ANARCHIST EVALUATIONS DISCUSS TENSIONS WITH RHEINMETALL ENTWAFFNEN ORGANISERS
AND AUTHORITARIAN LEFT GROUPS
~ Cristina Sykes ~
Evaluations of last summer’s anti-militarist camp in Germany have highlighted
the difficulties imposed by centralised organising and the militarist rhetoric
among authoritarian left groups. The Berlin-based “A-Barrio” evaluation tells
how the anarchist self-organised space struggled with the camp’s
hierarchically-coordinated structure and lack of clear responsibility-sharing,
while the monthly Graswurzelrevolution criticised the deeply militaristic and
authoritarian tendencies of “red” groups in the camp.
The Rheinmetall Entwaffnen protest camp took place last August in Cologne as a
week-long gathering of workshops, discussions and protest against Germany’s
largest arms manufacturer, and the country’s wider remilitarisation drive. It
went ahead despite repeated attempts by city authorities to ban both the
campsite and a planned demonstration, as organisers pressed on, drawing hundreds
from across Germany and beyond. The week culminated in a large demonstration on
30 August, when police deployed around 1,600 officers, used water cannons and
pepper spray, kettled participants for hours and arrested several hundred
people.
The ‘A-Barrio’ evaluation argues that for the camp organisers, “coordination and
organisation meant centralising the decision-making in the common assembly,
delegation, and a selective unified appearance”, while for the anarchists
“autonomy and self-organization meant acting from one’s own initiative and
responsibility, creating open procedures, organising through horizontal
decision-making processes, having space for improvisation, and refusing to be
told how the struggle should be or look like”. The writers note that “much of
the camp’s infrastructure depended on autonomous initiatives; the kitchen, sani,
awareness team, coffee stand. These groups were self-organized and somewhat
politically close to us, although we did not actively engage in common
procedures together. We can say that self-organization was critical in creating
mutual aid in moments of crisis, such as the hour-long police kettle that saw
many groups and individuals organise themselves in solidarity with the kettled
comrades. Their role shows that autonomy was only a problem when it appeared in
forms that challenged existing structures or expectations”.
Tensions with the camp’s central organisers became most visible around questions
of political autonomy and protest tactics. One flashpoint concerned the
appearance of party-political actors, including a planned talk by a
parliamentarian from Die Linke, which prompted A-Barrio participants to hang a
banner declaring the party “not welcome” — a move that led to pressure to remove
it under the camp’s ‘code of conduct‘. On the final demonstration, A-Barrio
marched as part of an autonomous block that refused several imposed conditions,
such as blanket bans on face coverings and protective equipment. The evaluation
describes how this block, alongside the so-called ‘Revolutionary Barrio’ of
Marxist groups, was effectively isolated, kettled and targeted by police, while
the rest of the march continued. The authors argue that this was not accidental,
but flowed from a protest structure that prioritised control and recognisable
leadership over pluralism and collective self-defence.
The assessment by Graswurzelrevolution focuses on the overtly militarist
politics of authoritarian left groups at the anti-militarist camp. “From the
‘Revolutionary Barrio‘ came repeated pronouncements in favor of a people’s war
and the East German People’s Army… A young man wearing a Stalin T-shirt was
asked if he was aware of whom he was promoting... according to his
indoctrination, the Gulags were just imperialist propaganda... Hammer and sickle
flags left no doubt: authoritarian communism is a revenant; only the Communist
Party can set us free“. Such displays, the authors argue, were expressions of a
political culture that normalises hierarchy, discipline and violence and
marginalises feminist, anti-militarist and anti-authoritarian perspectives.
The A-Barrio initiative will meet this week in Berlin “to discuss openly whether
or not to have a presence at the next Rheinmetall Entwaffnen Camp and also the
option of our own anarchist-autonomous-antimilitarist camp, inside or outside
Germany”.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Machine-assisted edit. Photo: Graswurzelrevolution
The post Germany: “Frustration” with centralism, Tankies at anti-militarist camp
appeared first on Freedom News.