Johannes Stern
According to a report in the Welt am Sonntag newspaper, German security officials and military experts are urging the rapid purchase of armed drones.
The
defence policy spokesman for the Christian Democratic Union-Christian
Social Union (CDU/CSU) fraction in parliament, Henning Otte, told the
newspaper, “Last year, we initiated a debate about the necessity of
combat-ready drones and clearly spoke out in favour of this capability.”
He went on to say that it was now time “to take the next step and
secure drones with this capacity for the German army.”
The defence
spokesman for the CSU, Florian Hahn, expressed a similar view. He said
that Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen (CDU) had to “urgently take
the decision this year.”
The drones were “a key question for our
sovereignty in defence policy and a key capability for a modern,
efficient army,” he continued. Other problems in defence policy, such as
the supply of A400M transport aircraft, should not result in “a
decision on the purchase of a drone being set aside,” Hahn added.
According to Die Welt,
the Social Democrats (SPD) are also stepping up pressure on von der
Leyen. “We expect the minister to make this decision quickly,” Rainer
Arnold, the SPD’s defence spokesman, was cited by the paper as saying.
High-ranking
military officials are supporting the calls from politicians. The
chairman of the Bundeswehr (German army) association, Lieutenant Colonel
Andre Wüstner, referring to current crises in Africa, Syria and Iraq,
declared that future conflicts would be carried out by means of drones.
The Defence Ministry had to finally begin purchasing and developing
combat drones, he insisted.
The Air Force inspector, Lieutenant
General Karl Müller, warned that if Germany did not develop its own
drones, it would be internationally dependent.
According to Welt am Sonntag,
the purchase of military drones is no longer a question of if, but
when. A spokesman for the Defence Ministry said a policy was being
worked on.
The newspaper claimed that €323 million in a secret
part of the defence budget had been “allocated for the purchase of three
combat-ready aircraft and two ground control stations.” The options
being considered, according to Die Welt, are the Israeli model
“Heron TP” and the US “Predator B.” In the medium term, the development
of a European drone was the goal.
Germany’s move to acquire combat
drones exposes the lies of the media and politicians that the German
ruling class and its military have been forced to wage war in defence of
human rights and democracy. Drones epitomize the US-led criminal wars
of conquest around the world.
Washington has deployed drones
mainly in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen. According to
research by the London-based Bureau of Investigative Journalists, the US
military and CIA have already claimed the lives of between 2,400 and
3,900 people in Pakistan alone through the use of drones. Victims of the
targeted killings, which are personally approved by President Obama,
are often women and children. Often they are guests at birthday parties
or weddings targeted for drone attack.
The Bild newspaper
recently revealed that Germany has been more broadly involved in such
methods of warfare (which are illegal under international law) than had
previously been reported. Extensive documents from the German army and
foreign intelligence service (BND) confirm that Major General Markus
Kneip, who commanded Germany’s ISAF troops in Afghanistan and today is
head of the strategy and deployment department of the Defence Ministry,
personally selected individual targets for the US targeted killing
programme.
The purchase of drones would give the German military
the ability to conduct its own targeted killings. Although the vast
majority of Germans oppose this illegal practice, plans for the
development of a military drone program have for some time been
systematically developed behind the backs of the population.
Already
in 2009, the CDU/Free Democratic Party (FDP) government stated in its
coalition agreement that it was “essential” to carry out “the
sustainable development and expansion of independent national
capabilities—in particular, future aircraft systems.” In the summer of
2012, then-Defence Minister and current Interior Minister Thomas de
Maizière described drones as “ethically neutral weapons.” Shortly
afterwards, a strategy paper entitled “Air Power 2030” was published by
the Air Force that called for the development of drone technology.
“The
utilisation and further development of the capabilities of unmanned
aerial vehicle systems is to be optimised in all areas of
surveillance-directing-impact and support, and their scope of deployment
expanded,” the paper stated. The Air Force intended, according to the
report, “to invest in these programmes so important for the future
because we are convinced that the German army can thereby be
strengthened as a whole.” The Air Force would increase “the capacity to
act and the efficiency of the entire German military system” so that it
could contribute “flexibly and globally at any time to German army
deployments.”
Since German President Joachim Gauck and other
politicians announced Germany’s return to an aggressive great power
foreign policy at the beginning of last year, a systematic campaign has
been waged in the media in favour of the purchase of these instruments
of murder. Particularly prominent in this campaign has been Humboldt
University Professor Herfried Münckler.
In June, he told public
broadcaster ARD’s “Mittagmagazin” (Mid-day Magazine): “The wars of the
future will be a mixture of classical wars and more modern police
interventions. Drones will play an increasing role in this policing role
of the military.”
He went on to say that drones were “very well
equipped for such police-style missions, certainly better than combat
helicopters, bombers and possibly also light infantry.”
He
continued: “I think one has to realise that the development of
combat-readiness on many levels is coming. Geopolitical factors play a
role in this, demographics, how many young men do you have, i.e., how
many victims can be risked, technological developments, tactical
innovations, strategic ideas.”
He added that “Post-heroic
societies like ours, societies that are not held together by particular
ideals of masculinity, by the ideas of honour and sacrifice” were
dependent upon “using technological assistance as a crutch to secure the
capacity to act on the military level.”
In a further interview
with the provocative title “To Proscribe Drones Would Be Absurd,”
Münckler said incompetence in security policy was being defended by
invoking morality.
German history was also a problem, he noted.
Due to "an intense feeling of guilt,” Germans were adverse to developing
a “heightened responsibility” to “engage in those places where
something like genocide is taking place,” he declared. He complained
that "because Germany stood at the centre of two world wars,” ordinary
Germans were inclined “to fold their hands and do nothing.”
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