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Wahad: A Palestinian state of mind

What does Heimat mean for Palestinians in Germany?


04/03/2025

‘We are all Palestinians,’ I hear crowds chant at protests. I ask myself what it means, what is the common thread making all of them Palestinians? We may live in a Palestinian state of mind if we miss trust in the world as something never had but existentially needed, disoriented until we recognize: this deprivation, this state is universally human.   

In German we call the metaphorical place of trust Heimat, insufficiently translated into homeland. I sometimes also call it Hemayat in Arabic due to the word’s comforting safety. It is something that comes naturally, a feeling that is deeply rooted, understood by itself, it is selbstverständlich. Heimat can be physical, and that is how most of us learn to internalize the selbstverständliche as places and people you know, move and breathe in and with, without preconditions.

Such Heimat can be seen as a kind of nostalgic longing for childhood basic trust. As soon as we outgrow it, we are thrown into a world we need to find Heimat in again using our templates of basic trust. For some of us these templates do not exist, do not fit, or are rejected from those who decide them. Pushed to its edges again and again the world becomes a non-place for some of us. A Palestinian place. 

Even if we have not experienced Heimat by and in ourselves, we do not come from the void we are pushed into. There must have been something, a place for us to ’return’ to. As pessoptimists we never give up our search for the ‘right’ place. Until then we are kept in a state of unrest. It may be the only possible state outside of a Heimat‘s shelter. A Palestinian state of mind. 

We are out of place but we are not wrong, only because those who decide on who fits keep telling us that we are an unwanted problem. We know what is right for us and remain steadfast, samidoun. In the end, we know why we are ignored: Not because we are wrong, but because our loss of Heimat is mirroring wrongs others will not admit to themselves. What cannot be true for them cannot be possible for us. What cannot be ignored must be suppressed. An oppression of the Palestinian in us. 

These external structures of oppression aim to bury the loss of Heimat inside us. Our most important resistance is fighting this internalization, keeping the externally forced exile out of our inner state. We do not let fear and anger terrorize us and others. Even with our felt powerlessness in the external world, our inner world remains sovereign. We can trust our inner Heimat, not to be occupied by external hegemonic structures that we have to shake off. A Palestinian shaking off (Intifada). 

Only then are we able to see that those internalized structures kept us divided. We start seeing Palestinian states all over the world. Not having to prove our existence anymore, we see the world on our terms; it is not we who are wrong, but the templates forced on us. We do not need prerequisites to find Heimat as the individuals we are—from private rivers to communal seas. The Palestinian state becomes a universal, self-determined one.

This is an extract from the book Gaza, lebendig halten which will be published in Germany in March 2025

Feminicide on the rise

The announcement of elections in Germany have put the proposal to create a specific law on gender violence on hold. Organisations and experts call for urgent measures.


02/03/2025

This article originally appeared in Spanish in El Salto and was published before the recent election. Translation: Roser Gari Perez. Reproduced with permission.

Germany does not have a Ministry of Equality, or any specific law protecting women from gender-based violence. Moreover, murders related to gender-based violence are often not classified as murders, but as manslaughter — that is, as lacking “base motives” or malice.

A study published at the end of 2024 by the Bundeskriminalamt (German Federal Criminal Investigation Office/BKA) reveals the true extent of violence against women in the country. Experts and women’s organisations have called for the government — composed of the Social Democrats (SPD), the Liberals (FDP) and the Greens (Die Grünen), a coalition that presented a specific law against violence against women — to pass measures to address this violence. Germany will hold general elections in February 2025 without this proposal having gone ahead.

Manslaughter or murder?

In cases where women are murdered by their partners or ex-partners, there are two possibilities: either the perpetrators can be sentenced to life imprisonment for murder; or (as frequently happens) courts can classify these crimes as manslaughter, which carries a sentence of up to 15 years in prison. Often, judges consider the emotional state of the aggressor to be a mitigating factor, which results in lighter sentences.

Lawyer Leonie Steinl, chair of the Criminal Law Commission of the Deutscher Juristinnenbund (the German Association of Women Lawyers), has criticised the law in the Süddeutsche Zeitung for not guaranteeing more severe treatment in cases of feminicide, especially when they occur within a relationship, as established by the Istanbul Convention 

According to Steinl, the legal system should allow for more severe penalties in these cases and establish that crimes committed in the context of a relationship (or former relationship) should be considered aggravating circumstances. This lack of rigour in the application of the law reflects, in her opinion, a deficiency in the judicial system that does not adequately address the seriousness of these crimes.

