By Ali Fathollah-Nejad*
"Bash these Islam-Nazis, put them in jail and kill them: That is anti-fascism!"
"Business as Usual"?
Report on the International Iran Conference of the "Mideast Freedom Forum
Berlin"
On the first weekend of May 2008, Berlin was host to two extraordinary
conferences. On the one hand, a crowd of altogether 1,600 predominantly young
people from all over Europe met at the Humboldt University in order to discuss
and reflect the turbulent, globally unfolding events of
1968.
On the other, not far away, about 400 participants gathered at the classier,
guarded »Auditorium Friedrichstrasse« under the theme of
"Business as usual? The Iranian regime, the holy war against Israel and the West
and the German reaction," organized by the recently created
»Mideast Freedom Forum Berlin (MFFB)«. Astonishingly despite wide
participation by journalist from major newspapers, there was no mention of the
conference in the German media. The purpose of the following account is also to
fill this crucial gap.
Also historically, not least due to the bitter experiences of the recent past
and present, an examination of the Weltanschauung advanced at the
conference bears importance: What has entered the political discourse in
Washington in a dominant fashion since almost a decade now, namely the view of
the so-called neo-conservatives, appears not only to sound the medial and
political terrains in Germany, but be willing to offensively occupy them. As in
the United States, Iran takes a prominent role here.
The very first event of this kind to take place in Germany, the MFFB's
"International Iran Conference" had set the target of intervening politically to
bring about a radical re-orientation of Berlin's Iran policy, one that is
heading towards Iran's complete isolation or "regime change." At the same time,
the addressees of such a posture were clearly named: Not only lies the "future
of pro-Zionism" in the hands of the Right. But beyond the so-called Anti-Germans
who are sympathizers anyway, the main task was to win over the whole left side
of the political specter.
The introduction was delivered by the chairman of the German branch of the
U.S.-based association
»Scholars for Peace in the Middle East (SPME)«,
professor Diethard Pallaschke. SPME's mission is to meet "anti-Semitism" and
"anti-Israelism" as well as to support the security of Israel's borders. In the
United States, SPME is accused of acting, via so-called
»campus watch«
groups, against critical statements on university campuses about Israeli and
also U.S. foreign policies in the Middle East. Amongst the most prominent
victims of this
curtailing of academic freedom
are
Norman Finkelstein (formerly at DePaul University and author of, most
recently, Beyond Chutzpah: On the Misuse of Anti-Semitism and the Abuse of
History, 2008) und
Tony Judt (director of New York University's Remarque Institute), who both
have Jewish background.
Pallaschke branded Iran the "biggest threat in the history of mankind" and as
such "to all civilized states." The next speaker was Charles A. Small, professor
of history at Yale University, who argued that Nazism and "radical Islam" had a
common ideology. Even Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, Israeli politician and longtime
Brigadier-General, had alluded to the possibility of a "second Holocaust," he
stressed. There should be no support of Iran from students, scholars and
European governments, especially as Iran's President Mahmud Ahmadinejad
"dehumanizes the other." He hoped that all those groups would "begin to act and
act quickly."
Small further quoted the former chief of staff of the Israeli military, Shaul
Mofaz, with his estimation that within a year an Iran armed with nuclear weapons
was to be expected.[1]
But according to the Iran report by 16 U.S. intelligence agencies, the
National Intelligence Estimate (NIE),
released in December 2007, Iran does not maintain a nuclear weapons program.
This finding was recently
confirmed by Mohammad El-Baradei, Director-General of the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), when addressing the Middle East World Economic
Forum in the Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh. Likewise
IAEA reports state that there is no evidence for an Iranian weapons program.
And if Iran ever decided to divert its civilian energy program to a military
one, the NIE says that "[a]ll agencies recognize the possibility that this
[nuclear weapon] capability may not be attained until after 2015" (p. 7).
A Preventive Nuclear Strike Against the "Satanic Ambitions" of the
"Un-Civilization"?
Menashe Amir, former longtime director of the Persian program of radio
»Kol Israel« (the Voice of Israel) and current head of the Persian website
of the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs
»Hamdami«,
said the Iranian regime was intent on "destroying the world order." The
"dictatorial regime" ruling the country had "satanic ambitions," he claimed. The
Iranian people should be assisted in bringing about a "regime change" – for the
sake of both Iranians and the rest of the world. Amir finished by telling an
anecdote about a private audience he had with U.S. President George W. Bush, to
whom he said: "Iranian citizens are waiting for you to rescue them." Bush
responded: "You know, we've the same problem in Iraq where we are stuck."
Benny Morris, professor of history at the Ben Gurion University of the Negev
(Israel), began his remarks about "A second Holocaust? The threat to Israel"
with a quotation of the professing neo-conservative and Washington Post
political commentator
Charles Krauthammer, foreseeing a nuclear power Iran already by 2009/2010.
