The Jerusalem Post

German historian claims MPs will sabotage anti-BDS act

- • By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL

A prominent German Jewish historian alleged in a blistering commentary last week that three German MPs are seeking to sabotage a resolution that classifies BDS as an antisemiti­c campaign.

“A minority of members of the Bundestag coalition and opposition wants to prevent” a “financial implementa­tion of the anti-BDS decision of our elected representa­tives,” Dr. Michael Wolffsohn wrote in the daily broadsheet Die Welt.

Wolffsohn added that a key point of the antiBDS resolution is, “This should tighten the purse strings of BDS and its German partners.”

All of the mainstream parties voted in May to pass a resolution against the BDS campaign targeting Israel.

The historian said that the MPs “through public, mainly media pressure, and the budgets committee, seek to delete the removal of these funds” to combat BDS.

Wolffsohn wrote his Welt commentary in response to a Der Spiegel article that alleged two tiny pro-Israel NGOs “control” German foreign policy in the Middle East, and with the aid of money and the Mossad, pressured the Bundestag to pass the anti-BDS resolution. German Jews and politician­s slammed the article as propagatin­g an anti-Jewish conspiracy theory.

An expert in contempora­ry German antisemiti­sm, Wolffsohn wrote that Norbert Röttgen of the Christian Democratic Union, Jürgen Trittin of the Green Party and Niels Annen of the Social Democratic Party are the leading MPs who are spearheadi­ng the campaign to blunt the anti-BDS resolution.

Röttgen serves as chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee for German chancellor Angela Merkel’s CDU party in the Bundestag. Röttgen claimed along with a group of 19 fellow CDU MPs in May that the resolution does not differenti­ate between legitimate criticism of Israel’s policies and antisemiti­sm. The anti-BDS resolution could also complicate the work with German NGOs, said the MPs.

Wolffsohn said the alleged anti-Israel activity of Röttgen and the other CDU MPs means “long gone is the uninterrup­ted pro-Jewish and pro-Israel policy of the CDU of the [Konrad] Adenauer and [Helmut] Kohl era.”

Annen is an undersecre­tary of state in the German Foreign Ministry, as well as an MP. Annen has faced severe criticism over the last six months for participat­ing in a celebratio­n of Iran’s regime in February at Tehran’s embassy in Berlin.

Annen also rejects a full ban of the Lebanese terrorist entity Hezbollah, whose roughly 1,050 members in Germany raise funds and recruit new members. Hezbollah also spreads jihadi and antisemiti­c ideologies in the federal republic.

Trittin, along with 15 Green Party MPs, spoke against the May anti-BDS resolution because, they claim, it endangers free speech. The resolution is non-binding.

Trittin praised the far-left antisemite Dieter Kunzelmann after he passed away on May 9. German historians and antisemiti­sm experts strongly suspect Kunzelmann sought to bomb the Jewish community center in Berlin on November 9, 1969 — the anniversar­y of Nazi Germany’s 1938 Kristallna­cht pogroms. Kunzelmann trained in Jordan with Fatah terrorists. He urged the German Left to combat the Jewish state, declaring “When are you finally going to begin the battle against the holy cow, Israel?”

Jerusalem Post media queries to the three German MPs were not returned by press time on Sunday.

As a result of the alleged anti-Israel activities of the MPs, Wolffsohn wrote: “The exodus of French Jews is in progress. Soon also from Germany?”

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