In addition, Steinl criticised a 2008 Bundesgerichtshof (Federal Court of Justice/BGH) ruling that excluded “morally reprehensible motivations” in cases of separation-related murder, arguing that the perpetrator acted out of the loss of something he did not want to let go of. For Steinl, this reasoning not only downplays the severity of the crime, but also reflects a patriarchal conception of the judicial system that should be revised.

Three women murdered every day in Germany

In 2023, Germany recorded 360 feminicides, which is equivalent to almost one woman murdered every day. Despite this alarming figure, the term “feminicide” lacks a specific legal definition, and crimes are dealt with under the offences of murder (Mord, punishable by life imprisonment) or involuntary homicide (Totschlag, with penalties of 5—15 years in prison). For a feminicide to be classified as Mord, the criteria of so-called “base motives” (niedrige Beweggründe) must be met — that is, the act must have a particularly despicable or immoral motive.

The lack of a clear and standardised definition of feminicide has resulted in many other homicides of women being left out of the official statistics. According to police data, 938 women were victims of homicide that same year.

Delal Atmaca, director of DaMigra, an organisation that brings together more than 60 immigrant women’s associations in Germany, warns that if there were a precise definition of feminicide, the total number of women murdered could be much higher — adding both feminicides and homicides together.

In total, Germany could reach an average of three women murdered per day. This reality emerges from a study published by the Bundeskriminalamt at the end of 2024, highlighting the true extent of violence against women in the country.

Despite their work, DaMigra face significant financial challenges, as budget cuts to the social and cultural sphere in Germany also affect their funding.

“We and other groups fighting against feminicide thought that the numbers would be much lower,” says Zora, a young women’s organisation that raises awareness of this issue. “It doesn’t surprise us, because although violence against women is increasing every year, funding for its prevention has suffered massive cuts. More and more shelters are closing and very few new ones are being built.”

Zora organises commemorative marches in front of the homes of the victims, placing candles and flowers as a sign of respect. In some communities, these actions generate reflection and support amongst neighbours, while in others, indifference or thoughtlessness predominate, although the latter is the minority case. In addition to these acts, the collective promotes political demonstrations to demand justice and concrete measures after each feminicide in Berlin.

Crime on the rise, and no Ministry of Equality

The study also reveals a worrying generalised increase in violence against women. There is a significant increase in rape, intimate partner violence and feminicide. Even political crimes motivated by misogyny are on the rise.

Despite these figures, activists at Zora lament society’s lack of reaction. “It didn’t make women take to the streets en masse on November 25,” they say, referring to the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women.

More than 52,000 girls and women were victims of rape, sexual harassment or coercion in 2023, 6.2% more than the previous year. Of these victims, half were under 18 years of age.

In the report, 68.6% of homicides are classified as domestic violence. This means that most girls and women are killed as a result of domestic violence (violence that occurs in the family environment) or violence from a partner. In the period covered by the report, in the year 2023, 180,715 women were victims of domestic violence — an increase of 5.6% compared to the previous year.

However, these figures only reflect cases reported to the police. The BKA warns that the real number is much higher, as many women do not report abuse.

The figures are scandalous, but perhaps the bigger picture is unsurprising, as Germany lacks a law to adequately protect women, or a Ministry of Equality. Gender policies fall under the remit of a ministry that covers several areas: the Ministry for Family Affairs, Senior Citizens, Women and Youth (BMFSFJ). According to Atmaca, this ministry has a traditionalist vision: “women are often considered only in the context of family and care work, rather than treating gender equality as an independent social objective. This contradicts the spirit of the Grundgesetz (Basic Law), which advocates active equality between women and men. The lack of attention to equality demonstrates how deeply rooted patriarchal structures and traditional gender roles are in politics and society.”

The current government, known as the traffic light coalition because of the colours of its parties (Green, Social Democrats in red and Liberals in yellow), presents itself as progressive, and one of its commitments was to implement the long-awaited Protection against Gender-Based Violence Act. However, the legislative process has been significantly delayed. After months of internal debate, they failed to agree on a joint project before the coalition splintered at the end of 2024. Subsequently, the SPD and the Greens independently presented a comprehensive bill on assistance against violence that was debated in parliament on 6 December. So far, it has not been passed.

