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German government presses for military deployment in Lebanon
By Peter Schwarz
14 September 2006
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The German government decided Wednesday, September 13, to send
German naval ships to the Lebanese coast. Within the context of
a United Nations mandate, the German Navy will have the task of
cutting off the supply of weapons to Hezbollah. The German parliament
(Bundestag) is expected to give its approval for the deployment
next week, opening the way for the immediate dispatch of German
frigates.
The German government has been vigorously pushing for a military
engagement in the crisis region since the start of discussions
in the UN over an internationally supervised ceasefire in Lebanon.
In the case of previous military engagements the German government
gave the impression that it was rather reluctant to send troops,
and would only do so on the basis of express requests. This time
round Berlin has badgered the UN for the chance to send in its
troops.
Barely had the UN ceasefire resolution of August 12 been agreed,
government circles in Berlin were making their own suggestions
for military intervention. The leading role was played by the
chairman of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), Kurt Beck, closely
followed by Defence Minister Franz Josef Jung, Interior Minister
Wolfgang Schäuble and German President Horst Köhler
(all three of the Christian Democratic UnionCDU). Two days
later the press announced that the government had agreed in principle
on a deployment of German forces and that a special meeting of
the parliament would shortly follow.
Along with the dispatch of the German Navy to monitor the coast,
the government also indicated it was prepared to send German troops
to guard the Lebanese-Syrian bordera proposal which was
quietly ditched, however, when Damascus made clear its strict
opposition. At the time, Defence Minister Jung (CDU) was keen
to refer to the German deployment as a combat mission.
The military plans faltered when it became clear that German
troops are not welcome in Lebanon. The official request from the
Lebanese governmentnecessary according to international
lawwas slow in coming. In Beirut the German army was looked
upon as an occupation rather than a peacekeeping force, with Germany
taking a partisan position and unable to play the role of an impartial
mediator in the conflict with Israel. The Lebanese public were
well aware that the government headed by Chancellor Angela Merkel
(CDU) had unconditionally backed Israel and the US during the
34-day Israeli bombardment and refrained from making the slightest
criticism of the devastating air raids. The German government
even refrained from calling for a ceasefire.
In particular the Shiite parties, who represent 40 percent
of the Lebanese population, look upon the monitoring of the coast
by the German Navy as a violation of Lebanese sovereignty. The
Amal movement, led by parliamentary president Nabih Berri, and
Hezbollah both set conditions for agreeing to such a deployment.
They called for an immediate lifting of the Israeli sea blockade,
which has paralysed the Lebanese economy for months. Secondly
they demanded that German warships remain a distance of between
6 and 12 nautical miles from the coast and only search other ships
with the agreement of the Lebanese navy. These terms met in turn
with opposition from the German and, in particular, the Israeli
government.
Under these conditions negotiations over the Lebanese mission
dragged on for weeks. Following prolonged diplomatic haggling
involving UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, Israel finally lifted
its air and sea blockade at the end of last week. French, Greek
and Italian ships are now patrolling the Lebanese coast until
the arrival of the German Navy.
The official request by the Lebanese government was finally
delivered to the United Nations on Monday. It was attached to
the condition that warships under the flag of the UN flag remain
a distance of six miles from the coasta condition which
was rejected by the UN. According to the rules of engagement agreed
Tuesday the German Navy, supported by other international forces,
will patrol the entire Lebanese coastline and the German contingent
is allowed to use force. The presence of a Lebanese officer on
each ship is regarded as sufficient to award the Lebanese government
at least some sort of symbolic recognition of its sovereignty.
The question arises, why is the German government so eager
for a military deployment, which is both expensive and very risky?
According to defence expert Hans Rühle, who occupied high-ranking
positions in the Defence Ministry and NATO for many years, there
are a number of concrete definable military risks for German
soldiers. These include acts of terror involving high-speed
boats along the lines of the attack which was carried in Aden
against the US warship Cole in October 2000, or attacks
with guided missiles. Such a missile struck the Israeli corvette
Hanit 15 kilometres from the Lebanese coast in July this
year.
The German government has given two reasons for its intervention:
guaranteeing the right of existence of the state of Israel, as
well as humanitarian and peace purposes.
When, however, it is a matter of state for Germany to
ensure the right of existence of Israel, chancellor Merkel
declared during the budget debate in the Bundestag last week,
then we cannot simply say: If the existence of Israel is
endangered in this regionand it iswe will simply stand
aside. If we want to take part in the necessary humanitarian and
political process, then it will be very difficult to say: others
should please take over responsibility for the military component.
