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Leading German politician issues alarm about threat of war
with Iran
By Stefan Steinberg
30 October 2007
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With one notable exception, the German media and government
circles have largely refrained from making any open comment about
the growing threat of a US military attack against Iran.
Two weeks ago, US president George Bush stepped up his rhetoric
against Iran and spoke eerily of the danger of a Third World War.
A week later, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice announced that
the administration in Washington had decided to declare Irans
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps a proliferator of weapons and
its Quds Force a supporter of terrorism, while Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson revealed new punitive economic sanctions
against Tehran.
Both Bushs comments and the latest measures by Washington
make a US military confrontation with Iran increasingly inevitable,
yet there has been no official reaction from the German government.
Reactions to the threat of war have been muted in the German press
and have largely concentrated on repeating points drawn from an
interview with one leading politician, Ruprecht Polenz, published
in the Sunday edition of the Tagesspiegel.
Ruprecht Polenz is chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee
in the Bundestag, the German parliament, and a leading member
of the ruling conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU). While
couched in the diplomatic tones of a politician with years of
experience in foreign policy, Polenzs full-page interview
in the Berlin-based Tagesspiegel was explicit in its criticism
of the Bush governments policy toward Iran.
Polenz begins his interview by declaring, The crisis
regarding the Iranian nuclear programme is the conflict with the
greatest potential for danger, not only for security and stability
in the region of the Near and Middle East, but for the whole world.
When asked to comment on the American presidents recent
reference to World War III in connection with Iran,
Polenz openly took Bush to task: I take absolutely no stock
of such rhetorical escalations. Responsible politicians should
also indicate in their language that they are looking for a solution.
With regard to the nuclear conflict with Iran, that can only take
place through negotiations.
Polenz was asked his opinion about press reports indicating
that Washington may plan to blame Iran for the deaths of American
soldiers in Iraq to provide a concrete pretext for going to war.
The CDU politician responded by warning the US against any attempt
to conduct military operations on Iranian territory, even in so-called
surgical operations against the Revolutionary Guards.
Polenz was then posed the question, What would be the
consequences of US military strikes against Iran? He replied,
That would lead to an uncontrollable chain reaction and
dramatically escalate the violence. Therefore, one must energetically
warn against such deliberations.
Polenz then went on to list some of the possible consequences
of a military attack on Iran. According to Polenz, Iran could
respond to an US attack with asymmetrical retaliatory strikes,
which, in addition to military resistance inside Iran, would include
the mobilisation of supporters for acts of violence in other countries,
particularly in Israel or in Iraq against American troops. In
addition, German soldiers and development aid could be directly
threatened, if Iran co-operates with terrorists in Afghanistan.
Polenz then criticised US economic sanctions against Iran,
which he said lacked the legitimacy of the United Nations. While
German business and banking interests in Iran are increasingly
jeopardised by such sanctions, the CDU leader pointed out that
US brand names such as Coca-Cola, Pepsi-Cola and Halliburton continue
to conduct business with Tehran.
At the end of the interview, the Tagesspiegel reporter
asked: Mr. Polenz, it is unusual for a union [CDU] politician
with such an important post to publicly take such a critical stance
in regard to the US government. What do you hope to achieve?
In response, Polenz made clear that his aim was to encourage
politicians in the US to oppose Bushs plans for war. I
want to support politicians in the US who reject an escalation
as I do. And I want to encourage more direct contacts between
the Americans and Iranians.
Polenzs blunt interview represents the most outspoken
criticism of the war plans of the Bush administration to be made
by a leading German politician since the coming to power of the
grand coalition governmentCDU-Social Democratic Party (SDP)-Christian
Social Unionin 2005.
It is extremely unlikely that a politician like Polenz, who
has years of experience on foreign policy issues but no cabinet
post, would give such an interview on his own initiative. He enjoys
close relations with the German chancellor, Angela Merkel (also
CDU), and it is likely, if not certain, that the interview was
officially sanctioned by leading figures in the German government.
His interview demonstrates that the government is conscious of
the disastrous economic and political repercussions for its interests
that would result from a US assault on Iran.
While Polenz was explicit in elaborating his fears of an international
conflagration resulting from any military assault on Iran, Chancellor
Merkel herself has refrained from making any public pronouncement
on the danger of war during the past few days.