The lack of a law protecting against gender violence

Michael Kretschmer, Vice President of the BKA, points out that the facts and figures demonstrate that violence and hatred towards women are growing social problems. He indicates that there is an increase in all kinds of crimes committed specifically against women. He also recognises that “there is a large dark field in this phenomenon”, which means that the real figures, especially in terms of domestic and digital violence, are likely to be much higher. Kretschmer emphasises that it is essential that the security authorities continue to monitor the evolution of these crimes, understand their root causes and act accordingly.

Although Germany complies with a key requirement of the Istanbul Convention — the collection and publication of data on gender-based violence — criticism of its implementation remains strong. DaMigra emphasises that although the treaty was ratified in 2018, Germany still lacks a specific law on protection against gender-based violence.

The organisation denounces this “unacceptable political stalemate”. Furthermore, they emphasise that — despite the Istanbul Convention and the increased awareness of the problem — there is still a lack of effective structures and measures to protect women, especially migrants and refugees, who remain amongst the most vulnerable.

The increase in violence in all its forms shows that current measures are insufficient. “It is our job to keep up the pressure, to demand political accountability and to promote profound social change,” says Delal Atmaca. “When a woman is murdered in this country, we must take to the streets and demand justice. But we must also point out the complicity of the German state, which bears responsibility for every one of the women murdered here,” conclude the Zora activists.

Germany’s economic malaise

Why the former “power house of Europe” now has a broken economy

Last Sunday the general election threw up some shocking and some surprising results. But why was there an election at all? After all, the so-called traffic light coalition government of the SPD, the FDP and the Greens had only served three years.

Germany has been stuck in economic stagnation for two years. Technically it has suffered a mild recession with the economy contracting 0.3% in 2023 and 0.2% in 2024. With disillusionment growing, SPD Chancellor Olaf Scholz proposed an easing of the so-called debt brake and an injection of 10 billion euros into the economy to try to finance much needed infrastructure spending and to try and stimulate the economy out of recession.

A 10 billion euro injection into the German economy by increasing state spending is a fairly modest stimulus but it follows the ideas of John Maynard Keynes. He argued capitalist economies naturally go into recession but there were not necessarily any automatic adjustment mechanisms, as orthodox neo-classical economists argued. They saw the “free market” bringing about economic recovery. Instead Keynes argued, governments need to finance recovery by increasing its debt, with that debt ultimately repaid from the government revenues generated by the recovering economy.

Although an easing of the debt brake was supported by Bundesbank president Joachim Nagel, Scholz’s Finance Minister, FDP leader Christian Lindner, refused. Lindner wanted to retain the debt brake and stimulat the economy by cutting taxes, to be paid for in turn by cutting spending. So Scholz sacked Lindler and the coalition collapsed.

What is the debt brake? The debt brake or Schuldenbremse is a rule restricting the amount of debt that can be incurred at federal level to just 0.35% of the value of total annual German production. That is the gross domestic product or GDP. It was enacted under Angela Merkel’s government in 2009 intending to restrict the total accumulated national debt to a maximum of 60% of GDP. For the European Union this was originally fixed in the Maastricht Treaty 1992 and then in the Stability and Growth Pact first established in 1997.

The debt brake has been reasonably effective in achieving its primary goal. German national debt currently stands at just under 63% of GDP. This compares with 100% in the UK, 110% in France, 120% in the US and an enormous 263% in Japan. 

The larger the national debt, the higher the amount of interest the government must find to pay interest on that debt. If national debt seems to be rising out of control, the financial markets (ie rich companies and individuals who speculate on currency movements) can take fright causing a plunge in the value of the currency. That in turn makes imports more expensive and inject inflation into the economy. In turn that may then be met by higher interest rates and cuts to government spending to curb the debt that the government is incurring and reassure those same financial markets.

If that is the rationale of the debt brake, the downside is that it restricts the government’s scope for keynesian debt-funded spending. As in economic stagnation and recession when the debt limit was reached as it was in Germany. The new government, to be led by CDU leader Friedrich Merz, now has to find a way to bring the economy out of recession. This is going to be crucial to the incoming government. For it is clearly economic stagnation that hugely contributed to discrediting the mainstream parties and fuelled the rise of the AfD.

