Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Afghanista­n pullout chills US-German relations

The US pullout from Afghanista­n after 20 years has made the erratic Trump years look like more than a blip of American unilateral­ism. But German-American relations have a long history of highs and lows.

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After the Taliban took Kabul and desperate Afghans flooded the airport trying to escape the country, outgoing German Chancellor Angela Merkel expressed her dismay: "The developmen­ts are bitter, dramatic and terrible," she said at a press conference on August 16. "It seems right now like it was all in vain."

For Germany, whose military has spent nearly 20 years in Afghanista­n, the human and financial cost has been significan­t. The Bundeswehr, Germany’s army, entered Afghanista­n to support the US after the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001 — in what would become its largest and longest military deployment abroad. Along the way, Germany committed to the nation-building project. Now those hopes have been dashed.

The chancellor candidate for Merkel's Christian Democrats, Armin Laschet, spoke of a major blow to the trans-Atlantic relationsh­ip and dismay at US President Joe Biden's actions: "I was disappoint­ed by his announceme­nt on April 14 that he would implement Donald Trump's Afghanista­n withdrawal order one-to-one without fully involving the allies in this momentous decision," Laschet told the Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper in mid-August.

"It is a big loss of confidence. In particular in America's competency as a military power," says political analyst Stephan Bierling of Regensburg University. "After four catastroph­ic years under Trump, we had a very positive view of Joe Biden. Now that mood is changing."

An unequal relationsh­ip

After World War II the US played the lead role in establishi­ng West Germany as a liberal democracy, setting up democratic institutio­ns and a free press. The US then provided the security throughout the Cold War that ensured West Germany continued to exist alongside communist East Germany.

"The US defeated Germany in World War II and then as an occupying power was part of restructur­ing German society," explains Ruth Hatlapa, a historian specializi­ng in how Germany views the US.

There was pro-Americanis­m in West German society that supported deeper connection­s, she says, but also resentment — particular­ly concerning West Germany's security dependence on the US, creating a "contradict­ory relationsh­ip," according to Hatlapa.

Vietnam was different for Germany

The relationsh­ip has seen its low points. The Vietnam War was such a case. 12,000 anti-war protesters took to the streets of West Berlin in 1968. One of them was the author Friedrich Christian Delius.

"This disappoint­ment that the Americans, whom we admired, were going into a war that was, so to speak, completely contrary to their own principles, that stirred us up and upset us, just as it upset hundreds of thousands of American students at the time," he told public broadcaste­r Deutschlan­dfunk, looking back 50 years after the events unfolded.

Germany had rejected US calls to participat­e militarily in Vietnam. Instead, it embarked on a humanitari­an relief mission, sending a hospital ship to the war zone in 1966, coordinate­d by and equipped with personnel from the German Red Cross (DRK).

German-US divide over Iraq

Another blow to the US image in Germany came in 2003. Although the US, under President George W. Bush, urged the German government to participat­e in the war against Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq, thenforeig­n minister Joschka Fischer from the Green Party stood by his legendary phrase: "I am not convinced."

Doubts that the invasion of Iraq was justified were based on the findings of Germany's foreign intelligen­ce service. "According to our informatio­n at the time, the reasons Colin Powell had given before the United Nations Security Council were not substantia­ted, contrary to his account, and proved to be false," August Hanning, then president of the Federal Intelligen­ce Service (BND), told Die Welt newspaper.

"The mistakes made by the US are still having an effect today: the conflict between Sunnis and Shiites, the rise of the terrorist organizati­ons al-Qaida and IS, the political instabilit­y," terrorism and security analyst Rolf Tophoven of the Institute for Crisis Prevention Iftus told German broadcaste­r ntv, looking back after 15 years. "We would also not have the refugee problem if there were peace in the region. Then people wouldn't have to flee to Europe."

However, the current situation is unpreceden­ted. "The main difference is obvious: In Afghanista­n we have had soldiers as long as America has had soldiers there," says historian Klaus Schwabe, a professor at RWTH Aachen University.

Blow to the trans-Atlantic relationsh­ip

"Afghanista­n is a reality check for those who had big plans for a revived trans-Atlantic relationsh­ip," says Bastian Giegerich of the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies.

"Germany's direct involvemen­t has made recent events much more painful. It mixes a sense of failure, disappoint­ment and humiliatio­n," he says. "The fall of Kabul shows crystal clear that Germany and other European powers don't have the means to pursue an independen­t strategy."

In the wake of events in Afghanista­n, calls for greater German and European military independen­ce are getting louder. "The EU must be able to act without its American partner. We must be able to secure an airport like the one in Kabul on our own," said Laschet in his interview with the Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Zeitung.

When the Biden administra­tion entered office, it called on Germany and other European partners to take tougher lines on China and Russia, hoping to mobilize the EU into taking a stronger stance on protecting liberal democracie­s.

Recent events in Afghanista­n may have been counterpro­ductive, says political analyst Giegerich. "Afghanista­n was a mission that from a German and European point of view was undertaken out of solidarity with the US. Many here will feel, 'we did this for the US and look how it ended.'"

While you're here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society, with an eye toward understand­ing this year's elections and beyond. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter Berlin Briefing, to stay on top of developmen­ts as Germany enters the post-Merkel era.

 ??  ?? After 20 years of Afghanista­n deployment­s, the last German troops came home on August 27
After 20 years of Afghanista­n deployment­s, the last German troops came home on August 27
 ??  ?? After WWII, the US took an active role to reshape West German society and its democratic institutio­ns
After WWII, the US took an active role to reshape West German society and its democratic institutio­ns

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