From: Barry Stoller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: [L-I] German Greens vote for troops, war


AP. 24 November 2001. Greens Back German Military Role Against
Terrorism, Avoid Government Crisis.

BERLIN -- Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer won the backing of his Greens
party Saturday for sending German troops into the war on terrorism,
averting the risk of a government collapse.

A national party conference passed a motion endorsing the troop pledge
after an emotional plea for support by Fischer, who demanded solidarity
with the United States and warned the Greens that they would risk
political oblivion by bringing down Germany's center-left coalition.

Faced with strong pressure from Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder's Social
Democrats, delegates meeting in the northern city of Rostock
overwhelmingly rejected pacifist proposals that would have disavowed
Fischer and taken the party out of the government.

"This is a clear mandate," said Greens lawmaker Albert Schmidt, who
supported sending German troops.

The vote signaled a fresh move away from the Greens' anti-war roots and
bolstered Fischer's position as his nation's chief diplomat.

Delegates, in a show of hands, overwhelmingly approved a proposal by
party leaders to stay in the government and to "accept" parliament's
decision offering up to 3,900 German troops to help fight terrorism. But
Schroeder has stressed there are no immediate plans to send German
ground troops to Afghanistan.

Greens members faced the sharpest dilemma in their party's two-decade
history after Schroeder called a confidence vote this month to force
lawmakers of his coalition of Social Democrats and Greens to endorse the
deployment in solidarity with Washington.

"I ask for your trust," Fischer said earlier in a fiery speech mixing
horror at the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States with sarcasm against
pacifist opponents. "I plead with you: Don't leave me and my policy in
the cold."

Some 800 delegates followed Fischer's speech with rapt attention, many
breaking into cheers and a standing ovation when he finished. Some
booed, however, when he said Germany "must stand at the side of our
alliance partner, the United States."

Opponents of German military involvement criticized civilian casualties
in the U.S.-led bombing of Afghan targets and expressed fear that
Germany was moving too fast in breaking postwar taboos on sending
soldiers abroad.

"This war has not solved the problem of international terrorism, and it
will not," Annelie Buntenbach, a leading left-wing Greens lawmaker. "It
is disproportionate. The West is running straight into a battle of
cultures."

Much of the dispute reflects a gulf between ordinary members - who
cherish the Greens' roots in the peace movement against the deployment
of U.S. nuclear missiles in Germany in the late 1970s - and party
leaders who have to make government policy decisions on a daily basis.


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Barry Stoller
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ProletarianNews




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