With a nuclear-armed Iran, Morris then argued, Israel would lose its
significance. Apart from strategic losses, investment flows as well as the peace
accords signed with Arab governments would be jeopardized. In order to forestall
the strategic challenge of a 'nuclear Iran,' he suggested, Israel ought to
intervene preventively and destroy the "Iranian nuclear project" by conventional
but preferably nuclear weapons. This would certainly cause the death of many
civilians, he admitted, but this prospect lies within the responsibilities of
the Iranians themselves who after all have to account for such of regime – the
"mad mullahs of Tehran." All in all, a nuclear strike was preferable to a
"second Holocaust" which was lurking from this "un-civilization," Morris
concluded.[2]
The "Third Option": Positioning a Terror Organization Against the German
"Steinmeier Policy"?
Paulo Casaca, Portuguese Member of the European Parliament (MEP), dealt with
the role of the European Union (EU) and the "effectiveness of sanctions" against
Iran. The latter would have to go beyond the present United Nations sanctions
framework, he said. "We really need economic sanctions from Germany and the
European Union." Casaca, member of the socialist group of the European
Parliament, then held up a picture he had obtained from "sources" of the
"Iranian resistance." It allegedly showed a tunnel built by Iran's Revolutionary
Guards, a construction said to be in connection with a nuclear weapons program.
The MEP did not hide that this "main Iranian opposition group" he was referring
to was the Mojahedin-e Khalq Organization (MKO, or MeK) – a militant
group listed as terrorist by both the
European Union and the
U.S. State Department. The "non-sense" of the MKO's classification as
terrorist organization ought to be removed, since, he claimed, it was all about
supporting the "Iranian people." In April 2004 Casaca had
spent some days at »Camp Ashraf«, the shielded city and headquarters of the
MKO, 60 kilometers north of Baghdad.
Matthias Küntzel, member of SPME's Board of Directors, warned to turn the
conference into an academic meeting.[3]
Quite on the contrary, its aim should be to intervene politically, and above all
to win the political Left over, he emphasized. Küntzel, who regularly writes for
the Wall Street Journal, concentrated furthermore on German–Iranian trade
relations. With Germany being Iran's number one European trade partner, Berlin
was assigned the vital task to realize the isolation of Iran, he argued. All in
all, a discontinuation of the trade relations between Germany and Iran would
only represent a small sacrifice for the former, but in turn would minimize
danger posed by the latter, Küntzel claimed. But in providing biased figures, he
supersized the German economy's importance for Iran.[4]
His criticism of the German industry's role and his suggestion to have a sit-in
in front of the headquarters of the business giant Siemens were well received by
the assembled left-wingers whose attitude towards big business is rather
skeptical. Even more as Küntzel also demanded that the business interest was not
allowed to stand above morality. Finally, he also called for the break-up of
diplomatic relations with Iran. He further accused the German media – except for
some comments in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, the country's
largest conservative daily – of severe defaults as to the presentation of the
"Iranian danger."
According to Morris, Bush had assured the Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
that Washington was taking care of the Iranian nuclear program. But given the
situation in Iraq there was only little probability of a U.S. military strike,
he added. However, if Democratic Senator Barack Obama was elected president in
November, he believed, then Bush would order an attack on Iran. Despite low
ratings and little support for war on Iran, the outgoing U.S. president would
have nothing to lose by such an attack. The rationale behind such anticipation,
which Morris did not attempt to hide, is that the 'Iran problem' cannot be
devolved unto Obama – who has even promised unconditional negotiations with Iran
–, but could eventually handed over to a Republican President John McCain. The
latter has already insinuated that he would continue the administration's
foreign policy and Iran strategy.
Contrary to the nuclear strike option preferred by Morris, Casaca referred to a
"third option" – beyond "appeasement" and military confrontation. This variant
consisted of supporting the political leadership of the "Iranian opposition" – a
reference made to the MKO. Amir noted that it was sufficient to eliminate a
single "chain" of the nuclear program in order to paralyze it. Thus it would
suffice to "only" bomb the nuclear plants of Natanz and Isfahan, he claimed. But
the best way to bring about a regime change in Iran was to follow his five-point
plan: (1) Providing a serious military threat; (2) expanding the sanctions to
paralyze the Iranian economy; (3) helping the Iranian population and ethnic
minorities, so that they could demand their rights; (4) financially supporting
the majority of the Iranians; (5) organizing the 3 million Iranians in exile, so
that they can exercise pressure upon Western governments to convince them of the
"danger" the Iranian regime posed. If all these measures were carried out, there
would be no necessity for military action, Amir pointed out.