The economic malaise is a shock for Germany, the powerhouse of the European economies in the post-war period. Between 1950 and 1990 the average growth rate of German GDP was 5%, far higher than the US at 3.3% or the UK at just 2.5%. Average growth was slower since reunification but still relatively strong until recently. As a result of these relatively high levels of growth, Germany today is between the third and sixth largest economy depending on the measures used for comparison.

That phenomenal growth was based on Germany rapidly becoming a major exporter particularly to the rest of Europe and to the United States. That export success was based on three inter-related things. 

Firstly, there was a growing world economy into which to export. This was particularly so in the so-called long boom in the 1950s and 1960s before things deteriorated in the 1970s. Secondly, that long boom was sustained by high levels of peacetime arms spending during the Cold War between the West and the Soviet Union. But the arms spending was concentrated in the UK and particularly the US. Germany and Japan were restricted in their arms spending because of their defeat in the Second World War. Thirdly, such restricted arms spending enabled Germany and Japan to concentrate investment into areas of industry with high export potential thus raising their productivity and competitiveness. 

However, the success of these two powerhouse economies weakened the UK and particularly the US ability to sustain arms spending. The world economy began to enter much more bumpy terrain in the 1970s and then with the arrival of neoliberalism and, ironically, the collapse of the Soviet Union. 

The Japanese economic miracle rapidly became a nightmare when a speculative financial bubble burst at the end of the 1980s. It left Japan in a deflationary trap which it may only now be emerging from. Germany however avoided that speculative financial bubble and continued to grow even with the reunification of two very differently structured economies with the collapse of the Berlin Wall. 

Germany was also relatively unscathed by the Great Financial Crisis of 2008 which inflicted severe hardship on other smaller and weaker EU economies such as those of Spain, Portugal and, above all, Greece. It’s only much more recently that stagnation and worse has set in.

What do the professional bourgeois economists say needs to be done now? Not surprisingly, opinions differ greatly and are often contradictory or unrealistic or plain wrong. One argument is that Germany became too dependent on Russian energy supply, the price of which went up with the onset of the Ukraine war and the imposition of sanctions against Russian exports. This caused some inflationary pressures in Germany, which have since eased off with alternative energy sources and the drop in gas prices.

Another argument is that the German economy is too export-orientated. Competition in export markets is now fierce, particularly from the Chinese economy. China has certainly been growing extraordinarily strongly since its admission into the World Trade Organisation in 2001. In an act of hubris the US saw China as a platform for US multinational profits with its cheap and disciplined labour force.

But there are two problems with the claim about excessive export-orientation. The first is that Germany remains very competitive in export markets by standard measures, as IMF analysts have pointed out. But secondly what would reorientating away from exports mean in practice? For the  Keynesians it means that German domestic consumption should rise to offset the loss of export markets. But that means rising wages. That is not in the federal government’s direct control and would be fiercely resisted by German bosses. The latter depend on maximising gaps between the value of goods produced and how much they pay workers to produce them – for their profits.

Another argument is that Germany suffers from too much regulation and stifling bureaucracy. The problem with this argument, much beloved by the so-called free market-eers, is that the German economy thrived in the past with rather more bureaucracy than exists today. Moreover, deregulation invariably will mean more environmental degradation and a worsening climate crisis. 

The Hartz reforms of some 15 years ago were intended to create more “flexibility” in the labour markets. Today some call for workers to pay for the malaise in the German economy by cutting wages, but this would cut domestic consumption  and therefore make the malaise worse. 

Others say there urgently needs to be infrastructure spending as Germany’s infrastructure is crumbling and the trains no longer run on time. All of this is true, of course. But firstly, how is the money to be found for this if the debt brake is to be maintained? Unless taxes were increased on rich individuals and corporations – a move the rich do not want. Or, more likely, some swingeing cuts to social spending. But also, desirable though such infrastructure spending is, there is no evidence that declining infrastructure has significantly impacted German international competitiveness.

Another argument is that Germany has an aging population which means that fewer and fewer people of working age and capacity support a larger number of people dependent on that working population. This is true and a major problem in the years ahead. That can only be met by two developments. Either an increased productivity in the production of goods that people need to live a decent life and; on the other hand, immigration. It’s a sick irony of the racism unleashed by the AfD and compounded by the concessions of the mainstream parties. The demands for restrictions on migration into Germany and, even worse, the forced expulsion in what is euphemistically called remigration will be economically disastrous for Germany.

