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World Socialist Web Site www.wsws.org

http://wsws.org/articles/2003/mar2003/glei-m15_prn.shtml


WSWS : News & Analysis : Middle East : Iraq

Paris, Berlin and the war against Iraq

By Peter Schwarz
15 March 2003

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The March-April edition of the magazine Gleichheitwill be published this
week. This is the editorial of the latest edition.

As this edition of Gleichheit goes to print, American preparations for a war
against Iraq have reached the point of no return. The latest comments
from the White House make absolutely clear that the Bush administration is
prepared to wage war at all costs.

During the past few weeks it has become increasingly evident that the
issue of so-called Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, UN inspections and
the debate on the Security Council serve as a pretext for a war which is
being waged for very different aims—the takeover of Iraqi oilfields, a
reorganisation of the entire Middle East under American domination and
the consolidation of American hegemony against its rivals in Europe and
Asia.

European governments have reluctantly come to the conclusion that they
can no longer avoid an open conflict with the US over the future course
of world politics. While the British and Spanish prime ministers, Blair and
Aznar, have joined forces with the transatlantic Great Power, the
standpoint taken by France and Germany has hardened. From diplomatic
manoeuvring aimed at securing their influence on developments in the
Middle East, France and Germany have now gone on to develop their own
initiatives and construct their own alliances. The term “axis”, which one
recently could only find in history books, has now become a key word in
official political language—for example, to describe the current
collaboration between Paris-Berlin-Moscow.

The unilateral and ruthless conduct of the Washington administration has
forced the governments of these three countries to develop a clearer
common line against the Bush war plans than they had originally wished.
Behind such a common stance rests exclusively the concern by each of
these countries for its own global interests. They have no objections when
Iraq’s national sovereignty is treated with contempt—as is demonstrated by
their support for strict weapons inspections. Neither are they opposed to
a reorganisation of the region, nor are they in principle opposed to the
use of military force—as was demonstrated by their ready support and
participation in the recent war in Yugoslavia.

The real basis for their stance becomes apparent when one considers
their domestic policies. When it comes to the issue of the dismantling of
democratic rights and the strengthening of the state apparatus, Paris and
Berlin have nothing to learn from Washington. Both European governments
are currently in the process of planning the most fundamental cuts in
their welfare states since the end of the Second World War. Workers’
rights, together with health provisions and care for the elderly, are being
systematically dismantled. The French and German governments are
reacting, on the one hand, to intensified global competition by seeking to
make workers shoulder the consequences. In addition the foreign policy
rift over Iraq has rapidly worsened the economic climate. Already there
are calls in the American press for an economic boycott of the rebellious
French.

On the other hand, further cuts in the welfare system are aimed at freeing
up finance for rearmament. France has already made a substantial increase
in its military budget this year and Germany is remodelling its army into an
international intervention force. A recent remark by the Social Democratic
Party Defence Minister Peter Struck, that “German interests could also be
defended in the Hindukusch”, recently unleashed a storm of protest. In
the meantime there is widespread agreement over defence policy in the
SPD-Green Party government camp.

The refusal by the US to respect established political institutions and
regulations has been carefully noted in the German press. In the event of
a unilateral invasion of Iraq by the US, the Süddeutsche Zeitung
anticipates the end of the “collective security system, established out of
the ruins of the League of Nations and nourished by the power of a
continually growing international law.” In its latest edition the usually
reserved Die Zeit newspaper asserts in its lead article titled “Hyper-power
USA” that America is undertaking a “morally inspired policy of hegemony”.

“As soon as the war against Iraq commences”, according to Die Zeit
publisher Michael Naumann, “a profound split will open up in the old world
order which had guaranteed Europe 50 years of peace under American
protection.”

In light of this development other newspapers have pleaded for a policy of
military strength. “Without military strength then there can be no
convincing deterrent. And without deterrent no respect can be won from
the United States,” wrote the Handelsblatt. “Europe must devote itself to
a policy based on strength, in order to put an end to the imbalance which
has prevailed since the end of the Cold War.”

