The BlogGermany’s Hostages in Iran, and “Critical Dialogue” with the Mullahs8:30 AM, Dec 16, 2010
• By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL
Germany’s journalists, human rights activists, and taxpayers are paying a painful price for its country’s woefully flawed “critical dialogue” policy with the Iranian regime. ![]() Last month, Iran’s rulers paraded two German journalists, Marcus Hellwig and Jens Koch of the Bild newspaper, on an Iranian state-controlled television station, claiming that the two journalists admitted to being hoodwinked into travelling to Iran by Mina Ahadi, a German-Iranian human rights activist. Ahadi, who lives in exile in Germany, is leading an international campaign against stoning in the Islamic Republic. She is deeply aware of the critical situation of the two journalists, saying, "They have been in prison for a month…no contact with their family, no phone contact, only once have German diplomats visited these journalists. They are under pressure." Both journalists were arrested in Iran in mid-October for merely interviewing family members of Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, a woman who was sentenced death by stoning for alleged adultery. This is only the latest chapter in the Iranian regime’s history of doing what it can to crush dissent domestically and at the same time force Western European countries to recoil from their human rights criticisms of Iran’s ruthless behavior. So what’s Germany trying to achieve by engaging in its 26-year-old policy of “critical dialogue” with the mullahs? Well, the running joke about Germany’s former foreign minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher, who commenced the policy with Iran in 1984, was the real purpose of German-Iranian cooperation was to engage in “critical dialogue” about U.S. foreign policy. Whatever it means, and whatever it hopes to accomplish, on thing is clear: Germany’s notion of “critical dialogue” is in disarray. The Wall Street Journal Europe editorial page captured how Germany’s soft approach to Iran’s rulers has reached a dead end:
Germany’s foreign policy now under the leadership of Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle, who considers Genscher to be a mentor figure, continues to replicate Genscher’s high intensity appeasement policy. Westerwelle’s Foreign Ministry has facilitated trips for members of his pro-Iranian trade business party (Free Democratic Party) as well as a parliamentary delegation to travel to Iran. Rainer Stinner, a member of parliament and a foreign policy spokesman of the Free Democrats, visited Iran last summer. Stinner rejects sanctions against the U.S.-designated terror entity the Islamic Revolutionary Guards because the IRGC controls vast sectors of the Iranian economy and it would adversely affect EU-Iranian trade. In November, Elke Hoff, a Free Democratic MP, visited Iran and declined to respond to press queries about her secret trip. Hoff, a proponent of German-Iranian trade, is a member of the German-Iranian parliamentary group and serves on the board of the German Near and Middle East Association, a pro-Iranian business trade organization. The association’s honorary chairman is former chancellor Gerhard Schröder, who last year met with President Mahmoud Ahamdinejad in Tehran to promote German-Iranian trade. The regime-controlled Iranian press quickly exploited Hoff’s visit as a sign of political and diplomatic normalcy and Hoff, wittingly or unwittingly, turned herself into a useful idiot for Iran’s despots. Recent Blog PostsThe Weekly Standard ArchivesBrowse 15 Years of the Weekly Standard |
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