[D66] German politicians and media promote military intervention in Syria

J.N. jugg at ziggo.nl
Thu Sep 17 13:41:53 CEST 2015


http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2015/09/17/medi-s17.html

German politicians and media promote military intervention in Syria
By Johannes Stern
17 September 2015

The German elite are using the refugee crisis in Europe to intensify
their campaign for militarism and war. Since the government sealed the
borders to stop the flow of refugees into Germany, politicians and the
media have been pushing for a military intervention in Syria.

Interior Minister Thomas de Maizière (Christian Democratic Union, CDU)
led the way on Sunday. On the same day he announced Germany would
reintroduce border controls, telling the German newspaper Die Zeit that
Europe has “not acted decisively enough in its foreign and security
policies.”

Although “the West bombed Libya,” they had “ended engagement as soon as
the dictator was gone,” complained the interior minister. He added that
“The fight against Syrian dictator Assad and the so-called ‘Islamic
State (IS)’ was also not being carried out with the necessary
determination.” One cannot stand by and “watch the killing any longer,”
he added.

De Maizière exemplifies the militarist turn of German foreign policy
during the last two years. In 2012, when he served as minister of
defense, he criticized proponents of military intervention in Syria as
“coffeehouse intellectuals” who “call for the deployment of soldiers
without having to be accountable for it.” Now he raises the possible
deployment of ground troops in the fight against IS in order to defend
the interests of German imperialism in the Middle East.

To quote de Maizière: “We need a security strategy. One cannot defeat IS
out of thin air. One cannot rely on the fight of the Kurdish Peshmerga
on the ground alone.”

Wolfgang Ischinger sang the same tune in an interview with the Münchner
Merkur Tuesday. The leader of the Munich Security Conference also called
for military intervention in Syria and even sending in German ground
troops if necessary.

A “comprehensive political strategy” (Ischinger refers to the proposal
of Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier to establish a large Syrian
Contact Group, taking Moscow and Tehran into account) would “only be
credible […] if it is backed by credible military options.”

The EU would have to “be able to talk seriously about questions like
protection zones in Syria for the millions of refugees” and “speak with
the US and other nations about possible flight bans in and around
Syria.” According to Ischinger, anyone who could not commit to that,
should not “be surprised when hundreds of thousands or millions of
refugees land here.”

The use of the German military was, therefore, “obvious.” While Germany
had “wrongly looked away” before, it has now learned “with difficulty
and somewhat late, that looking away does not free us from
responsibility,” he said. “Inactivity” has consequences and the Syrian
conflict had now “come crashing on our doorstep.”

The entire Middle East is “on the verge of a great explosion” and the
“threat of instability spilling over” is enormous. With regard to ground
troops, he would “not rule anything out.” For that, however, one would
also have to “engage Syria’s neighbors in the region.” What was not
permissible, according to Ischinger, was “the planning of crusade-style
events”.

The war and propaganda strategies of the German elite are as repugnant
as they are transparent. In reality, the “great explosion” of the Middle
East, with its dramatic consequences, is not the result of “looking
away” or “inactivity.” It is the result of the neo-colonial war policies
of the West, which de Maizière, Ischinger and Co. now want to massively
expand.

The rise of IS and the suffering of millions of refugees, which the
German elite now uses as a pretext for direct military intervention in
Syria, are direct results of previous interventions that left entire
countries in ruins and cost hundreds of thousands of lives. Among them
are, above all, the invasion of Iraq in 2003, the NATO bombardment of
Libya in 2011 and the civil war in Syria instigated by the West.

If anything is “explosive,” it is the offensive of the German
government. While it did not, officially at least, participate in the
wars in Iraq and Libya, it is now using the consequences of these
illegal crusades to secure its piece of the pie in the redistribution of
the Middle East and to promote the return of German imperialism on the
world stage.

An interview with Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble (CDU) in the Monday
edition of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung underscores just how
aggressive Berlin has become. Schäuble, who embodies more than anyone
the role of the German “task master” of Europe with his brutal stance
toward Greece, now demands, under the title “We cannot duck away,”
proceeding with the drive to war despite the anti-militarist sentiments
of the majority of the population.

According to Schäuble, Europe will naturally have to engage more
strongly in Syria, and “in Germany we will have to get used to taking on
even more foreign policy responsibility.” That the German population is
“skeptical, even hostile” was “no badge of honor for Germany.” The
government will have to “take note of it” but must “not be content with
it.” Germany “cannot duck away.”

Then he threatens: “I know that especially in foreign policy we’ve come
a long way since 1990. But we are far from finished. We must adjust to
that. Our policies must show that we have the courage to lead, even when
the opinion polls seem to speak another language.”

That is the voice of war and dictatorship! A further comment in the
weekend edition of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung made clear how far
German ruling circles are prepared to go in carrying out their
reactionary plans. Under the title “The Order of the Day,” reserve
officer Reinhard Müller argues not only for “an intervention” in Syria
and a “robust” deployment for the “home front protection” of refugees,
but also for the deployment of the military within Germany.

After noting that the military was until now on call only “as a kind of
armed, technical aid organization,” he dresses up further demands in the
form of questions: “Or must the military be used for the defense of
housing accommodations? Or should it enable or prevent right-wing and
left-wing extremist demonstrations, in case the police force is too weak?”

“Necessity knows no law,” concludes Müller.

It should be recalled that Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg justified the
invasion of Belgium by Reich Defense on August 4, 1914 with precisely
these notorious words. “We are now in a state of necessity, and
necessity knows no law,” said the Reich Chancellor. “Our troops have
occupied Luxemburg, perhaps already entered Belgian territory.
Gentlemen, this is a breach of international law […] the wrong that we
are committing we will endeavor to repair as soon as our military goal
has been reached.”


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