To conclude the starting panel - whose title defined the "Iranian threat" in
relation to Islamism, anti-Semitism, and the nuclear program – its moderator
Alan Posener, chief commentator with the Welt am Sonntag, a German
conservative Sunday paper, warned that one could not "fight dictatorships by
over-cautiousness" but only by "strength." But the latter would not be part of
the "Steinmeier policy." In fact, Posener's call signals the dissatisfaction of
those pushing for a tough stance vis-à-vis Iran, a military option included
therein, with the Iran policy as pursued by the Foreign Ministry that is under
the aegis of Frank-Walter Steinmeier and his Social-Democratic Party (SPD).
Likewise, Volker Perthes and Christoph Bertram, respectively the present and
former directors of the
»German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP)« – a
Berlin-based think-tank advising the German government on foreign policy matters
– were criticized by the conference participants as Steinmeier's Iran policy is
believed to take into account SWP's input. Both Perthes and Bertram plead for a
Western
"strategic partnership" with Iran, while Bertram – also a former director of
the »International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS)« in London – just
recently called for a
détente policy vis-à-vis Iran as the strategy so far had clearly failed. On
the other hand, the Iran stance by Chancellor Angela Merkel and her
Christian-Democratic Party (CDU) is considered to be in line with demands from
Washington and Tel Aviv.
Anti-War Intellectuals as "Purchased Vassals" of the "Iranian Theocracy"?
The following morning was dedicated to the "character of the Iranian Regime."
The Iranian writer Javad Asadian deemed the return of the Twelfth Imam, the
Mahdi, to form the religious and ideological core of the "Iranian
theocracy." The final aim was the appearance of this Shiite Messiah. He further
claimed that Iran needed the atomic bomb in order to use it against Israel.
Thereupon the publicist Nasrin Amirsedghi drew a dark picture of women's rights
in Iran, a country which was stricken with the "deadly pandemic" called "Islamic
republic." There was a "virus introduced" by Iran's Revolutionary Leader
Ayatollah Khomeini, she claimed, which was the Islamic law Sharia,
characterized by "incalculable aggressiveness."
In addition, Germany's prominent Islam and Iran experts Katajun Amirpur, Navid
Kermani and Bahman Nirumand acted as "purchased vassals" of the "Allah state,"
Amirsedghi asserted, and Asadian added that they must be confronted followed by
large applause. Revealingly, those three public figures are admittedly known for
their statements critical to the Iranian government, but at the same time
markedly
reject any 'military solution' to the conflict.
Finally, Miro Aliyar from the Austrian Committee of the
»Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan« explained that Iran was a
multi-ethnic state, and therefore the ethnicities represented therein were
entitled to autonomy. It is
reported that the Bush Administration is supporting separatism in the
Iranian provinces of Kurdistan, Khuzestan, and Baluchestan in an effort to
destabilize and disintegrate the country. Among the beneficiaries of U.S. and
Israeli aid for that goal is the Iranian sister organization of the PKK, the
PJAK, that has conducted cross-border raids into Iran.
Israel To Carry Out a Preventive Strike Against Iran
Under the title "The Holy War against Israel and the West" Ha'aretz
journalist Yossi Melman, the U.S. neo-conservative figurehead Patrick Clawson
and the German political scientist Alexander Ritzmann were due to speak. The
latter underlined that the 'Islamic danger' was simmering inside Germany where
the Lebanese Hezbollah maintained numerous offices. He also condemned the
anti-Israel reporting of the Hezbollah broadcasting company
Al-Manar, which despite expulsion from different satellite networks
could still be received in Europe still via one network. Ritzmann, who is a
Senior Fellow with the neo-conservative Brussels think-tank
»European Foundation for Democracy«,
opined that Iran could at any time activate these "Islamist" groups residing in
Germany for political purposes, and will do so. Nearly all German politicians
believe, Ritzmann claimed, that Iran represented a danger for Israel. However,
the task was to make clear that Iran was also a danger for Europe and the whole
world, he emphasized – indeed a challenge since based on the facts on the ground
Germany's policy-makers are far from conceiving the "Iranian threat" in such
dimensions.
Following the same dictum, intelligence expert Melman described the threat of an
irrationally acting Iran that would acquire nuclear weapons capability between
2009 and 2011. If diplomacy failed, he predicted, Israel had to act militarily;
an approach agreed upon by most Israeli politicians and parties, he added.
Following the so-called Begin Doctrine – named after a former Israeli Prime
Minister and used as basis for the 1981 bombardment of the Iraqi nuclear plant
»Osiraq« – his country would act preventively within one or two years from now:
"I believe Israel will have to do it," Melman concluded. Not sharing Morris'
suggestion of a nuclear attack on Iran, he stressed that conventional tools
might be sufficient. Melman covers intelligence and national security issues for
the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz and is the co-author, with Meir
Javedanfar, of The Nuclear Sphinx of Tehran: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the
State of Iran (2007).