Bourgeois economists and the mainstream parties in Germany have no serious answers to the current German economic malaise and the situation is the brink of getting much worse. Trump bizarrely believes the rest of the world have been ripping the US off and he is now imposing a very broad range of tariffs. The US accounts for about 10% of Germany’s exports by value and they could be hit with a 25% tariff which could cut demand for German exports dramatically. 

The world economy and the German economy continues to depend on US economic growth and spending on imports. US economic growth is currently stronger that of the EU and of Germany although not nearly as strong as in the period 1950 to 1990. But there are profound doubts about whether that growth is itself sustainable. 

US consumption spending is currently sustained by increases in the spending of the richer sections of the population whose wealth has been buoyed up by a financial bubble. Tariffs will increase the price of imported goods into the US raising inflation and with it the prospect of higher interest rates. The financial bubble looks increasingly unsustainable. If it pops, or at least deflates, the US as a market for exports will decline and there will likely be serious financial consequences across the world’s financial markets.

Add to this the acceptance by the mainstream parties of Trump’s demand for much higher European arms spending. It is very likely this can only be financed by squeezing essential government spending in other areas. The government that emerges out of Sunday’s election therefore seems very likely to be caught between an economic rock and a hard place. 

The AfD is going to seek to exploit the incoming government’s failures but it has no economic answers and if its racist migration policies were implemented the economy might well collapse. 

The race is on to generate a movement which will not only challenge the AfD but also Merz’s government. That movement has to point the way towards an end to the dire problems posed by a system run for profit. 

We urgently need to replace it with a system run by those who actually produce the wealth of society, the working class, so they can plan it to meet the needs of all instead of the profits of the few.

Red Flag over Berlinale 2025: An Embarrassing Festival of Self-Censorship

Feel bad about going to Berlinale this year? Maybe reading how terrible it was will help.


28/02/2025

Last year’s Berlinale film festival was marked by scandal. After two co-directors of the documentary No Other Land, one Palestinian and one Israeli, gave short speeches calling for equality, they were denounced by German politicians for antisemitism. A Bundestag resolution called it one of the “big antisemitism scandals” in recent years (Elon Musk’s “Roman salute,” in contrast, barely got a peep).

I do not envy Tricia Tuttle, the new head of the Berlinale, who must try to navigate between the German state’s fanatical support for Israel’s far-right government and the international art scene’s generally liberal views. There were contradictory signs like an Instagram post, nine months too late, defending No Other Land, and an FAQ informing people that the so-called antisemitism resolution was mistaken and not legally binding.

Anodyne

The resulting festival was an embarrassing mess. Germany’s public broadcaster offered a slideshow of “stars speaking out politically” that looks like a competition for anodyne messages. “HUMANITY! LOVE! VOTE!” Why did no one think to bring a sign about “DEMOCRACY”?

The only person to make an actual political statement from the stage was Tilda Swinton, who defended boycotts of Israel at a press conference. The festival leadership, in contrast, highlighted a documentary about David Cunio, who had starred in a Berlinale film in 2013 and is currently a hostage in Gaza.

In other words, they know there is a war going on, and they have chosen to focus exclusively on the side backed by German imperialism. The only film from Palestine was about parkour in Gaza City. I heard one official on stage musing about a “place that no longer exists,” as if talking about Atlantis swallowed up by the sea.

Racism and Calling the Cops

It was up to a handful of brave artists to talk about politics. Jun Li, director of Queerpanorama, read out a statement by Erfan Shkarriz, who was boycotting the festival. Berlin cops opened a criminal investigation because of the phrase “From the River to the Sea,” which multiple German courts have declared to be legal.

That is Berlinale 2025: Inviting international artists and then sticking the cops on them.

At the premiere of a documentary about the dictatorship in Paraguay, editor Manuel Embalse, who is Jewish, gave a similar speech while wearing a keffiyeh. He ended with the same slogan, used around the world as a call for equality — it has never been, despite what German prosecutors think, a unique marker of one particular Palestinian faction. 

Dirk Stettner, chair of the CDU in the Berlin parliament, called for cancelling the whole festival. This would be the next logical step: banning international artists from Germany.

While the films in competition seem to have been mostly forgettable, two spectacular documentaries allowed victims of German racism to tell their stories. Das Deutsche Volk portrays the families of the nine people murdered in Hanau five years ago. They are currently being attacked by local politicians for criticizing the state. 