Against such a background it becomes apparent why a movement against
the war cannot be based on illusions in the French and German
governments. Any support for the French and German governments would
transform the antiwar movement into an instrument for the aims of
European rearmament, which is being deliberately pursued in Paris and
Berlin. Such a movement would cut itself off from the mass of the
population who are being called upon to finance militarism in the midst of
a growing social crisis. And it would help to set in motion a spiral of
rearmament which could lead to even more terrible wars—including a
military confrontation between the Great Powers themselves.

The movement against an Iraq war must be organised independently from
all bourgeois institutions— whether it be European governments or the
United Nations. It must extend beyond national borders and turn to
working people by combining the issue of war with social questions.

In this respect the mass demonstrations of February 15 represented a
historic turning point. Millions of people protested against war across the
globe, including in the US itself. The extent of the demonstrations—in
many places the biggest for a half century—surprised even the organisers
of the protest. The New York Times conceded with astonishment: “The
fracturing of the Western alliance over Iraq and the huge antiwar
demonstrations around the world this weekend are reminders that there
may still be two superpowers on the planet: the United States and world
public opinion.”

The protests gave voice to social discontent which has been brewing for
years, but up until now has found no organised political outlet. The
alienation of large sections of the broad masses from official politics had
up until now taken predominantly passive forms—declining voter
participation and political disinterest. Now, however, many millions have
actively intervened in political life.

The massive participation on demonstrations inside the US itself brought an
important fact to light: the Bush administration is not acting from a
position of strength but rather from weakness and internal crisis. With its
aggressive foreign policy the US government is responding to domestic
problems for which it has no answer—the dramatic polarisation of American
society, the declining living standards of broad layers and huge economic
and budget deficits.

George W. Bush, who came to power in the wake of a stolen election,
rests on an extremely narrow social base. He represents the moneyed
oligarchy which was able to fabulously enrich itself during the stock
market boom of the ’90sand—as is exposed in the case of Enron—was
prepared to employ thoroughly criminal methods. He represents the
coming to power of the underworld. He remains in power only because
the Democratic Party, propped up by the same layers of the superrich, has
refrained from any sort of opposition while the US mass media has
effectively blocked out any dissenting opinion. In light of the general social
decline Bush resorts to the military option, the only area in which the US
has real superiority. This explains his aggressive, ruthless and irresponsible
actions.

The social polarisation of the US not only explains Bush’s politics, it is also
the key to establishing an alternative. The American working class—millions
of manual and clerical workers struggling for a decent living in factories,
service industries, schools and offices across the country—represent a
powerful social force who, unlike America’s privileged elite, lack their own
political organisation and perspective.

European governments have no interest in mobilising the masses of the
US—after all they are very well aware that it was American imperialism
which came to their aid at the end of the Second World War to ward off
revolutionary social explosions. This explains why conservative forces in
Europe—including the opposition parties in Germany—line up in their
majority with Bush. They regard social upheaval in the US, which would
inevitably be echoed in Europe, as an even greater risk than Bush’s
unilateral politics. The official “left” in Europe—in Germany, the Social
Democrats and the Green Party—also refrain from questioning the
legitimacy of the Bush administration and scrupulously avoid anything
which could be regarded as an appeal to the broad masses in the US.

The World Socialist Web Site works to provide a political orientation to the
mass movement against war which emerged on February 15 and make it the
basis for the construction of an international socialist party of working
people. The current edition of Gleichheit is dedicated to this aim and, for
clarity, has been divided into three parts. The first part consists of reports
and analyses of the path towards war; the second comprises programmatic
and political statements by the WSWS editorial board and the final part is
devoted to extensive reportage of the demonstrations which took place
across the globe on February 15.







Copyright 1998-2003
World Socialist Web Site
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