Clawson,
deputy research director at the neo-conservative »Washington Institute for
Near East Policy (WINEP)« – a think-tank ascribed to the Israel Lobby – was
certainly the most prominent international figure speaking at the conference. He
argued that in addition to economic pressures, political and security measures
must be taken, such as accelerating the "military security" of Iran's neighbors.
Moreover, it must be openly voiced that "we will be prepared to deter Iran."
However, if diplomacy failed, he said to me in an interview, he fears that the
military option will be employed. Clawson, one of the
main players in the preparation of the "regime change" enterprise in Iraq,
has over the years demanded an equal lot for Iran.
"Language of Sticks" as the "Only Solution"?
On the panel "Iran and Europe: Dialogue or confrontation?" Saul Singer, The
Jerusalem Post's editorial page editor, argued that Europe's "appeasement
policy" regarding Iran would press Israel towards war.[5]
The author of Confronting Jihad: Israel's Struggle and
the World After 9/11 (2003) praised the event as ringing the
"beginnings of a new anti-fascist Left." Singer, who earlier in the conference
referred to the "Iranian nuclear war program,"
pointed to the Iranian President's disputed statements regarding Israel
and called for Ahmadinejad to be legally pursued. This ought to be done
according to the
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide whose
Article 3(c) says that "[d]irect and public incitement to commit genocide" is
punishable.[6]
However, one can doubt whether Ahmadinejad's falsified statement – which
verbatim
reads "The Imam [Khomeini] said that this regime occupying Jerusalem (een
rezhim-e eshghâlgar-e Qods) must [vanish from] the page of time (bâyad az
safheh-ye ruzgâr mahv shavad)" – can be interpreted as incitement to
genocide, or is a call for a "regime change" in a country that in violation of
the most basic principles of international law continues a decades-long
occupation.
Singer continued stressing that it was not the Iranian nuclear program that
posed problem, but the very existence of the regime. The West could act, and had
to do so, particularly so as it "holds international legitimacy in its hands" –
in fact, a questionable judgment in the view of the reality of Western-led
occupations in the last decade. Especially when it comes to the Iranian nuclear
program, the majority of the international community has
consistently
supported Tehran's position against Western accusations.
Finally, the well-known German journalist Bruno Schirra was convinced that the
only solution regarding the "clerical fascist system" of Iran would be the use
of the "language of sticks." The author of Iran – Sprengstoff für Europa
[Iran – Explosives for Europe] (2006) said that bombing Iran would only postpone
the nuclear program to about five to ten years, so that in the end one would be
forced to live with a nuclear-armed Iran.
There was no mention of the word "dialogue" included in the panel's title, nor
any suggestions in such a direction.
A "New Anti-Fascist Front" Against the "New Hitler"?
The final panel discussion was meant to promote "The need for a new
antifascism." Laying the foundational stone of the evening, Jeffrey Herf,
professor of history at Maryland University, put Ahmadinejad on a level with Bin
Laden and Hitler. It was a matter of defying "fanatic anti-Semitism," he
insisted, an ideological fanaticism that must not be underestimated.
The next speaker was Los Angeles-based Kayvan Kaboli, spokesperson of the
»Green Party of Iran«.
He considered the "Tehran regime [to be] of fascist essence," which not only in
a few years, but right now represented an international threat – just like
"global warming" as he went great length to explain. Iran, Kaboli asserted,
pursued a "program of territorial expansion" and used Iraq as stepping stone to
eradicate Israel. The "clero-fascist regime" in Tehran planned to "islamize the
world," he said. And the European "appeasement policy" toward Iran "for the sake
of juicy contracts" was "shameful." Kaboli finally called upon Iranian
"opposition" groups to declare support for Israel. After all, the "two fascisms"
– Nazi-Germany and Iran – were the same and also equally dangerous. It was the
formation of a worldwide anti-fascist front, he suggest, which presented a way
out.
The highlight of the congress was the contribution made by Thomas von der
Osten-Sacken. The founder and director of the NGO
WADI,
a German 'relief and human rights' organization mainly active in Northern Iraq,
made it quite clear from the very beginning that what he called "Islam-Nazism"
was very similar to Germany's National-Socialism. Therefore anti-fascism was
necessary, whose aim had to be to "bash these Islam-Nazis, put them in jail, and
kill them" – a statement which was accompanied by large applause. As
"anti-fascists" we had to "wage war," not militarily however, but the war must
be taken seriously, he insisted. Just like in the 1930s and 40s the
universalistic vision must be to fight "despotism."