Die Müllner Briefe features a much older mass murder: the arson attacks that killed three people in Mölln in 1992. Thousands of letters were sent to the survivors, but shockingly, the city of Mölln locked these messages of solidarity away for 27 years. They are now being presented to the public.

Yet my favorite film at the festival, Hysteria, was a satire of the German anti-racist film genre. In a film-in-the-film, a Turkish-German director is trying to commemorate yet another racist murder — the 1993 arson attack in Solingen that took five immigrants’ lives. The filmmakers want to do everything right — but one of the refugees they hire as extras is upset to see a Quran was burned for a shoot. As everyone tries to act in a principled way, the situation gets increasingly tense and absurd. Different characters who are affected by German racism — the intern with a Turkish father, the wealthy director, the different refugees — argue about who benefits from white privilege and who is making art that assuages European guilt. A morally ambivalent, hilarious  masterpiece!

Under the Radar

The closest thing to an impactful statement about Germany’s complicity in genocide might have come from Radu Jude, who won a silver bear for the screenplay of Kontinental ’25. A bailiff in Cluj, a city with Romanian, Hungarian, and German traditions, evicts a poor man from the cellar where he is just barely surviving. He kills himself, and she spends the rest of the film searching for relief from the overwhelming guilt, consulting her boss, husband, priest, former student, and many other weirdos.

Like in every Jude film, the focus is on the absurdity of everyday life. The constant and casual racism against the ethnic Hungarian protagonist from the Romanian majority is one example, matched by the casual racism of ethnic Hungarians, which is funny for viewers totally unfamiliar with the stereotypes. In reminding herself that she followed the rules, she does not absolve herself, and only highlights the cheap excuses people use to do inhumane things — “I was just doing what I was told!” — German officials should watch this.

As always, Berlinale was also full of bland Hollywood slop and failed projects that will rightly never see release. The political messages were still there, but they were much harder to find than in previous years.  If you boycotted the festival, you didn’t miss much.

Red Flag is a weekly column on Berlin politics that Nathaniel Flakin has been writing since 2020. After moving through different homes, it now appears every Friday at The Left Berlin.

The German Greens: From Pacifist Roots to Militarism, Neoliberalism, and Greenwashing

A Party Transformed


26/02/2025

Bündnis 90/Die Grünen, founded in 1980 as a fusion of environmentalists, pacifists, and anti-nuclear activists, has long shed its radical origins. Once synonymous with grassroots democracy and peace, the Greens now embody a paradox: a party still branded as “center-left” and “green” by the German mainstream while blatantly championing militarism, neoliberal austerity, and policies starkly at odds with its founding principles.

Below are a few helpful reminders of past controversies and betrayals of principles

  • Militarism’s Early Roots: The Greens’ 1998 entry into federal government under Chancellor Gerhard Schröder (SPD) marked their first betrayal of pacifism. Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer justified NATO’s 1999 bombing of Yugoslavia as “humanitarian intervention,” setting a precedent for future pro-war stances. The party later backed the Afghanistan War, cementing its alignment with US-led militarism.
  • Neoliberalism and the Hartz IV Legacy: Partnering with the SPD, the Greens co-authored the Hartz IV reforms (Agenda 2010), which slashed welfare protections, imposed punitive sanctions on the unemployed, and normalized precarious labor. These policies exacerbated poverty and psychological distress, disproportionately harming marginalized groups, forcing them into working conditions that barely covered, if at all, basic human needs.
  • Scandals and Suppression: The Greens’ had early ties to pedophilia apologists (resurfacing in 2013) having members proposing the decriminalization of pedosexuality back then. And in a much more recent incident in 2023, they purged member Miriam Block, a Hamburg politician stripped of her roles for demanding an inquiry (introduced by Die Linke) into the unsolved NSU-linked murder of Süleyman Taşköprü, a request rejected by their coalition partner, the SPD — this highlights a pattern of prioritizing power over accountability and justice.

A review on recent events

The Greens have Unconditionally supported Israel’s War in Gaza. “No weapons and military equipment to warzones” was a heavily exhibited phrase printed largely on countless Green election posters displayed nationwide, which included an image of a white dove during their 2021 Bundestag election campaign.

After October 7, 2023, Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock and Vice Chancellor and Economic Affairs Minister Robert Habeck rejected calls for a humanitarian ceasefire ( Gaza-Krieg: Bundesregierung weiterhin gegen Waffenstillstand) despite the fact that other fellow European foreign ministers (e.g. France and Ireland) and UN general secretary António Guterres called for one. 

