Obama demands Europe send more troops to Afghanistan

Antid Oto aorta at HOME.NL
Sat Jul 26 11:18:53 CEST 2008


REPLY TO: D66 at nic.surfnet.nl

Democratic candidate in Berlin

Obama demands Europe send more troops to Afghanistan

By Stefan Steinberg
26 July 2008

Barack Obama’s speech before an audience of some 200,000 in Berlin was
a reactionary affirmation of Cold War anti-communism and an attempt to
promote the new framework for US imperialist militarism and
aggression, the so-called “global war on terror.”

Against the backdrop of a potted history of post-war US-European
relations, the Democratic presidential candidate appealed for closer
collaboration between the two continents in the struggle against the
“new danger” of international terrorism and demanded that European
governments increase their troop levels in Afghanistan.

In his call to arms in the “war on terror,” Obama suggested that the
populations of Europe, in particular Germany, had to overcome their
aversion to war. The Democratic candidate, who is well aware of mass
opposition among the German people to Germany’s military presence in
Afghanistan, declared: “No one welcomes war. I recognize the enormous
difficulties in Afghanistan ... America cannot do this alone. The
Afghan people need our troops and your troops, our support and your
support to defeat the Taliban and Al Qaeda....”

Obama’s first proposal was a call for concerted action by Europe and
the US to send a “direct message to Iran that it must abandon its
nuclear ambitions.” Touching on the initial opposition of Germany and
France to the invasion of Iraq, he said that “despite past
differences” Europe should support the efforts of the US to stabilize
the puppet regime in Baghdad and “finally bring this war to a
close”—that is, accept an indefinite US military presence and American
domination of the country.

In one revealing passage, Obama hinted that his election would not
signify a lessening of US militarism or the military burden on Germany
and other European nations. He declared: “Yes, there have been
differences between America and Europe. No doubt, there will be
differences in the future. But the burdens of global citizenship
continue to bind us together. A change of leadership in Washington
will not lift this burden.”

Obama thus took the occasion of his only public address during his
overseas tour to reiterate a perspective of endless war and military
violence.

The political substance of Obama’s speech was aptly summed up by the
right-wing Republican journal National Review, which published a
sympathetic editorial Friday characterizing the speech as “fairly
conservative and distinctly patriotic.” The editorial stated:

“In the course of about 20 minutes the senator took the following
positions:

* A strong condemnation of Communist tyranny and a celebration of
America’s successful resistance to it during the Cold War;

* A passionate plea for the continuation of the Atlantic Alliance and
its evolution in a global partnership as the only basis for
international security and safe commerce;

* An endorsement of the war on terror that included President Bush’s
trademark argument that we must “dry up the well of extremism that
supports [terrorism]”;

* An unambiguous backing of NATO’s mission in Afghanistan and a clear
demand that Europeans should send more troops there;

* A commitment to free trade, open borders, and globalization;

* Support for the promotion of democracy in the Middle East and
elsewhere that included an acceptance that the Iraq war had been won
by the US, its Coalition allies, and the current Iraqi government;

* A straightforward statement that Iran “must” abandon its nuclear
ambitions;
* And a patriotic evocation of America as the vehicle of the world’s
hopes for freedom and justice.”

Obama’s appearance had been preceded by an unprecedented campaign in
the German media, which gushed with enthusiasm for the presidential
candidate. A number of newspapers had predicted a large turnout and
drew parallels to the large gatherings in Berlin for John F. Kennedy
in 1963, and Ronald Reagan in 1987.

Significantly, Obama chose to evoke the words of Reagan, whom official
US opinion credits with winning the Cold War. Echoing Reagan’s “Mr.
Gorbachev, tear down that wall,” Obama declared, “When you, the German
people, tore down that wall—a wall that divided East and West; freedom
and tyranny; fear and hope—walls came tumbling down around the
world.... and the doors of democracy were opened.”

Obama, who has never made a secret of his own enthusiasm for the “free
market,” began his next sentence with “Markets opened too.” However,
he remained silent on the socially devastating consequences of the
introduction of capitalist relations into Eastern Europe, which led to
the wholesale dismantling of industry in eastern Germany and mass
unemployment, and in the former Soviet Union produced a fall in life
expectancy seen previously only in countries ravaged by war. Obama’s
speech was also notable for its neglect of the social crisis facing
millions in the United States and Europe’s industrialized west, as
well as the US financial breakdown that threatens to plunge the world
into a new Depression.

The speech was crafted to simultaneously address several audiences.
For the German and European public, he sprinkled his remarks with
vague appeals for the unity of different cultures and efforts to fight
Third World poverty and climate change. To the German and European
bourgeoisie, he offered a more collaborative relationship and implied
that, in return for their assistance in salvaging America’s
neo-colonial ventures in Afghanistan and elsewhere, they could
anticipate a larger share of the spoils.

To the American ruling elite, Obama offered assurances of his
determination as president to prosecute US imperialism’s global
hegemonic aims, while adopting a more multilateral posture and
strengthening the transatlantic alliance.

There was high praise for Obama’s speech from across the German
political spectrum, with leaders from the Christian Democratic Union,
Christian Social Union, Free Democratic Party, Social Democratic
Party, Greens and the Left Party all expressing satisfaction.

The German and European bourgeoisie by and large welcome an end to the
Bush era and see in an Obama presidency increased opportunities to
pursue their own imperialist aims. The Dutch newspaper De Volkskrant
wrote of Obama’s visit to Germany:

“In recent years America has had to face up to the limitations of its
power in Afghanistan and Iraq, and also in other international issues
such as the Israeli-Palestinian problem and the uranium dispute with
Iran. Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy are assuming increasingly
dominant roles in international diplomacy. What became clear after
September 11, and is becoming ever clearer now, is that since the end
of the Cold War our world knows no universal values of which the US is
the main or sole representative.... America needs its old NATO allies
once more.”

See also:
What accounts for Europe’s love affair with Obama?
[July 24, 2008]

http://wsws.org/articles/2008/jul2008/berl-j26.shtml

**********
Dit bericht is verzonden via de informele D66 discussielijst (D66 at nic.surfnet.nl).
Aanmelden: stuur een email naar LISTSERV at nic.surfnet.nl met in het tekstveld alleen: SUBSCRIBE D66 uwvoornaam uwachternaam
Afmelden: stuur een email naar LISTSERV at nic.surfnet.nl met in het tekstveld alleen: SIGNOFF D66
Het on-line archief is te vinden op: http://listserv.surfnet.nl/archives/d66.html
**********



More information about the D66 mailing list