Von der Osten-Sacken, who is considered a leading figure of the so-called "Anti-Deutschen"
[Anti-Germans] – a well established ideological strand among the German Left
which deems unconditional support for Israel's policies as consequential lesson
of Germany's hegemonic strive in World War II and its Holocaust crimes –
presented an agenda for the "democratization" of the Middle East. This included:
secularization and "rule of law"; a "restructuring of the economy"; a
"federalization" instead of nationalization, in which Kurdish efforts for
independence would be considered; against „gender apartheid"; and against both
Iran and Syria. These programmatic points, which strongly reminded of the 2004
U.S.
initiative for a "Greater Middle East," were supplemented by his very
curious interpretation of the ongoing Iraq War. The countries of the region,
such as Iraq, are "rotten from the core" so that one only had to "screw the
cork" and war would inevitably break out.
Altogether, he denied a nuclear weapons-free zone, which follows that Israel
would remain the only country in the Middle East possessing such weapons of mass
destruction. To conclude, Von der Osten-Sacken outlined his "vision" for the
future of the region. He wished one day to be able to take the Intercity train
from Tel Aviv via Amman and Baghdad to Tehran without any passport check, then
go to a Tehrani disco, drink beer and later on have a sunbath at the Persian
Gulf.[7]
Broder's Slander Volley
The last speaker of the conference, Henryk M. Broder, was the most prominent
figure among the German participants. An author for liberal-left outlets, above
all Germany's most influential political weekly magazine Der Spiegel, is
notorious for his defamatory polemics. In his 2006 best-seller Hurra, wir
kapitulieren! [Hurray, we capitulate!], he accuses the West to "cave in"
vis-à-vis Islamists and thus to promote Europe's "Islamization." Signaling his
agreement with and referring to what his predecessor had outlined before, Broder
quoted a Palestinian journalist friend whom he used to meet in Bethlehem with
the sentence "It's not about the occupation, it's about the girls on the beach!"
He stressed that the situation at hand was as "terrible and cruel" as in the
1930s. In an unmistakable reference to Nazi-Germany, Broder remarked that the
topic Iran "looks somehow familiar to us." But there was an important difference
between 1939/40 and 2008, he added: nowadays, there was no Churchill who was
able to act after negotiations failed. On his co-edited web-blog,
Die Achse des Guten [The Axis of Good], which assembles a pool of
writers and registers
nearly 400,000 unique visitors per month, Broder called Iran the
"Fourth Reich." The "idea of war" was "horrifying" to him, but this option
could not be omitted, he underscored.
Then, he contented himself with quoting passages from German daily papers of
2006 about the West–Iran standoff. The citations delivered the impression of
European politicians constantly offering attractive incentive packages to the
Iranians; but with resolute defiance, Tehran had been rejecting them.
Furthermore, Iran had also repeatedly ignored ultimatums set by the West without
shrugging its shoulders. This absurd lining up of newspaper excerpts caused a
certain amusement within the audience. He did not need to read out the
quotations from 2007, Broder added, because their content could easily be
imagined. He finally quoted the Iranian president as saying "the Europeans are
stupid," and complacently added that Ahmadinejad might be right.
Then Broder turned to the
»Arbeiterfotografie«
(Concerned
Photography). This group of politically committed photographers was the
first in Germany to reveal the
mistranslations of the Iranian President's alleged "Israel must be wiped off
the map" statements made during an anti-Zionism conference held in Tehran in
October 2005. On its
initiative the »Bundeszentrale für Politische Bildung (bpb)« [Federal Center
for Political Education], a public think-tank, ordered the examination of
Ahmadinejad's remarks by the translation service of the German Parliament, the
Bundestag. As a result, Associated Press (AP), Tagesschau.de
(website of Germany's most widely watched TV newscast) and SpiegelOnline
(the online edition of Der Spiegel) conceded their unchecked adoption of
translations dispatched then by the major Western news agencies. However, they
have not yet corrected their mistakes in previously published items.
The issue of Ahmadinejad's actual words gained prominence as late as this March
with an article appearing in the country's largest daily, the Süddeutsche
Zeitung, where the renowned Islam and Iran expert, Katajun Amirpur, pointed
to the widespread mistranslation of this
"Iranian key sentence" and the danger it harbors for serving as a pretext
for waging war an Iran allegedly intent on "wiping Israel off the map."
Not amused by Amirpur's revelations then, at the conference Broder relinquished
a rude tirade against "those who sparked the debate" with the bpb – a reference
to the »Arbeiterfotografie«: Already calling the latter
"lumpenproletariat" in a blog, Broder now added to this
"troublemakers," "cranks," "bums," "anti-social elements," "subsidy receivers"
and "madmen." However, he stressed, the bpb had "elegantly" solved the issue
kicked off by those "fools." In fact, the
website particularly provided by the public think-tank to open a discussion
on Ahmadinejad's statements and "Iran's position" hardly presents a balanced,
let alone educational account: From three contributions in total, one is by
Matthias Küntzel and another – a polemic – by Broder himself.
The Auschwitz Lesson: Suspending Human Rights in Case of Emergency?
In the final discussion, the U.S. historian Herf called for a "new Atlanticism."
Such an "Atlantic alliance" should wage the "long war against radical Islam" – a
phrase at the core of
neo-conservative thinking. At the same time he predicted that if the "U.S.
withdraws from the world," especially from Iraq, then Europe will be exposed to
greater danger.
Von der Osten-Sacken, on his part, claimed that a large majority of the Iranian
population was in favor of "liberation." He underlined that we were in a "state
of emergency." The lesson of Auschwitz meanwhile comprised the idea that "in
some situations, human rights are to be suspended," he was convinced. Finally,
Kaboli recommended including each willing group – regardless of its democratic
posture – into an "anti-fascist front."
Fully in compliance with Küntzel's initial desire, the conference at no time
ran the risk of being only approximately academic. Following his desire for
political intervention, some of the prominent Berlin conference participants
intend to talk to German Chancellor Angela Merkel. In order to likewise
refer to the alleged danger posed by Iran and to require concrete action,
they moreover wished for a Bundestag hearing and also intend to talk
to German companies.
All conference participants agreed upon the notion of a "worldwide threat"
posed by the new quasi-"fascist" state of Iran. They also agreed upon an
iron fist as best response to this.
[8] Among this sea of consent, there was only a single moment in
the conference where a dissenting view was voiced. A bearded, Jewish man
from the audience said that the picture drawn between Good and Evil was not
so clear for him as presented by the panelists. Immediately, he was
interrupted by the moderator and asked not to issue a statement (whereas
others who agreed with what had been said were extensively allowed to make
their case) but to ask a question. However, he was not able to do so, as the
microphone was promptly taken away from him by one of the organizers.
Against Iran and Islam: Unholy Alliances of the "Anti-Fascist Front"
With the participation of key Berlin panelists, an almost
identical conference, entitled "The Iranian Threat," took place at the
University of Vienna/Austria on the following day. The congress was
organized by SPME Austria and
»Stop the Bomb – Coalition against the Iranian
extermination program«,
an initiative endorsed by over 4,000 petition signees, who demand a total
isolation of Iran. Among them are Austrian Nobel Literature Prize laureate
Elfriede Jelinek and prominent Dutch writer Leon de Winter.[9]
In an
interview for
SpiegelOnline – the very popular online edition of
Der Spiegel –, conducted by Broder, in August 2005, De Winter states:
"Sometimes there is only the choice between disaster and catastrophe, and
then one must remember that the first and foremost task of the state is to
guarantee the life and security of its citizens. […] We deal with a new
totalitarianism. No, this one is not new, but is only different. After the
left fascism of the Soviets, after the right fascism of the Nazis, Islamism
is the fascism of the 21st century."[10]
»Stop the Bomb« emerged out of protest against ongoing trade relations
between Austria and Iran. Especially the 2007 gas deal, worth of 22 billion
euros, between the Austrian OMV (Österreichische Mineralölverwaltung),
Central Europe's leading oil and gas corporation, and the National Iranian
Oil Company (NIOC), is a thorn in the initiators' flesh as it might
undermine their much-desired, total isolation of Iran. In Berlin, the German
journalist Schirra has uttered the wish to form a German variant of the
»Stop the Bomb« initiative.
Unlike the German media, the Austrian daily
Der Standard published a
conference report headlined
"Threats of War from the Lecture Hall." The contents and threats that
were uttered in Vienna led Der Standard's Senior Editor Gudrun Harrer
to assume that these both congresses must have been a concerted lobbying
"roadshow" in an effort to push for war on Iran and to brand
anti-Zionism as anti-Semitism.
The long-serving Mideast expert Udo Steinbach, director from 1976 to 2007 of
Germany's foremost Middle East research entity, the »German Orient
Institute«, has called the Berlin conference's goal to form an "AIPAC" in
German-speaking countries. And indeed the resemblance to the
»American Israeli Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) –
America's pro-Israel Lobby«
– deemed as of one of the most
influential
American lobbies
– is hard to overlook.
Akin to AIPAC, WINEP and other parts of the Israel Lobby and the wider
neo-conservative movement, the German-speaking variant is beating the drums
for war on Iran.
Next on the agenda is a date 31 May–1 June at Cologne University, which the
audience was given notice of by flyers in the entrance hall of the Berlin
conference: The
"Kritische Islamkonferenz: Der Islam als politische Herausforderung"
[Critical Islam Conference: Islam as Political Challenge]. The event is
linked on the website of the right-wing, Islamophobic
Politically Incorrect (PI), which in turn also links to Broder's
Achse des Guten weblog. PI is also sympathizing with
Honestly Concerned, an initiative founded in May 2002 to counter
anti-Israel stances in the media and also of the main supporters of the
Berlin conference. By mid-May two major German organizations committed to
fighting the "Islamization" of Germany and Europe merged into the
»Bürgerbewegung (Citizens' Movement) Pax Europa«.
