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Germany: Green Party attacks peace marches
By Ulrich Rippert
18 April 2007
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German peace groups recently organized their traditional Easter
March against war and militarism. This year, the protests
were centred on the Iraq war and the expansion of the German military
mission in Afghanistan Leading Green Party politicians, whose
parliamentary group had voted for the deployment of the Luftwaffe
(Air Force) in the south of Afghanistan, have now attacked those
organising the Easter Marches.
Green Party leader Claudia Roth accused the organizers of the
anti-war protests of having only a black-and-white view
According to Roth, their statements said notoriously little
about how such international crises could be countered. Too often,
she said, the view of those on the Easter Marches was limited
to a narrow rejection of the military option, while
the United Nations did not even rate a mention in the calls for
the demonstrations. This was a failure of peace politics.
Instead, some of the appeals to support the demonstrations gave
the impression that the US government, the European Union and
the German political establishment were a single axis of
evil, Roth said.
Franziska Eichstädt-Bohlig, the leader of the Green Party
parliamentary group in the Berlin city legislature, derided the
Easter Marches as not a contemporary form of anti-war protest.
The peace marches have decayed into a ritual, which
was only directed against war, but offered no differentiated
and positive answers to complex and contradictory situations.
World conflicts could not be solved by disarmament alone
The world was more complicated than just for or against
peace, said Eichstädt-Bohlig.
Reinhard Bütikofer, who along with Claudia Roth is co-leader
of the Greens, expressly defended Germanys international
military missions. The world would be far more uncertain
without the deployment of German troops in Afghanistan or in the
Lebanon, he told the media.
In a press interview, Bütikofer opined regarding the peace
role of the German Armed Forces: Without the necessary civilian
construction of the country in Afghanistan and also protecting
the important democratic impulse militarily, nothing could succeed.
This is pure war propaganda. In reality, the NATO troops in
Afghanistan provide just as little protection for democracy
as the American troops that are occupying Iraq They are protecting
the puppet regime of Hamid Karzai, who came to power through the
US military and is subservient to the imperialist powers. Karzais
influence does not extend beyond Kabul, and popular resistance
to his regime is constantly growing.
In order to support Karzai, the German Armed Forces are working
in the north of the country with local warlords and drug barons.
The warlords trade in weapons and drugs is tolerated, and
in return, the warlords agree not to undertake any action against
the weak central government. Last year in Afghanistan, more opium
was produced than ever before.
In the south, the suppression of the resistance takes on ever
more brutal forms. Thousands of civilians are falling victim to
what is euphemistically called the fight against the Taliban.
In the meantime, the occupation troops are deeply hated throughout
the population.
As with the war against Iraq, the great powers are also pursuing
imperialist goals in the occupation of Afghanistan. In their struggle
for control of energy sources and for geo-strategic interests,
Afghanistan takes on an extraordinarily important position, with
its borders on Iran, Pakistan and the former Soviet republics
of Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.
The open attack by the Greens on the pacifists organizing the
Easter Marches (the Network of Peace-cooperatives) marks a new
stage in the partys turn to the right.
Since they entered the German government in 1998 and Green
leader Joschka Fischer took over responsibility for foreign policy,
the Greens have abandoned their former pacifist views and become
enthusiastic proponents of international military deployments.
But they had always tried to retain the pacifists within their
ranks, at least by making various verbal concessions. That is
no longer the case. Now, the Greens are attacking the peace movement
in a way that in the past would have been expected only from the
Christian Democrats. There are essentially two reasons for this.
First, the time has passed in which German foreign policy could
be disguised with pacifist clichés. Washingtons aggressive
foreign policy and the American debacle in Iraq have also forced
Germany to defend its international interests with increasing
aggressiveness and with military means.
Former Green Party Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer expressed
this clearly in a speech at Berlins Humboldt University
in mid-March. He began his speech with the question, Are
we Europeans prepared to solve the problems that have resulted
from the self-weakening of the United States as a result of their
policy of unilateralism, and which led them into the disaster
of the Iraq war? And he ended the speech with the demand
for a new foreign and security policy responsibility
for Europe under German leadership.
Fischer expressly endorsed a stronger military commitment.
Of the German deployment to the Lebanon, he said the present situation
was no longer acceptable in which the German navy is limited to
the Lebanese coast, keeping the extraordinarily dangerous
Armada of the Hezbollah in check, while other allies are
pulling the chestnuts out of the fire in the country
itself.
Second, since the Greens failed to secure a majority together
with the Social Democratic Party (SPD), they are aspiring to a
coalition with the Christian Democrats. A coalition of the Christian
Democratic Union (CDU) and Christian Social Union (CSU), the Liberal
Democrats (FDP) and the Greens would enjoy a numerical majority
in the Bundestag (federal parliament) and could replace the grand
coalition of the CDU/CSU and SPD, which is running into increasing
problems. Fischers Humboldt speech reads like a renewed
application for the post of the foreign minister. It contained
nothing that CDU Chancellor Angela Merkel could not accept.
Party chief Bütikofer has stressed repeatedly in the past
months that his party is aiming at closer co-operation on different
levels with the CDU/CSU.
And for some time in the Berlin city legislature, which is
presently ruled by a coalition of the SPD and Left Party, the
CDU chairman Friedbert Pflüger has been striving to establish
good relations with the Greens. He has made no secret of the fact
that he considers a coalition of the two parties desirable. The
Berlin Greens are flattered and for their part stress the increasing
political common ground with the CDU. A Christian Democratic-Green
Party coalition in the German capital would set a precedent for
federal politics.
See Also:
Germany: Left Party and Election Alternative
seal their merger
[9 April 2007]
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