It was only after Palestinian deaths surpassed 32,000 in March 2024 that Baerbock first suggested the idea of a possible humanitarian pause to the fire. Germany remains meanwhile Israel’s second-largest arms supplier (€323 million in 2023), with the Greens, in possession of 2 key ministeries for the approval of arms exports (Habeck’s and Baerbock’s), authorizing exports despite overwhelming evidence of war crimes. 

All of this unfolds as German exports account for 30% of Israel’s arms imports. This places it just behind the United States, which dominates with 69% of Israel’s military supplies — a staggering 99% combined total that underscores the West’s complicity in Israel’s military aggression.

Baerbock’s shameless and outrageous declaration at a Bundestag session on the 10th October 2024 announcing that “civilian sites lose protected status if abused” directly violates the Geneva Conventions. Habeck echoed debunked Israeli claims about Hamas using “human shields”, despite UN reports from March and November 2024 finding no evidence by reporting that “Israel does not provide substantial evidence nor could they independently verify those allegations”. 

Habeck stated “…Hamas uses the (Gaza) population as hostages, even as human shields and hides behind them, kind of producing the images (of dead children) and civilian casualties themselves”. When questioned about the possibility of an ongoing genocide in Gaza perpetrated with German weapons and unconditional support Habeck said: “the naming of a genocide in Gaza is a complete contortion of victim and perpetrator…”. (l )

Never in its history has Germany exported so many weapons as during the current legislative period. In 2023 they increased the amount of arms exports to Israel tenfold compared to the year 2022. (Deutsche Rüstungsexporte nach Israel fast verzehnfacht | tagesschau.de) These 2023 exports were authorized as “urgent procedures”.

Fuelling the Ukraine-Russia War

The Greens spearheaded Germany’s U-turn on pacifist arms exports, flooding Ukraine with heavy weapons and backing a €100 billion military upgrade fund. Sven Giegold, a top Green official in Habeck’s ministry, even advocated arming “democratic” nations in conflicts — a far cry from their anti-war roots.

Germany and the EU’s failure to impose an early oil embargo on Russia, coupled with ineffective diplomacy and poorly timed sanctions, allowed the Ukraine war to escalate. This inaction marked one of two key breaches of the Greens’ campaign pledge to avoid arming conflict zones. Even within the SPD, critics warned that heavy weapons deliveries risked dangerous escalation. Yet under pressure from Kyiv and internal Green Party figures like Annalena Baerbock — who declared “We see terrible horrors every day” and insisted “now is not the time for excuses, but for creativity and pragmatism” — Germany pivoted to militarism.

Unlike the fierce internal dissent during the Greens’ 1999 support for NATO’s Yugoslavia bombing, the party’s pro-war consensus on Ukraine faced minimal to no resistance. Strikingly, Anton Hofreiter — once seen as the leader of the Greens’ anti-militarist “Fundi” faction — now echoed the “Realos” wing (led by Baerbock and Habeck), declaring “we have no other choice” to justify arming Ukraine. Hofreiter even invoked fear of a Russian invasion sparking World War III, a rhetoric diametrically opposed to the Greens’ pacifist roots. This shift underscores the party’s abandonment of its anti-war principles in favor of militarized Realpolitik and lobbying for the military industry. This can also be highlighted by the approval of a 100 billion Euro fund to swiftly upgrade the national military in June 2022.

Climate Protection Farce: Greenwashing

Their slogan “climate protection is human protection” during their electoral campaign is exposed as perhaps the biggest and worst lie and contradiction.

The 2023 eviction of Lützerath —a small village destroyed for RWE’s coal mine expansion in Green co-governed (with CDU) North Rhine-Westphalia exposed their environmental hypocrisy. While preaching for environment protection and renewable energies the Greens approved record fossil fuel projects alongside military exports, two of Germany’s and the world’s largest CO₂ sources.

Germany has committed to reducing national emissions by 65% below 1990 levels by 2030 and achieving climate neutrality by 2045, as outlined in its 2021 Climate Protection Act. As a signatory to the Paris Agreement since April 22, 2016, these pledges are not only central to its international reputation but also to the Greens’ electoral promises. Yet the party’s actions starkly contradict these goals. The violent eviction of the village of Lützerath in 2023 — aided by police using pepper spray and bulldozers — to expand RWE’s Garzweiler coal mine exemplifies this blatant hypocrisy. For a party ostensibly dedicated to environmentalism, facilitating fossil fuel extraction while partnering with one of Germany’s largest energy corporations represents a profound betrayal of its foundational principles.

