By Ali
Fathollah-Nejad
When Promising Ideas Threaten to be Buried in Transatlantic Waters
Last week, on 28 October, a new German government
took office. A coalition of Chancellor Angela Merkel's still ruling conservative
Christian Democratic/Christian Social Union (CDU/CSU) with the pro-business Free
Democrats (FDP) as junior partner replaced the Grand Coalition of conservatives
(CDU/CSU) and social-democrats (SPD). While the new administration is faced with
multiple socio-economic crises internally, on the external front the challenges
are not less significant.At a
press conference held in Berlin a few days after the election outcome,
prospective foreign minister Guido Westerwelle[1] refused
to respond in English after a BBC reporter had asked him to do so. When, in
quite a non-chalant manner, he added that "This is Germany here", the field for
polemics had been opened. Not only did speculations spark about the FDP leader's
supposedly missing English language proficiency (although one would hardly think
that any of his predecessors did better - quite the contrary), the political
leanings of a FDP-run Foreign Ministry entered the debate.
Pragmatic answers to Mideast
challenges
In an interview[2]
to the journal of the German Council on Foreign Relations (DGAP) - perhaps the
most influential German foreign policy think-tank[3] -,
Westerwelle's statements were quite astonishing. On the war in Afghanistan, he
pledged "to end every German military deployment as quickly as is realistically
possible" while nonetheless echoing the highly controversial claim made by
former Defense Minister Peter Struck (SPD) that Germany was being defended in
the Hindu-Kush. Still he appeared more straightforward than many in the SPD or
even the Green Party - who tend to succumb to a paternalistic "liberal
interventionism" - when stating that the Afghanistan operation was not based on
"altruism".
On Iran, he recognized the central
requirement of improving U.S.-Iranian relations and praised Obama's
"de-escalation" imprint as opposed to George W. Bush's "policies of containment
and escalation". As a second key element, he pointed to the precarious security
architecture both globally and regionally. The nuclear powers would need to cut
their arsenals, thus following their obligations enshrined in the
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)[4]. "The more seriously the
existing nuclear powers take their obligation to help create a world free of
nuclear weapons, the greater credence they will have in the eyes of states like
Iran, who [sic!] find the prospect of possessing a nuclear arsenal
extremely tempting," Westerwelle added.
He further pleaded for a regional
approach to the manifold Middle East conflicts, modeled on the so-called
Helsinki Process, the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE),
in the 1970s. For some years now, conflict researchers and international peace
organizations have strongly advocated that a Conference on Security and
Cooperation in the Middle East (CSCME)[5] be set as number
one of the global political agenda. However, while the latter envisages civil
society participation, Westerwelle's suggestion comprises the involvement of the
U.S., Russia and the UN.
Despite the unsatisfying details of
his Middle East plan - which by the way underlines Berlin's commitment to a
two-state solution in the Israel/Palestine conflict -, there appears to be an
improvement from past orientations. While the former Foreign Ministry headed by
the SPD's Frank-Walter Steinmeier proved to be quite disregardful of such an
idea, the acknowledgement by the FDP, which over the last few years has
consistently favored such an initiative, is without doubt a development in the
right direction as how to handle the much-loaded Mideast crises.
The Coalition Agreement:
Westerwelle's foreign policy ideas enriched with a conservative flavor
The conceptions promoted by
Westerwelle have indeed found their way into the Coalition Agreement[6]
(pp. 121-122) - though enriched with a clear conservative handwriting. This is
displayed when in Berlin's official attempt to prevent Iran from acquiring
nuclear weapons, the agreement states that the new government, along with its
partners, would support harsher sanctions against Tehran if necessary. Such a
political instrument was hardly favored by the FDP in the past which had been
rather critical towards the Grand Coalition's handling of the Iran dossier and
Berlin's unflinching insistence on the "carrot and stick" approach that after
all proved to be a failure[7]. On the contrary, voicing the
stark resentment from considerable branches of the industry, the Liberals
criticized the government in Bundestag appellations[8]
for imposing trade limitations on German companies, which went beyond the
sanctions framework as mandated by UN Security Council resolutions.
Yet, in a speech at the London
School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) on 22 October, the President of
the Federation of German
Industries (BDI), Hans-Peter Keitel, pointed to the fact that Washington
would not wish to see the sanctions regime bypassed. This indicates that Germany
still fears the U.S. Treasury Department's warnings to be excluded from the vast
American market if trade ties with Iran are being maintained. This happens while
German entrepreneurs moan about losing the Iranian market while Chinese and
American companies, directly and indirectly respectively, get increasingly
involved there.
Providing a nice face for
"Germany's defense in the Hindu-Kush"
Nevertheless, the FDP's fresh
conceptions are likely to be counterbalanced by a strong transatlanticist camp
within the much stronger Union parties. One of the latter's exponents is the new
Defense Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg (CSU). The Bavarian aristocrat is a
member of the DGAP, the
Atlantik-Brücke ("Atlantic Bridge"), the
Aspen
Institute, and spokesman for his party's Transatlantic Forum - all of which
advocate a strict Atlantic orientation of German foreign policy. Being one of
the most prominent[9] German politicians, Guttenberg is
expected to provide a handsome image for the highly contested war in
Afghanistan, which his predecessor, the sallow Franz-Josef Jung (CDU), plainly
failed to do. Jens Berger, whose blog Der Spiegelfechter ("shadow
boxer") is amongst the country's most read[10], writes[11]:
-In Washington there is no single neoconservative think-tank in which the name
Guttenberg would not prompt a pleasurable click on the tongue". In the
meanwhile, it is expected[12] that the policies around the
"Afghanistan problem" will not be set in the liberal Foreign Ministry, but in
the conservative Defense Ministry.