The bolstering anti-Islam movement in Germany appears to enjoy privileged
ties with emerging neo-conservative ideologues. Allegedly in favor of
Israel, the United States, and European values, those groups have designed a
new globally omnipresent threat – this time, Iran in the company of Islam –
which they cultivate both in domestic (immigrant integration) and foreign
policy (Iran and its "evil" allies) stages. Startlingly, for building such
an unholy alliance strugglers against anti-Semitism have unconsciously
joined with rightist extremists.
These agents provocateurs have specialized in distorting the
realities (forcing on the "clash of civilizations" concept upon social and
political conflicts) and in perverting the lessons modern history provides.
In their "West against the (Islamic) rest" paradigm, they ruthlessly
camouflage the horrendous consequences of their recent drum beats, leaving
the over one million Iraqi victims of the ongoing occupation a lone footnote
in their bloody efforts to "promote democracy." The blunt assumptions and
statements uttered at the Berlin conference expose – without further need of
comment – their homophobic attitudes. Even more gravely, they
invoke the memory of millions of Holocaust victims to suit their one and
only agenda: the "long war." The self-proclaimed "anti-fascist" supporters
of Bush's neo-conservative project are in reality anti-democrats; and
certainly they are not pro-Israeli or pro-American – nor are they
pro-Iranian: they are pro-war.
And: It remains to be seen whether the conference organizers' will to win
over the Left will succeed. The German Left Party plays a decisive role here
as it must decide whether it is willing to continue the path of
anti-imperialism and anti-war, or is ready to bury them at the altar of a
grotesquely defined raison d'Etat – as Gregor Gysi, head of Die
Linke's large Bundestag caucus, has recently
demanded. While Broder
applauded him, he was boldly
criticized by foreign and peace policy experts of the party-affiliated
foundation who doubted if Gysi was really advocating a "leftist policy." But
despite the mobilization of "pro-Zionist"
factions amidst leftist milieus, the huge crowd gathering at the Berlin
1968 Congress keep the hope astute that war-mongering will have a hard time
selling its propaganda to sympathizers of the Left.
Version of 1 June 2008.
The author thanks Judith Schlenker (Germany) for translating an initial
version of the report from German.
About
the author: *
Ali Fathollah-Nejad (M.Sc. cum laude, M.A., B.A., B.Sc.), born 1981
in Tabriz/Iran and raised in Germany, was educated in binational study
programs in France (Sciences-Po Lille), Germany (U Münster) and the
Netherlands (U Twente) covering the fields of political science, sociology,
law, history, and economics. His research interests comprise
international affairs, aspects of globalization, the international politics
of the Middle East, the foreign policies of France, Germany, the United
States and Iran as well as politico−cultural issues of immigrant
integration. He publishes in English, German, and French with his articles
being translated moreover into Spanish, Italian, and Persian.
He is the author of a detailed study on the U.S.−Iran Crisis, entitled
Iran in the Eye of Storm – Backgrounds of a Global
Crisis,
which had been consulted over 8,000 times from winter 2005 to spring 2007.
Since 2006, he has delivered numerous lectures all across Germany.
Further, he works as a freelance culture and music journalist.
[3] For the
views expressed in his talk, please refer to both his articles
"Ahmadinejads Mission" [Ahmadinejad's Mission], Bundeszentrale
für Politische Bildung, 25 April 2008, and
"The Tehran–Berlin Axes", The Wall Street Journal (Europe),
15 May 2008.
[4] Küntzel's
presentation of figures in terms of German–Iran economic relations was
biased. He estimated the German–Iranian trade volume to be at 5 billion
euros, which is correct, but he did not mention that as a result of the
sanctions imposed upon Iran in recent years, a pressure mainly exerted
by the U.S. Treasury, German exports had
halved to
3 billion euros for 2007. While trade with Iran equals less than 0.5
percent of Germany's total export volume, Iran covered 40 percent of her
imports from Germany, Küntzel claimed. In reality, Iran covers roughly
10 percent of its total supplies worth of
over 60 billion U.S. dollars from Germany. Furthermore
Küntzel claimed that about three-quarters of the small and medium-sized
enterprises in Iran were dependent on goods imported from Germany. This
is also rapidly changing with Iranian firms turning to Asian countries
and at the same time making efforts to increase domestic production
capabilities.
In conclusion one must note that Küntzel supersized Germany's economic
weight for Iran, thus serving the purpose of supporting his argument for
a cancellation of German trade ties with Iran, which would then result
in a quasi-total isolation of the Middle Eastern heavyweight. But the
situation in a globalized world economy is more diverse than this
simplistic assessment suggests. As a consequence of the U.S.-pushed
sanctions regime imposed upon European economies, those have experienced
significantly losses in trade shares with Iran. However, a complete
breakup of the trade relations with Iran would have damaging long-term
consequences for the world's number one export nation, as the chairman
of the "North Africa–Middle East Initiative of the German Economy,"
Matthias Mitscherlich, emphasized in an
interview on 29 November 2007. Meanwhile, European retreat from the
lucrative Iranian market has made China, an EU rival, the most important
trade partner of Tehran touching a bilateral trade volume of
25 billion dollars this year. The business volume with the United
Arab Emirates (UAE) has
hit 12 billion dollars, 10 billion of which are Iranian imports. The
UAE is believed to serve as bridgehead to the Iranian market for U.S.
firms.
[5] In early
2008, the Jerusalem Post announced that it will begin a
partnership with the Wall Street Journal including joint
marketing and exclusive publication in Israel of The Wall Street
Journal Europe. Its
current head editor is David Horovitz who in 2004 replaced current
Wall Street Journal editorial board member Bret Stephens. In
addition, in 2007, Dow Jones & Company, the owner of the Wall Street
Journal – whose editorial board is considered as supporting
neo-conservative foreign policy stances – was bought by media mogul
Rupert Murdoch.
[7]
Due to Von der Osten-Sacken's anti-Muslim agitation, the already
independent WADI Austria recently dissolved from the main German
organization to become what is now
LEEZA.
[8] At the
conference were also present: Wahied Wahdat Hagh, political scientist,
former member of
MEMRI
Germany (»The Middle East Media Research Institute«),
online columnist for Welt Debatte and
Senior Research Fellow
with the Brussels think-tank »European Foundation for Democracy«; Klaus
Faber, German State Secretary ret., attorney from Potsdam and acting
chairman of the »Wissenschaftsforum der Sozialdemokratie in Berlin,
Brandenburg and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern« and co-editor of Neu-alter
Judenhass: Antisemitismus, arabisch-israelischer Konflikt und
europäische Politik [New-Old Jew-Hatred: Anti-Semitism,
Arab–Israeli Conflict and European Policies] (Verlag für Berlin
Brandenburg, 2006).
[9] Other
important signees are the Berlin and Vienna conference speakers Küntzel,
Casaca, Kaboli, Herf, and furthermore Hermann L. Gremliza (editor of
the 'Anti-German' weekly magazine konkret), Kazem Moussavi
(foreign policy speaksperson of the »Green Party of Iran« in Europe),
Karl Pfeifer (leading
journalist with the Austrian, pro-Israel online journal Die
Jüdische [The Jewish]), Sacha Stawski (editor-in-chief of the online
Honestly Concerned), Ruth Contreras (member of SPME's Board of
Directors, coordinator for SMPE in Europe and chairwoman of SPME
Austria), chief editors of
»German Media Watch« (a pro-Israel media monitoring group
established in 2001),
Andrei S. Markovits (professor of Political Science at the
University of Michigan and author of the German-language book Amerika,
Dich hasst sich's besser. Antiamerikanismus und Antisemitismus in
Europa, published by konkret's publishing house »Konkret-Literatur
Verlag« in 2004), Micha Brumlik (who was present at the Berlin
conference is professor for Educating Science at the University of
Frankfurt/Main and co-editor of the political-scientific monthly
magazine Blätter für deutsche und international Politik),
Christopher Gillibrand (journalist with the
neo-conservative The Brussels Journal – The Voice of Conservatism
in Europe, which is published by the Zurich-based non-profit
organization »Society for the Advancement of Freedom in Europe (SAFE)«
and features articles from the American right-conservative daily The
Washington Times),
»Scottish Friends of Israel«, Raimund Fastenbauer (Secretary-General
of the Austrian Federal Association of the Jewish Religious Community [»Bundesverband
der Israelitischen Kultusgemeinden«]), and many others.
[10]
In own translation.
The German original reads: " Manchmal hat man nur die Wahl zwischen
einem Desaster und einer Katastrophe, und dann muss man sich daran
erinnern, dass es die erste und wichtigste Aufgabe des Staates ist, das
Leben und die Sicherheit seiner Bürger zu garantieren. […] Wir haben es
mit einem neuen Totalitarismus zu tun. Nein, er ist nicht neu, er ist
nur anders. Nach dem linken Faschismus der Sowjets, nach dem rechten
Faschismus der Nazis, ist der Islamismus der Faschismus des 21.
Jahrhunderts." The interview can also be
retrieved via WADI's website.
... Payvand News - 06/05/08 ...
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