The environmental devastation wrought by Israel’s assault on Gaza — partially financed by German arms exports — includes the destruction of 40% of cultivable farmland over 1 million olive trees razed, and widespread contamination of water, soil, and air from CO₂-intensive military strikes and illegal white phosphorus use. These actions have left 97% of Gaza’s water unfit for human consumption, with only 5% of water needs met by groundwater.

“Feminist Foreign Policy”

Baerbock’s self-proclaimed “feminist” branding collapsed amid Gaza’s humanitarian catastrophe: 67% of casualties are women and children, 50,000 pregnant women endure unsafe births under deplorable human conditions, and 690,000 lack hygiene access. It is important to remind people of Baerbock’s dismissed ceasefire calls despite UN pleas, reducing her “feminism” to empty rhetoric.

Hypocrisy and Racism

Green Party co-chair Ricarda Lang targeted climate activist Greta Thunberg for her solidarity with Palestine, weaponizing the term “antisemitism” to accuse her of spreading “conspiracy tales” and exploiting climate activism to promote a “one-sided position on the Palestine-Israel conflict.” Lang even baselessly labeled Thunberg a “jew-hater”, a smear emblematic of the German political establishment’s conflation of anti-Zionism with antisemitism. 

This kind of hypocrisy was further exposed during the Berlinale 2024 scandal, where Green Minister of state for culture Claudia Roth faced criticism for applauding the critically-acclaimed documentary “No Other Land” by Palestinian director Basel Adra and Israeli journalist Yuval Abraham. When pressed by CDU politicians, especially by Berlin Mayor Kai Wagner, Lang defensively claimed, “I was only clapping for the Israeli moviemaker,” completely sidelining Adra’s contribution and epitomizing the Greens’ racist, selective and hollow performative allyship.

Erosion of Rights and International Law: Contempt for Accountability

Despite the ICJ’s provisional ruling on Israel’s “plausible genocide” and ICC arrest warrants for Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and now Israeli ex-Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, Baerbock initially ismissed these as “hypothetical.” This also despite the UN and the largest human rights organizations, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch having openly named and condemned apartheid, crimes against humanity and genocide perpetrated by Israel in Gaza. 

In 2024, the German government approved €160 million military exports to Israel, 31.2 of those additionally in December 2024 even as evidence of Israeli war crimes and mass civilian casualties in Gaza mounted. In a surreal twist, the Greens demanded a “written guarantee” from Israel that German weapons would not be used to violate international law—a performative gesture given Israel’s documented use of such arms in unlawful strikes. This attempt to “clean their conscience” (or rather wash their already crimson red bloody hands in advance) ignores overwhelming proof that German-supplied equipment has already facilitated repeated war crimes.

Katrin Göring-Eckardt (Green Bundestag Vice President) insisted Netanyahu should be “spoken to elsewhere,” mainly after 1:46:00) while ex-party chief Omid Nouripour and Cem Özdemir (Agriculture Minister) outright rejected the ICC’s legitimacy — a stark contrast to the latter’s pre-election claim in 2021 that “human rights aren’t tactical.”

Germany and the U.S. continue to supply 99% of Israel’s military imports. This unwavering support is enabled by the German Greens, who have endorsed arms exports to Israel without hesitation

Hard Right-Wing Drift

Habeck’s “10-point security plan” shamelessly mirrors far-right CDU rhetoric (CDU’s 5-point plan), emphasizing deportations, biometric surveillance, and targeting “Islamists” while ignoring far-right violence, which is statistically significantly higher. The firing of Marjam Samadzade (Schleswig-Holstein integration official) in mid 2024 over a pro-Palestine social media “like” exemplifies the Greens’ authoritarian turn.

A Party Unmasked

The Greens have long abandoned their pacifist, environmentalist, and social justice roots to become architects of militarism, neoliberalism, and right-wing normalization. Their “green” label now masks carbon-intensive policies, unconditional support for apartheid, and complicity in war crimes. A vote for today’s Greens is a vote for a rebranded hard-right agenda — xenophobic, profit-driven, and drenched in hypocrisy, mockery of international law and violent genocide.