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Europes Green militarists
German Green Party campaigns for Congo mission
By Peter Schwarz
1 June 2006
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The days when the German Green Party opposed international
military operations by Germanys armed forces, or at least
criticized them, have long since passed. After seven years in
government, the party has returned to the opposition benches,
but it has by no means returned to its former pacifist positions.
The Greens are among the most avid proponents of a German military
mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, one that could
easily become the most extensive and dangerous foreign operation
conducted by German soldiers since World War II.
To the extent that the Greens have levelled any criticism against
the government, it is criticism from the right, not the left.
For them, the plans of the Christian Democratic-Social Democratic
grand coalition do not go far enough. While the government wants
to limit the deployment of the Bundeswehr (armed forces) to the
capital Kinshasa and its immediate surroundings, and set a time
limit of four months for the operation, the Greens are pleading
for a mission that is unlimited both in time and geographical
scope.
On May 16, the day before the cabinet decided to send 780 Bundeswehr
soldiers as part of a European Union mission to the Congo, the
Green parliamentary faction submitted a resolution expressly welcoming
the operation. The Federal Republic of Germany has the interest
and the obligation to make an appropriate long-term contribution
to the stabilization of the peace process in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo, the motion declared. It continued: The
troops being sent by the European Union are an important contribution
to the security of the elections.
The motion was directed against the restrictions originally
outlined by Defence Minister Franz Josef Jung (Christian Democratic
UnionCDU) limiting the deployment of German troops to the
Congolese capital. The government should not impose any
artificial restrictions on this United Nations mission,
the Greens declared, adding, The help provided by the Bundeswehr
should not end at the Kinshasa city boundary.
While the government maintains the fiction that the Congo mission
is one of limited duration on behalf of the UN, and is merely
to guarantee the smooth running of the forthcoming elections,
the Greens regard the deployment of German soldiers into the heart
of Africa as an integral part of a comprehensive foreign policy
strategy. Support for the Democratic Republic of the Congo
should form part of a coherent and collaborative foreign, security
and development policy towards the states of Africa, our southern
neighbour continent, the Green Party motion stated.
The Greens are advocating a long-term military commitment throughout
Africa. Their motion asks the government to ensure that the Congo
mission include police training and army reform, supporting the
UN troops over the longer term with logistics and both civilian
and military leadership personnel, strengthening their ability
to uncover weapons dumps and finally disarm the numerous
militias...
This boils down to the permanent stationing of German soldiersand
not only in the Congo. As part of their coherent African
policy, the Greens call for the German government to support
UN peacekeeping missions in Africa through financial means,
civilian and military experts and logistics.
Before submitting the motion, Green Party parliamentary deputies
Hans Christian Ströbele and Winfried Nachtwei had visited
the Congo. Both followed their trip by submitting detailed reports
in which they strongly advocated a Bundeswehr mission.
Ströbeles role is particularly worth noting. The
67-year-old attorney, a veteran of the 1968 protest movement and
a founding member of the Greens, was for a long time considered
to represent the left wing of the party and to be an internal
party critic of Joschka Fischer, the Green leader who served as
foreign minister in the previous Social Democratic Party (SPD)-Green
Party government.
In the 2002 federal elections, Ströbele was not offered
a safe place on the party slate, so he stood as a candidate in
the Berlin Kreuzberg constituency, becoming the only directly-elected
Green Party Bundestag (parliament) deputy.
In previous inner-party disputes over German military missions
abroad, Ströbele usually led the no camp, generally
capitulating at the last minute and urging the party to close
ranks. Now he is seeking to smother in advance any objections
to the Congo mission.
The very first sentence of his Congo report reads: European
Union soldiers are not being sent to the Democratic Republic of
the Congo (DRC) to force Europes will upon the government
or the population; nor are they being deployed to start and conduct
a war, or finish one, and certainly not to seek to secure European
or German business interests.
Ströbele does not provide any evidence for these claims,
which would be difficult to furnish. There is no lack of background
reports (including in the German press) concerning the enormous
natural wealth of the country. An article in Internationale
Politik by German UN diplomat Albrecht Conze, whom Ströbele
and Nachtwei met in the Congo, describes in detail how this wealth
is being plundered by different great powers and their agents
on the ground and taken abroad.
To say that Germany and Europe are not pursuing economic interests
in this case is a fairy tale, which becomes more all the more
improbable the more frequently Ströbele repeats it. It
seems to me, he writes, that the danger is negligible
that the EU mission and that of the Bundeswehr will serve German
economic interests and that and a neo-colonial policy is being
promoted. What proof does he provide for this assertion?
A civilian interlocutor from Bukavu answered this
reproach by saying it was stupid!
Ströbele eagerly quotes such anonymous sources, according
to whom German soldiers are not only welcome in the Congo, but
yearned for. The EU force, and in particular one with German
participation, is regarded as particularly effective and neutral,
he writes. The refusal to send EU troops, however, would
be regarded as Europe and Germany displaying a lack of interest
in the development of Africa.
He justifies the expansion of the mandate to areas beyond Kinshasa
in a similar way. A mandate limited geographically to the
capital Kinshasa and the airfield and to the task of evacuating
election helpers and Europeans in the event of a crisis
would be little understood and would be very difficult to
explain to the Congolese population, Ströbele writes.
Given the nature of the various groups that are contesting
for power and influence in the Congo, it is no wonder that the
plans for the Bundeswehr advocated by Ströbele and Nachtwei
find enthusiastic support amongst them. The various warlords,
militias and tribal chiefs who are at loggerheads are all striving
for good relations with one or more imperialist powers. Without
support from outside, they could not maintain themselves. In this
regard, Germany is a particularly sought-after partner, first
because it is quite rich, and secondin contrast to France
and the USbecause it has not yet aligned itself with any
particular grouping.
The allegedly democratic elections will not change the catastrophic
conditions in the country one iota. At best, they will determine
which ethnic or political grouping of the Congolese elite will
in future plunder the population and enjoy preferential relations
with the great powers.
In this respect, the Congo does not differ much from Iraq,
where the alleged democratisation process, under the
direction of the occupying powers, has led to an acute aggravation
of tensions between the various ethnic groups.
No other Bundestag faction supports the Congo mission with
such enthusiasm and unanimity as the Greens. There are substantial
reservations among the Christian Democrats, the Social Democrats
and the Liberal Democrats; the Left Party opposes the mission.
Many parliamentarians fear that the government may be embarking
upon an adventure with an uncertain outcome. They fear that the
Bundeswehr could become enmeshed in a conflict for which it is
not prepared, either militarily or psychologically. Even if they
endorse such operations in principle, they believe the German
population is not yet sufficiently conditioned to accept military
setbacks and high casualty levels.
The Greens have no such worries. They show the least regard
for the lives and well-being of the ordinary soldiers they would
send there, displaying a good measure of social arrogance. Many
of these former pacifists exercised their right to refuse to perform
military service as conscripts, undertaking civilian duties instead.
Their children are rarely found in the ranks of the Bundeswehr.
So it is not the lives of their loved ones that are being put
at risk.
The Greens support a professional army, and therefore take
the position that those who seek payment for being soldiers must
be prepared to put their lives on the line. They display the same
class conceit towards the Bundeswehr soldiers that they have for
the unemployed, having overseen numerous welfare cuts while they
were in office.
The transformation of the Greens is breathtaking. The one-time
pacifists have shed their old skins to become unabashed proponents
of imperialist military operations. In the past, the imperialists
tended to send their missionaries first before dispatching the
troops. Today, the Greens have taken on this role.
See Also:
German cabinet agrees on military
operation in the Congo
[25 May 2006]
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