“Stop the Killing,” Major Antiwar Protests Held in Germany, France, and Italy
by Connor Freeman and Will Porter | Feb
27, 2023
https://libertarianinstitute.org/news/stop-the-killing-major-antiwar-protests-held-in-germany-france-and-italy/
A series of
antiwar protests over the weekend saw Western European citizens in mass
demanding their governments pursue diplomacy with Russia and halt arms
shipments to Kiev. As the current conflict in Ukraine turned one year old,
major demonstrations – which saw people united across the political spectrum –
were seen in Germany, France, and Italy.
10,000 people
gathered in Paris to protest against France’s membership in both NATO as well
as the EU. Attendees also demanded an end to the French government’s military
aid to Kiev. The demonstration, dubbed the “National March for Peace” was
organized by the right-wing Les Patriotes party. According to the group’s
leader Florian Philippot – who joined the Paris rally himself – similar but
smaller protests were held at 30 other locations throughout the country on
Sunday.
On Saturday,
thousands of people participated in peace demonstrations in the Italian cities
of Genoa and Milan. In Genoa, the rally focused on ending weapons shipments to
Ukraine and was organized by union members and left-wing activists, whose
slogan was “Lower weapons, raise wages.” 4,000 people from across Italy joined
the Genoa protest, along with people from France and Switzerland as well,
according to local media reports.
The
Collective Autonomous Port Workers (CALP) helped organize the rally with the
Italian communist party. They demanded the port of Genoa’s facilities no longer
be used to facilitate arms shipments to Ukraine.
CALP’s
Riccardo Rudino pointed out that “the conflict in Ukraine did not begin last
year” but rather “in 2014, with the massacre of the Russian-speaking population
of the Donbass.”
Following the U.S. backed 2014 coup in Kiev –
which overthrew the government of former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych
– Russia annexed the Crimean peninsula, while over 14,000 people were killed,
including thousands of civilians, in Kiev’s war on the breakaway republics of
Donetsk and Luhansk.
In London, a
large group carried out a similar demonstration calling for peace in Ukraine
and an end to the British government’s weapons transfers to Kiev. The event was held by Stop the War Coalition at
Portland Place in Central London and was attended by former Labour Party leader
Jeremy Corbyn.
Many
thousands of people participated in a massive protest in central Berlin, where
attendees railed against German military aid to Kiev. The protesters, who were
massed at the Brandenburg Gate, demanded additionally that their government engage
Russia in peace talks and bring the war in Ukraine to an end.
The
organizers say as many as 50,000 people joined the “Uprising for Peace” demonstrations.
However, the police offered a lower-end estimate of 13,000 people in
attendance. The event was organized by Sahra Wagenknecht, a member of the Links
Party (the Left Party) in Germany, as well as a feminist author and campaigner
Alice Schwarzer.
Wagenknecht
declared neo-Nazis were not welcome at the protest, but anyone else who desired
peace “with an honest heart” was welcome to attend. During her speech at the
event, Wagenknecht declared the creation of a “new, strong peace movement in
Germany.”
She also
observed that the myriad protestors were united by the fact that they do not
feel represented by the government of Chancellor Olaf Scholz and his foreign
minister, Annalena Baerbock, in their decision to supply Kiev with weaponry,
including main battle tanks.
In a
reference to the drastic escalation of Berlin’s involvement in the war since
last year, some banners read “Helmets today, tanks tomorrow, the day after
tomorrow your sons.”
Other banners
carried by the protesters bore such anti war slogans as “Stop the Killing,”
“Not My War, Not My Government,” and “Diplomats instead of grenades.”
Two weeks
prior to the protest, Wagenknecht and Schwarzer published a “Manifest for
Peace” which demanded that Scholz “stop the escalation in weapons deliveries.”
The petition has reportedly garnered more than 650,000 signatures, including
some prominent intellectuals and political figures.
This
weekend’s massive protests in Berlin followed a smaller demonstration at the
end of January in Nuremberg, where participants rallied against Scholz’s
decision to provide Leopard 2 battle tanks to Kiev. This month, around 10,000
people also protested in Munich during the Munich Security Conference, where
Western leaders discussed funding,
arming and training Ukrainian forces “as long as it takes” to defeat Russia.
Also on
Sunday, in southwestern Germany, protesters gathered at the Ramstein air base –
where the Ukraine Defense Contact Group’s meetings on
arming Kiev are held – calling for an end to the weapons deliveries while
demanding the U.S. Air Force to “go home.”
In Nuremberg,
protestors expressed their dire concerns that the German people were being
dragged into another war with Russia. As one demonstrator commented “If we
Germans get involved in a war, and I personally do not have a war with Russia,
then for us Germans, based on history, it is the worst sign that we can send.”
The demonstrator continued, “no war must go through Germany, neither with arms
deliveries nor anything else, because otherwise, Germany will be in the middle
of it again.” He believes this is just what “America wants.”
The latest
protests in Germany took place against the backdrop of veteran investigative
journalist Seymour Hersh’s bombshell report “How
America Took Out The Nord Stream Pipeline.”
Before the
war began, Russia provided roughly a third of Europe’s gas, while Germany
depended on Moscow for more than half of its gas supplies. After the Nord
Stream pipelines were sabotaged, Russian President Vladimir Putin offered to
ship gas to Europe via an undamaged line in Nord Stream 2. This offer was
quickly rejected by Berlin.
Secretary of
State Antony Blinken celebrated the blasts in the Baltic Sea – which, according
to Hersh, were caused by explosives planted by U.S. Navy divers and detonated
with a sonar buoy dropped by a Norwegian spy plane. Blinken described the
attack as a “tremendous strategic opportunity” to wean Europe off its
dependency on cheap Russian energy “for the years to come.” Since the attack,
which led to possibly the largest ever leak of methane gas, the U.S. and Norway
have taken Russia’s place as
Europe’s top natural gas suppliers.
As a result
of the economic war on Russia led by the U.S., people across Europe have
suffered skyrocketing gas prices and inflation, leaving some struggling to heat
their homes during the frigid winter months. The strain is beginning to show,
likely playing some role in motivating the spate of protest actions in recent
days. Last year, tens of thousands attended similar demonstrations in
Italy, Germany, France, and the Czech Republic,
with many voicing outrage over pricey foreign aid to Ukraine as their living
standards continue to plummet.
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