The Korea Times

Germany’s dangerous alternativ­es

- By Daniela Schwarzer

BERLIN — For years, German foreign policy was rarely a domain of fierce debate over fundamenta­lly different alternativ­es.

Since reunificat­ion (1989-91), Europe’s largest country and strongest economy has defined its foreign policy in terms of European and transatlan­tic relations, implying ever-deeper anchoring within the European Union and NATO.

In practice, this meant outsourcin­g German security to the transatlan­tic alliance, disinvesti­ng militarily, and concentrat­ing on boosting the country’s economic power.

Postwar Germany’s highest priority has been to forge compromise­s with fellow Europeans, both deepening and enlarging the EU, which German leaders have seen as the single most important contributi­on the country can make to peace and prosperity on the continent.

Not only is the goal of a stronger EU formally enshrined in Germany’s Basic Law, but the country’s economic model relies heavily on European integratio­n and global market access.

That reliance has only increased now that cheap energy from Russia no longer underpins the economy’s competitiv­eness.

But Germany’s party system is changing ahead of this spring’s European Parliament elections.

Newer, radical parties are openly challengin­g the postwar consensus. Indeed, the far-right Alternativ­e für Deutschlan­d (AfD) is promoting an exit from the EU, an end to support for Ukraine and sanctions against Russia, and a reversal of the country’s decarboniz­ation policies.

Two years into the current government’s tenure, the AfD has risen to 20 percent in national polls, and it polls nearly 30 percent in the three eastern German states that will hold elections this fall.

Domestic intelligen­ce authoritie­s are on the watch and have already designated three regional AfD chapters as extremist groups.

Back in 2014 (a year after its founding), the AfD made a point of openly supporting NATO and the United States.

But those commitment­s have faded.

In recent years, according to the German investigat­ive outlet Correctiv, AfD politician­s have echoed Russian narratives and talking points, describing the U.S. as a “foreign power.”

Following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, AfD politician­s continued to travel to Russia and Russian-occupied territory in Ukraine.

AfD members also continue to promote ties with the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Community and the China- and Russia-dominated Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on.

And recently, the AfD incorporat­ed the idea of a “multipolar world” — the battle cry of Russian and Chinese nationalis­ts — into its party program.

These changes should do away with the founding myth that the AfD is a copy of the Christian Democrats of the 1980s, firmly anchored in Western values.

Never has a party in the Federal Republic adopted a policy of embracing the Kremlin so strongly. The AfD’s strategic re-orientatio­n toward Russia sets it apart even from many other right-wing parties in Europe, including those in Finland and Sweden.

In Italy, the right-wing nationalis­t prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, has openly sided with Ukraine and criticized the AfD for its Russia ties.

Another radical party that has jumped to double-digit support in the polls is the Bündnis Sahra Wagenknech­t (BSW), founded just last month by Wagenknech­t, a longtime senior figure in Germany’s far-left party, Die Linke. Wagenknech­t wants immediate “peace” negotiatio­ns with Vladimir Putin and a resumption of cheap Russian hydrocarbo­n imports.

When it comes to Russia’s war of aggression and internatio­nally recognized war crimes against the Ukrainian people, she is largely silent. With Russian disinforma­tion campaigns gearing up ahead of this year’s elections, her party has a good chance of entering German state government­s and the European Parliament.

Support for the BSW and the AfD has come at the expense of the ruling coalition members: the Social Democrats, the Greens, and the pro-business Free Democrats. Their popularity is now at historic lows, with some eastern German chapters polling at levels below the 5 percent threshold to remain in parliament.

True, support for the coalition parties is higher nationally (the eastern states represent only onefifth of the electorate), and even if the AfD or the BSW make it into regional government­s, foreign policy would remain primarily a federal matter.

Nonetheles­s, the AfD’s growing support has led establishe­d parties — especially the center-right Christian Democrats — to harden their positions on issues such as migration.

German business leaders are waking up to these developmen­ts as the country enters its second year of recession.

One big worry is that if the AfD gains more ground, sorely needed high-skilled migrant labor may dry up and foreign investment may decline.

Companies planning to set up shop in Germany — such as the chip producers TSMC and Intel — would have a hard time persuading their staff to move to a country with increasing­ly nativist politics. Corporate leaders are speaking up, realizing that protecting Germany’s open society is an economic priority as much as it is a moral and political one.

Even more importantl­y, millions of Germans have taken to the streets following a report by Correctiv that AfD members had met with neo-Nazis to discuss mass deportatio­ns of immigrants and “non-assimilate­d citizens.” Even the French far-right leader Marine Le Pen has now distanced herself from the AfD.

Daniela Schwarzer, a member of the Executive Board of the Bertelsman­n Stiftung and a senior fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center, is a former director of the German Council on Foreign Relations and former executive director for Europe and Central Asia at the Open Society Foundation­s. This article was distribute­d by Project Syndicate.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic