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Reuters. 17 March 2002. German Greens shed pacifism in bid to keep
power.

BERLIN -- Germany's Greens ditched pacifism at a weekend congress to
make life in government easier, but the move may be too late to keep the
former protest movement in power after an election on September 22.

Four years in government, during which the Greens sparked two political
crises with their reluctance to agree to Germany's first foreign combat
missions since World War Two, have dented their credibility with many
voters, both pacifist and mainstream.

The party, junior partner in the ruling coalition with Chancellor
Gerhard Schroeder's Social Democrats, has its roots in the peace
movement and the 1968 student protests.

It effectively struck pacifism off its agenda of core principles at the
congress, which approved a motion that the use of force could not be
ruled out as a last resort to combat genocide and terrorism.

The move merely sealed on paper a painful transformation that the Greens
have undergone in practice, led by Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer, one
of Germany's most popular politicians and the party's biggest electoral
asset.

Fischer persuaded them to drop fierce opposition to Germany committing
troops to NATO's 1999 Kosovo bombing campaign and to the U.S.-led war on
terrorism, averting a government collapse by arguing the Greens could
achieve more in power than outside.

But shedding pacifism does not solve the party's quandary.

By accepting the use of force to become more palatable to the broad mass
of voters, it has disillusioned many of its highly educated, traditional
supporters.

Commentators say even Fischer, who has transformed himself from
stone-throwing street protester to statesman, may be unable to reverse
its fortunes after a string of local election defeats and poor opinion
poll results.

"As a traditional party of opposition, the Greens have had a tough time
explaining their government role to their core supporters. They have
alienated a lot of their voters and must now find a way to mobilise
them," said Dieter Roth, director at the Electoral Research Group, a
leading polling institute.

[N.B.] They risk losing the peace vote to the reform communist Party of
Democratic Socialism  (PDS), which has consistently opposed German
military involvement.

The PDS stance, reaffirmed at its separate weekend congress, helped win
the PDS enough votes to enter the Berlin city government after a
regional election last October.

Unless they improve their poll ratings of between five and six percent,
and overtake the pro-business liberal Free Democrats (FDP), the Greens
may not be able to form a new government with Schroeder, who could
prefer an alliance with a party which gives him a bigger majority.

Schroeder favours continuing his alliance with the Greens. But if they
emerge too weak, he will have to consider a coalition with the liberals
or even a grand coalition with the conservatives.

"The Greens have given up pacifism and thereby become more peaceful,"
wrote the conservative daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. "Now they
are realising they have achieved complete manoeuvrability at a time when
it no longer guarantees electoral success."


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Barry Stoller
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ProletarianNews

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