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German chancellor threatens Iran and demands seat on UN Security
Council
By Peter Schwarz
1 October 2007
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Is the German government ready to support US aggression against
Iran in exchange for a seat on the United Nations Security Council?
The first appearance by German Chancellor Angela Merkel at the
United Nations General Assembly points in this direction.
In her speech in New York on September 25 Merkel supported
the demand for increased sanctions against the Islamic republica
longstanding demand of the Bush administration, which also has
the support of France following the election earlier this year
of a new president and government.
Merkel called upon Tehran to prove that it is not working to
develop nuclear weapons. Should Tehran fail to do this, she would
push for harsher sanctions. Let us not fool ourselves,
she said, if Iran came into the possession of nuclear weapons,
it would have devastating consequences.
Merkel reversed the burden of proof, declaring: The world
does not have to prove to Iran that Iran is building a nuclear
bomb. Iran must convince the world that it does not want the bomb.
Under conditions where Washington categorically refuses to
recognize any evidence that does not support its charges against
Iran, even when it is provided by the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA), Merkels statement amounts to a blank cheque
for the Bush administration.
Merkel went to call for a permanent seat for Germany on the
Security Council. Germany is ready to take more responsibility
with the assumption of a permanent seat on the Security Council
she declared, and went on to stress the urgency of such a move:
Time is short, there are various crises to be dealt with.
Merkel emphasised that the current composition of the Security
Council no longer reflected todays world. There is
no other alternative than to adapt it to political reality,
she said.
Merkels stance was supported by the German Foreign Minister
Frank-Walter Steinmeier. He told journalists that he was intent
on raising German ambitions in the corridors of the
UN with as many member countries as possible.
In an interview in the Bayerischen Rundfunk, former
German UN Ambassador Gunter Plüger also called for a German
seat on the Security Council. He justified this with the increasing
number of international military operations being conducted by
German forces. The best decision remains useless if it is not
implemented, he said. That means that the Security Council
should include those few states which have the resources necessary
to implement a Security Council decision. And this surely includes
Japan and Germany.
Since the reunification of Germany in 1990, the federal government
has repeatedly raised the demand for a permanent seat on the exclusive
circle of five veto-wielding powers on the Security Councilthe
US, Great Britain, France, Russia and China. The campaign won
momentum two years ago when Merkels predecessor, Gerhard
Schröder, coordinated with the governments of Japan, Brazil
and India and agitated world-wide to expand the number of permanent
members to include the four nations plus two African countries.
The plan failed following the failure of African countries
to agree candidates. Japan hesitated and the US and China threatened
to impose a veto. In the absence of any final vote by the Security
Council, the US was not required to make any final commitment.
Until now the German government has refrained from raising the
demand again.
Now Merkel obviously sees a chance of achieving the desired
goal. In his own speech to the General Assembly, President Bush
indicated he was open to plans for reform, but mentioned only
Japan in this connection, advocating the addition of Japan
and others as permanent members of the Security Council.
According to a report in the Bild newspaper, Merkel
will travel to Bushs Texas ranch in November for a two-day
private meeting where she will seek the support of the president
for a German seat. It is unlikely that Bush would agree to this
without demanding something in return. The price for a deal could
well be German agreement to intensified sanctions and an eventual
war against Iran.
Change of course
Merkels threats against Iran express a change of course
in German foreign policy. Up to now Berlin has urged a united
approach against Iran by the Security Council, and sought to prevent
a break with the US on the one side and Russia and China on the
other, thus allowing Germany to balance between the two camps.
The German government also sought to avoid any escalation of the
conflict because of its close business relations with Iran. Germany
is Tehrans most important trading partner.
Merkel did not go so far in New York as French President Nicolas
Sarkozy, who called for sanctions to be imposed on Iran by the
European Union without a Security Council resolution. But her
aggressive threats point in the same direction.
Some weeks ago Sarkozy rferred to the alternative between an
Iranian bomb or the bombardment of Iran. He repeated his
threats in his speech to the UN assembly.
Sarkozy maintained that there would be no peace in the
world if the international community proved too weak to prevent
the proliferation of nuclear weapons. Iran has the right
to civil use of nuclear power, he said, but added, [I]f
we permit Iran to arm itself with nuclear weapons, we are taking
an unacceptable risk to the stability of the region and the world.
In his next sentence he claimed: All experts all over the
world agree that Iran is working on a military nuclear weapon.
Merkels change of course in foreign policy is in part
related to Sarkozys initiative. Until a few years ago, Paris
and Berlin aspired to stand up to the US as equals on the basis
of a unified European foreign policy. However, this project has
largely failed. Instead of drawing Berlin and Paris together,
increasing tensions with the US have served to intensify the historical
conflicts between the two countries.
Tensions over economic and foreign policy issues have been
mounting since the assumption of power by Sarkozys government.
The German press has been full of trenchant and sarcastic reports
on the restless Frenchman.
Berlin has responded with indignation to Sarkozys efforts
to establish French supremacy in the EADS (Airbus) company, his
campaign for a state-dominated monopoly in the sphere of energy
and nuclear power, his attacks on the independence of the European
central bank, as well as his unilateral foreign policy initiatives
in Darfur, Libya, Lebanon and Iraq.
In view of the tensions in Europe, Sarkozy has undertaken to
break with Frances previous Gaullist foreign policy tradition
in favour of closer links to US foreign policy.
The German weekly paper Die Zeit concluded that in recent
weeks Sarkozy has very clearly laid his claim to be a main
player in world affairs, and sought to explain his aggressive
course against Iran as follows: Sarkozy realises it is no
longer possible to prevent an escalation of the conflict and prefers
to surf along with the wave.
Now the German government is taking the same course. In light
of increasing tensions with Russia, which is asserting its own
interests with growing self-confidence, and Chinaonly last
week Merkels meeting with the Dalai Lama led to denunciations
by the Chinese sideBerlin has also decided to further close
ranks with America and surf along with the wave.
Already in 2003 Angela Merkel had taken a different line from
that of then-Chancellor Schröder, whose public criticism
of the Iraq war led to a cooling of relations with the US. After
taking office in 2005 Merkel, sought to recover ground and seek
closer links to the Bush administration.
Now she has gone a step further. Her aggressive threats against
Iran serve to strengthen Washingtons plan for a military
assault on Tehran. A number of newspaper articles have already
drawn attention to the advanced stage of preparations for a substantial
military strike, before the expiration of Bushs second term
of office, aimed at destroying Irans nuclear plants, military
installations, and civilian infrastructure.
The claimspread above all by Sarkozythat increased
sanctions would prevent a war by forcing concessions from Tehran
is hardly credible, as is amply demonstrated by the Iraq war.
In the case of Iraq, UN-imposed sanctions were used to provide
propaganda for the war and weaken Iraq prior to the attack launched
by the US. In any event, current American preparations for war
against Iran have little to do with its nuclear program, but are
driven by the countrys large oil reserves and its strategic
situation in a region containing the worlds largest energy
reserves.
It is significant that Merkel has linked her policy swing toward
Bushs course against Iran with the demand for a German seat
in the UN Security Council. Behind the endlessly intoned formula
that Germany is ready to assume more responsibility
lies the drive by the countrys ruling elite to once again
operate as a major imperialist power and to support this by military
means.
Following its defeat in two world wars, for which it bore the
main responsibility, the German ruling class was forced to assume
a more modest role in world politics for many decades. Now it
hopes that a Security Council seat will expedite its admission
into the circle of the imperialist great powers. That in furtherance
of this aim the German government is prepared to support or tolerate
a war which could threaten the lives of millions of Iranians demonstrates
the criminal character of German imperialisms ambitions.
See Also:
The New York Times
and Ahmadinejads appearance at Columbia University
[27 September 2007]
Why is the German press silent
on US preparations for war against Iran?
[19 September 2007]
Israels air raid on
Syria: another threat to Iran
[18 September 2007]
British academics warn US
is preparing shock and awe attack on Iran
[11 September 2007]
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