Foreign Minister Frank Walter Steinmeier (SPD) took a similar
approach. Also speaking in the budget debate, Steinmeier declared
that never had a contingent of German soldiers been sent
into a region with the task of destroying or increasing German
influence in the country.... This government and previous governments
have always sought with their decisions to either supervise peace
treaties, create stability for people or put an end to expulsions
and mass murder. Likewise, the German army in Lebanon has
the task, together with soldiers of other countries, of ensuring
that the weapons in this region remain silent in future.
This official version, whereby on the one hand Germany is obliged
for historical reasons to defend the right of existence
of Israelwhich amounts to an uncritical acceptance
of Israeli government policyand on the other hand secure
peace in the Middle East with the aid of the German
army, is reflected in the vast majority of media reports and comments.
Any sober examination of recent events, however, shows the absurdity
of such a representation.
The Israeli attack on Lebanon was part of imperialist efforts
to reorganise the entire Middle Easta process which had
begun with the invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq and is aimed at
securing US control of the entire region. The military operation
in Lebanon had been prepared long in advance by Israel and took
place with the unconditional support of the US. Israel had already
begun intensified air raids on Lebanon, even prior to the kidnapping
of two Israeli soldiers by the Hezbollah militia. The kidnapping
merely provided the pretext for a campaign of bombing terror,
which struck broad swathes of Lebanese infrastructure and killed
over a thousand civilians.
As the WSWS wrote on July 21, The immediate aim of this
warthe elimination of Hezbollah as a military and political
force within Lebanonis directed against all mass resistance
to Israeli and American domination of the country. The Bush administration
and its allies in Jerusalem see this as an essential step toward:
1) the removal of the Syrian Baathist regime, and 2) the launching
of a full-scale war against Iran. (See The
real aims of the US backed Israeli war against Lebanon)
This analysis has been confirmed in detail by research carried
out by the US journalist Seymour Hersh in an article in the New
Yorker magazine, which explains how American and Israeli agencies
planned the attack on Hezbollah as a kind of dress rehearsal for
a war against Iran.
Jerusalem and Washington agreed to a ceasefire only following
the failure of the one-month Israeli bombing campaign against
Hezbollah and growing international indignation over the role
of Israel, the US and the main Arab regimes in the Middle East.
Nevertheless, their failure in Lebanon led to a severe weakening
of US and Israeli political and military authority.
This is the real reason for Germanys eagerness, along
with that of the other German powers, to intervene in the Middle
East. It is seeking to both support, and partly replace, Washington
in its self-appointed role as world policeman. At the same time,
European powers detect a chance to establish their presence in
a region which has long been dominated by the US.
This was spelled out in a commentary in the Süddeutsche
Zeitung by Karl Kaiser, an expert on international policy,
who formerly headed the German society for foreign policy and
now teaches at Harvard University. His article was titled Europeans
to the front.
He establishes at the beginning of the article that the military
conflict in Lebanon has in light of the consequences
of the previous policy of the Bush governmentchanged the
relation of forces in the region, at the expense of Israel and
Americas capacity to act. There now exists the danger
that the existing anti-Israeli front, based on the nationalism
of secular Arab states, could turn into a pan Islamic and thus
religiously-motivated front, which would be much broader and more
militant.
Kaiser writes that this represents a challenge to Europe both
politically and militarily: Europes significance is
growing in this strategically changed landscape. The policy of
the Bush governmenteven in the eyes of the moderate Arab
regimeshas so substantially weakened the reputation of the
US as to dramatically reduce its capacity to act as a mediator.
In this situation the European Unionin the interest of the
West, including Israelmust play a substantial role as initiator
and mediator, and secure this by the deployment of its own resources.
The term resources refers to military means. Such
an attempt by the European Union to keep the Middle East under
military control in the interests of the West, including
Israel has its own, predictable logic. It will inevitably
result in German and European soldiers coming into conflict with
the populations in a region, which has been a centre for imperialist
interests and intrigues since the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.
It will also plunge those countries which refrained from involvement
in the Iraq war into a spiral of violence and conflict. Such a
development is already visible in Afghanistan, where NATO took
over command from the US. The situation will be no different in
Lebanon. A deployment of the German Navy in this conflict must
be decisively rejected.
See Also:
Germany joins US, British,
Israeli axis of aggression
[4 August 2006]
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