Hawks vs. public opinion:
Militarization or security?
A definite darling of America's
neo-cons is
Eckart von Klaeden, an Atlantik-Brücke executive committee member,
who is the Foreign Policy Spokesman for the CDU/CSU Parliamentary Group. Known
for his hawkish stances, he can be expected to lobby against any FDP initiatives
trespassing the transatlantic framework. Despite a majority[13]
of Germans favoring the Bundeswehr's withdrawal from Afghanistan,
Guttenberg[14] and Klaeden[15] have
repeatedly favored the military engagement there - which the Obama
Administration wants the Germans to even boost further. In December, the
Bundestag will decide upon the continuation of its mandate for what
euphemistically is often called "peace and stabilization mission".
By currently providing about 4,500
troops in the no-longer calm northern areas of Afghanistan, Berlin finds itself
as third largest troop contributor after Washington and London. It is now being
discussed to increase the level of German troops to 7,000. This might reflect
the country's great-power aspirations, as Andreas Buro - one of the founding
figures of the German peace movement - accurately notes[16]:
"While the NATO states Canada and the Netherlands have announced their troops to
be withdrawn already by 2010/2011, the Federal Government still adamantly
adheres to the war alliance. Not because of Afghanistan, but because Berlin
would like to distinguish itself as an important EU military pillar for the
leading NATO power, the US."
However big the political odds are -
be it the CDU/CSU's transatlantic hawks or America's call for a rising
engagement of her allies - a rational-pragmatic input by the FDP could
constructively impact the foreign policy discourse in Europe's largest country.
One can hope that the insight gains in prominence that the only truly
responsible way to help Afghanistan to free itself from this mess is to end the
NATO war. That the latter provides an indispensable feature for the continued
armed conflict in that war-torn country must not remain a historic lesson that
only the Left Party and the peace movement have learned. Yet, it remains to be
seen how successful the latter two can articulate public opinion and thus force
the new government to abstain from a further militarization of Berlin's foreign
policy. Germany's - and for that matter, any other NATO member's - security is
not defended in the Hindu-Kush, but jeopardized.
[1] See Cate
Connolly, "German
election: Guido Westerwelle sets sights on foreign ministry",
guardian.co.uk, 28 Sep. 2009.
[2] "Guido
Westerwelle's Foreign Policy: Germany's new foreign minister answers IP",
IP Global, 27 Sep. 2009.
[3] See
James G. McGann, The Global "Go-To Think Tanks": The Leading Public Policy
Research Organizations In The World, Philadelphia, PA: Think Tanks and
Civil Societies Program, University of Pennsylvania, 2008,
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/files/2008_Global_Go_To_Think_Tanks.pdf, Table
No. 2, p. 26.
[4] For the
text of the NPT, see
http://www.fas.org/nuke/control/npt/text/npt2.htm.
[5] "CSCME:
Number one on the world political agenda", 1 Feb. 2007, IPPNW.de,
Initiated by IPPNW (International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War)
e.V. (Registered Association) and IALANA (International Association of Lawyers
Against Nuclear Arms) Germany.
[6] "Wachstum.
Bildung. Zusammenhalt. Der Koalitionsvertrag zwischen CDU, CSU und FDP",
16th Legislative Period, enacted and signed on 26 Oct. 2009.
[7] See Christoph
Bertram, "Rethinking
Iran: From Confrontation to Cooperation", Chaillot Paper, No. 110
(August 2008), Paris: European Union Institute for Security Studies.
[8] See
http://dipbt.bundestag.de/extrakt/ba/WP16/121/12109.html.
[9] See e.g.
"Beliebteste
Politiker: Guttenberg zieht an Merkel vorbei", FR-online.de, 24
July 2009.
[10] See
http://www.deutscheblogcharts.de/archiv/2009-42.html
[11] Jens Berger, "Deutschland
wird Schwarz(Gelb): Der Koalitionsvertrag steht und die Versprechen des
Wahlkampfs sind vergessen", Telepolis, 24 Oct. 2009.
[12] René Heilig, "Bundeswehr
bleibt an der Afghanistan-Front: Verbündete ziehen ab, Deutschland steht zum Â"MittelwegÂ"
- was will Westerwelle?", Neues Deutschland (Berlin), 22. Oct. 2009.
[13] See e.g. "stern-Umfrage
zu Afghanistan: Deutsche für Abzug - und für Jung", stern.de,
16 Sep. 2009.
[14] Karl-Theodor zu
Guttenberg, "Afghans
Respond Favorably to NATO Efforts in Afghanistan", Atlantic-Community.org,
7 Jan. 2008.
[15] Eckart von Klaeden,
"Afghanistan: Der richtige Einsatz" [Afghanistan
Is Not Iraq - Germany Must Stay!], Die Zeit, No. 30/2009.
[16]
Andreas Buro, "Abzug jetzt:
Friedenspolitik statt Krieg", junge Welt (Berlin), 8 Oct. 2009, p.
8.
... Payvand News - 11/16/09 ... --