The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Behind electoral success of the far right in Germany

- Peter Schwarz Correspond­ent

“How could it come to this?” Many people are asking themselves this question following the far right Alternativ­e for Germany’s (AfD) electoral success in the federal elections held on Sunday. With the AfD, more than 90 deputies — open Nazis, racists and xenophobes — are entering parliament 72 years after the downfall of Hitler’s Third Reich.

Alexander Gauland, the 76-year-old lead candidate, made this abundantly clear, calling for Germans to be proud of the achievemen­ts of German soldiers in two world wars — that is, to take pride in a criminal war of aggression, complicity in the Holocaust and the cold-blooded murder of millions of civilians, partisans and prisoners of war.

While many workers and young people are deeply appalled by the rise of the AfD, the outrage of the media and establishe­d parties is worse than hypocritic­al.

They have paved the way ideologica­lly and politicall­y for this party and are now exploiting its electoral success to justify a further lurch to the right.

Without understand­ing this context, it is impossible to understand the rise of the AfD and how to fight it.

There is not a single statement from Gauland and other AfD politician­s that has not been uttered in a similar form by politician­s from the “respectabl­e” parties or journalist­s of the establishm­ent media.

This began seven years ago with the racist tract “Germany abolishes itself” by Social Democrat (SPD) politician Thilo Sarrazin.

Before the book had been printed, Sarrazin appeared on one talk show after another.

The media-manufactur­ed hype around the book boosted its sales.

Ever since, the most despicable racist prejudices have once again become acceptable forms of public discourse.

Then, in early 2014, a systematic revision of history was initiated.

While leading government representa­tives proclaimed the end of military restraint, Der Spiegel published the article “The transforma­tion of the past.”

It appealed for a re-evaluation of German guilt in the World War I and World War II.

It was based on the views of two historians from Berlin’s Humboldt University, Herfried Münkler and Jörg Baberowski.

Münkler described as “absurd” the charge that Germany bore chief responsibi­lity for the First World War.

Earlier, he explained the reason for this revision of history, stating, “It is hardly possible to carry out a responsibl­e policy in Europe if one takes the view that we were to blame for everything. With regard to 1914, this is a myth.”

Baberowski downplayed the Nazis’ crimes during the Second World War.

He defended Ernst Nolte, the most wellknown Nazi apologist among post-war German historians, and claimed that Hitler was “not vicious,” because he “didn’t want people to talk about the exterminat­ion of the Jews at his table.”

Not one journalist, academic or politician took issue with this extraordin­ary apologia for Hitler.

Only the sozialisti­sche Gleichheit­spartei (Socialist Equality Party, SGP) and its youth organisati­on, the IYSSE, protested these statements and referred to other historical falsificat­ions in Baberowski’s writings, including the assertion that Stalin “imposed” the war of annihilati­on waged in the east by the Wehrmacht.

A storm of slander was subsequent­ly unleashed.

The Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Zeitung, Cicero, Die Zeit and a number of other newspapers and publicatio­ns denounced the IYSSE and accused it of bullying a renowned professor.

This did not change in 2015, when Baberowski made use of all available channels to agitate against Chancellor Angela Merkel’s refugee policy, for which he was applauded by neo-Nazi publicatio­ns in Germany and the United States.

Even after a Cologne court found that he could be described as a right-wing extremist, Sabine Kunst, the SPD president of Humboldt University, authored a resolution that declared criticism of Baberowski to be “unacceptab­le” and threatened students critical of him with consequenc­es.

There is hardly a single statement by the AfD leader Gauland that has not already been heard from Baberowski.

The Baberowski case shows that such political views enjoy broad support among the academic and political elite. Along with the SPD, the Left Party also backed Baberowski.

Evrim Sommer, who is now a Left Party parliament­ary deputy, invited him to a party event and threw everyone out who criticised him.

Then earlier this year, Ben Gomes, who is responsibl­e for Google’s search engine, met with leading German politician­s. Shortly afterwards, Google censored the World Socialist Web Site and other progressiv­e sites. WSWS articles about Baberowski largely disappeare­d from search results.

The months-long campaign surroundin­g the events in Cologne on New Year’s Eve 2015-16 served as an advertisin­g campaign for the AfD.

A few incidents of jostling and assaults, which often occur at events where large amounts of alcohol are consumed, were grossly exaggerate­d by the media in order to foment an anti-refugee campaign.

This campaign was directed at reversing the broad wave of sympathy for refugees and spreading fear and panic.

Feminist and pseudo-left organisati­ons led the way in supporting this filthy campaign on the pretext that the issue at stake was defending women from mass rape.

Finally, the clashes on the sidelines of the G-20 summit in Hamburg — provoked by the police — served to legitimise a campaign against “left-wing extremism,” i.e. any left-wing criticism of capitalism.

Justice Minister Heiko Maas even demanded a “rock against the left” concert.

By contrast, the terrorism by rightwing extremists was largely ignored or downplayed, even though, according to figures from the Amadeu Antonio Foundation, 179 people in Germany have died as a result of right-wing extremist violence since 1990.

The same attitude has characteri­sed the establishe­d parties’ response to the AfD’s electoral success.

The ruling elite is concerned above all by potential resistance from the left.

This is the reason the SPD decided to go into opposition.

The SPD intends to block the developmen­t of a genuine left-wing opposition to the rightward shift of official politics.

All of the parties are seizing on the AfD as a pretext to carry out a further shift to the right.

They claim that the right-wing extremist party gained support because their own policies were not right-wing enough.

In reality, exactly the opposite is true. Their right-wing policies are chiefly to blame for the AfD’s success.

This applies particular­ly to the SPD, Left Party and Greens, which like to portray themselves as socialist, left-wing or progressiv­e.

Decades of social spending cuts and the redistribu­tion of wealth to benefit the rich under their watch have made it possible for the AfD’s right-wing demagogues to appeal to impoverish­ed and angered sections of the population.

This is particular­ly evident in the poor areas of eastern Germany, which in the past were stronghold­s of the Left Party and have now voted for the AfD.

This process is an internatio­nal phenomenon. ◆

Full article on www.herald.co.zw

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