The reticence on the part of the German government to criticise
openly the Bushs administrations plans for Iran are
mirrored by the lack of coverage of the theme in the German press
and media. Taken together, Polenzs interview and the general
lack of official response by the German government and media indicate
that while differences are growing across the Atlantic, and German
ruling circles are deeply alarmed at the prospect of a US assault
on Iran, the grand coalition in Berlin is not prepared to jeopardise
its long-standing relations with America.
How is this to be explained?
First, Germany is intent on pursuing its policy of maintaining
an equilibrium between East and West in terms of its foreign policy.
Towards the West, it seeks to maintain good working relations
with the US, which was a principal political prop throughout Germanys
postwar history and continues to be an important trading partner.
The Merkel government came to power in 2005 determined to close
the gap with Washington that had opened up following the rejection
of the Iraq war by her predecessor, Gerhard Schröder of the
SPD.
Towards the East, Berlin accepts the need to retain satisfactory
relations with Russia, which is an important supplier of energy.
At the same time, the increasingly aggressive opposition to the
US in recent months by Russias Vladimir Putin, who a week
ago described Bushs plans for Iran as similar to running
around like a madman with a razor blade, has created additional
headaches for the German foreign ministry. Growing antagonisms
between the US and Russia, including the provocative new American
defence system situated in eastern European countries, and Russian
withdrawal from international treaties, have immediate repercussions
for Germany in its attempt to maintain a middle ground.
The second reason for the backhanded and extremely muted criticism
of Washington by German government circles is the fear that any
form of open debate on the issue of US military strategy could
lead to a revival of a broad antiwar movement in Germany. German
politicians from all political parties, including the Greens,
are desperate to press ahead with the countrys military
mission in Afghanistana military intervention that is profoundly
unpopular with the German public. In his Tagesspiegel interview,
Ruprecht Polenz was also forced to concede that a large majority
of the German population opposed such interventions.
A US attack on Iran would undoubtedly provoke massive antiwar
sentiment in Germany. At the same time, it would have the potential
to turn the Afghanistan conflict into a much larger conflagration
across broad regions of Central Asia and the Middle East. This
helps explain why the possibility of US strikes against Iran is
currently being handled with kid gloves by the German government
and press.
In his attempt to portray the SPD as an opponent of militarism,
the issue of military force against Iran was also briefly raised
by the German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier (SPD) at
the partys national conference held in Hamburg last weekend.
Steinmeiers speech at the conference was notable for
the veiled criticism he made of Chancellor Merkel on a number
of foreign policy issues, including criticism of her support for
the US war against Iraq in 2003 and a call for her to make an
official trip to Afghanistan to bolster the sagging effort of
the German army there.
In his comments on Iran in Hamburg, however, Steinmeier closed
ranks with the chancellor and put forward the official line of
the German government. Military adventures are no contribution
to a solution, nuclear weapons must not end up in
the hands of people who deny the Holocaust, and Germany
favours a diplomatic solution in collaboration with the US, China
and Russia.
Germany also has material interests at stake in Iran and the
surrounding regioninterests that are under threat from US
sanctions and would likely be wiped out by a war. Germany, Italy
and France are Irans top three trading partners, with total
exports worth US$9,802 million in 2006.
Much of Irans state-controlled industry is dependent
on German engineering exports, 65 percent of which in 2005 came
with government-backed export credit guarantees, and Germany is
actively engaged in bidding for an interest in the planned Nabucco
pipeline, which would make Iran a key energy partner with the
European Union and Germany.
Nevertheless, the spineless response in Berlin makes clear
that the German government will either do nothing to oppose, or
could even side with the US in the event of a military strike
against Iran. If it comes to a war, it will continue to regard
its alliance with Washington as the best guarantee for its own
imperialist interests in the regioneven if the end result
is a major step towards the Third World War predicted by Bush.
The dilemma for the establishment in Germany is that it is
placing its hopes for a change of course in Washington on Bushs
political accomplices. The Süddeutsche Zeitung recently
commented: Berlin should also be helping those forces in
Washingtons unpopular government who want to act tough but
still peacefully. Those who dont support sanctions risk
giving Vice President Dick Cheney the upper hand in the White
House. If Condoleezza Rice and Robert Gates...want to win George
W. Bushs ear they now need help from afar.
In his Tagesspiegel interview, Polenz makes a similarly
pathetic appeal to US politicians, although all the evidence from
the Bush presidency is that appeals for moderation on the part
of his cohorts and fellow war conspirators have fallen on deaf
ears.
See Also:
German chancellor threatens Iran and
demands seat on UN Security Council
[1 October 2007]
Why is the German press silent
on US preparations for war against Iran?
[19 September 2007]
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