Protesters descend on Germany’s ‘Little America’ to denounce U.S.-led escalation in Ukraine
By: Rachel Marsden
RAMSTEIN AIR BASE, Germany — Protesters gathered on Sunday at this military
base about 37 miles from the French border, and the focal point of the largest
community of Americans (over 50,000) outside of the U.S. Nicknamed “Little
America”, Ramstein Air Base has been home to U.S. forces since the end of the
Second World War, but also serves as the central command for NATO’s air and
space operations. More recently, it has become the meeting place for the Ukraine
Defense Contact Group of western defense chiefs as they discuss and approve
increasingly heavy Western weapons for use in Ukraine against Russia.
The irony isn’t lost on the protesters gathered here — and in cities all around
Germany — that the country whose military was once tightly controlled and
limited by Western allies in the wake of WWII is now being egged on by these
very same allies to take a leading role in escalating what some Germans fear is
shaping up to be yet another world war on European soil.
It’s a role that runs contrary to German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s routinely
expressed desire to avoid moving further away from a peaceful diplomatic
resolution in Ukraine. “We are sticking to our balanced, decisive course in
supporting Ukraine and preventing an escalation of the war beyond that between
Russia and Ukraine. We will continue to do that," he said in an interview last
September.
Fast-forward to the end of January in the wake of a meeting on this very base
about Leopard tanks for Ukraine. Poland had already taken the position that it
would send its own German tanks regardless of whether Berlin approved their
re-export. The U.S. had pledged Abrams tanks. And Scholz suddenly changed his
tune. “We have carefully weighed every arms shipment [to Ukraine], coordinated
them closely with our allies, first and foremost with the United States,” he
said after his government approved both original and re-exported Leopard 2 tanks
for Ukraine. What changed his mind. A ruse, by Washington, apparently.
Biden’s “reluctant” announcement to send the American tanks “unlocked a flow of
heavy arms from Europe and inched the United States and its NATO allies closer
to direct conflict with Russia,” the New York Times reported.
And while some German tanks have already arrived in Ukraine (specifically the
hand-me-downs from Poland) Washington’s aren’t set to arrive in the country
until at least next year.
Protesters here resent Washington’s role in pushing Germany and Europe into a
largely symbolic weapons pledges — after all, what good is Germany’s 18 pledged
Leopard tanks really going to achieve against Russia’s arsenal, they say. A
similar rally the day before, in Berlin, amassed 10,000 demonstrators, including
some of those who were also in Ramstein. There, also, they called for diplomacy
over weapons deliveries. The press has largely gone out of its way to
characterize the marchers as either far-left, or far-right, or both — which
might be a useful exercise if over half the country didn’t find common cause
with them.
German voters are split on the country’s participation in the conflict, and
there’s certainly no outcry for an escalation — let alone a German-led one. On
the contrary, a Forsa Institute poll in January found 80 percent in favor of
negotiations even at Ukraine’s loss. A recent Ipsos poll shows a majority of
Germans are now more concerned about their economic survival than with
financially backing Ukraine.
Germany has become Europe’s economic and industrial engine largely as a result
of historically directing far more investment in those sectors than in foreign
wars — a position that many American voters wish their own leaders would adopt.
There’s a sense here that Germany is now simply just going along to get along
with the U.S. in the interests of showing off western “unity” — even if it’s at
the expense of the country’s own.
America’s beef with Russia has already cost Germany its competitiveness. Much
like the donation of Leopard tanks, Berlin was pressured by Washington into
dropping its Russian gas supply via the Nord Stream pipeline network that fueled
its industry — and which then mysteriously blew up in what investigative
journalist Seymour Hersh attributes to a U.S.-led covert operation. The collapse
of Germany’s energy lifeline from Russia has left its citizens paying sky high
prices for American gas, and its industry susceptible to efforts by the Biden
administration to seduce them into relocating across the pond in exchange for
tax benefits and lower energy costs under the Inflation Reduction Act.
There’s a sense that the establishment isn’t listening to the average person and
is catering instead to special interests. It’s a risky posture that will only
serve to drive voters away from traditional establishment parties and figures as
the situation worsens. And there’s a palpable fear of the conflict — and
Germany’s involvement in it — spiraling out of control, with the Biden
administration recklessly leading the charge.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN