powers in Munich. Islamic anger, the Süddeutsche
Zeitung wrote, led to a demonstrative solidarising of
the Western world, which quite rightly feels itself to be under
attack. The Munich Security Conference offered the most obvious
evidence of this new harmony. The transatlantic security network
is busy not just with itself, but is confronted with a new threat
and has adjusted its sights.... The threat posed by Islamic fundamentalism
has accelerated the trend to a new unanimity.
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