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We will not be able to help you

How Germany is militarising the health sector and why health workers are resisting


07/12/2025

In July 2025, the vdää (the Association of Democratic Physicians) published a booklet called “Wir werden euch nicht helfen können” (“We will not be able to help you”). The title echoes a peace-movement slogan from the 1980s, used by medical professionals to warn the German public. They cautioned that, should the Cold War escalate into a full-scale nuclear confrontation, the health sector would be unable to help.

The booklet arrives as Germany takes a Zeitenwende, with politicians calling for a more war-capable society. The German government intends to reshape the healthcare system for military purposes, while cloaking its militaristic policies in euphemisms such as “resilience,” “health security,” or  “ZMZ” (“civil-military cooperation”). 

According to the vdää, these policies would divert resources from civilian care, tie medicine to warfare, and undermine ethical medical principles. The association’s core message is simple: the healthcare system must not become an arm of the military. Physicians and health workers should resist being drawn into war preparations and instead focus on promoting peace, diplomacy, and social justice.

These concerns were reiterated at a recent congress organized by the vdää, the Gesundheitspolitisches Forum. A workshop on the militarization of the health sector was among the most attended events. 

The urgency felt by health personnel is understandable. Health workers are among the first professional groups on the front lines—both in peacetime and in war operations.

Preparing hospitals for war

At the end of August, two clinics in Rostock conducted a military exercise, transporting fake war casualties from the harbor to hospital grounds. The drill was intended to demonstrate how cooperation between the Bundeswehr and the health sector could work. 

In November, Bundeswehr Colonel Zimmermann was scheduled to speak at the symposium “Civil Emergency and Rescue Medicine in Civil Protection” at the Charité in Berlin. He was uninvited after protests were announced, including by the IPPNW (International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War). But this small victory should not distract from the bigger picture: the government remains determined to enmesh the military in the health system. 

In July, the Berliner Senat presented its plan „Zivile Verteidigung Krankenhäuser“ (Civil Defense Hospitals). This plan, drafted with the help of the Bundeswehr, outlines how hospitals will need to prepare for a crisis, and especially war. 

The vdää has expressed concerns about several aspects of the plan: a shift from “individual medicine to disaster medicine”; discussions about allowing “the severely injured or so-called ‘hopeless’ patients” to die; and the transfer of extensive powers in hospitals to the military.

Medicine for war vs Medicine for peace

There are many troubling issues to consider if a state integrates its military and health apparatus. Chief among them is how this integration will transform the way civilians are treated and cared for.

Medicine for war is very different from medicine for peace. Wartime medicine treats different injuries and uses different techniques. Emergency procedures used to treat high-velocity gunshot wounds are not necessarily applicable to injuries sustained in civilian life (such as trauma suffered after a bike accident for example). If more training time is devoted to war medicine, how does this affect the capability of health workers in peacetime?  In the vdää booklet, Bernhard Winter reports on the annual Symposium on Civil–Military Cooperation. There, a demand was made to grant military doctors preferential access to certain surgical procedures over civilian doctors during their specialist training.

Furthermore, triage rules differ significantly between peacetime and wartime. In civilian medicine, triage—the process of assessing and prioritizing patients—is aimed at providing the most effective treatment for all patients in need, to save the greatest number of lives. In wartime, priority is given to soldiers who can be returned to duty quickly, in order to maximize military effectiveness.

A civil–military collaboration, as it is currently being pushed, entails the subordination of civilian structures to military purposes. This also implies a shift in priorities. In the event of war, even if it does not occur on German soil, it becomes likely that injured or sick civilians will be deprioritized in favour of German or NATO soldiers. 

“Modern wars depend on the fact that large numbers of wounded soldiers are sent back into the firing line after they have received medical treatment. This means that the general aim of healthcare is inverted. This is a concept known as ‘reverse triage’, meaning that instead of our usual way of triage, where we assess a patient and treat those most in need of healthcare first, instead we will have to start looking for the least injured military personnel in order to treat them as a priority, because they are needed back at the frontline.”

Vital Signs, Against the militarisation of the health sector 

When the health sector is subordinated to military objectives, it undergoes profound transformation. Training in specialties relevant to wartime takes precedence over training for civilian medicine, while large-scale exercises focus less on more likely scenarios—such as a pandemic—and more on a war that may never happen. Even infrastructure planning is impacted: some hospitals needed for civilian care might close, while hospitals that are connected to transport axes envisioned for NATO operations might remain open or be newly built. 

There have even been talks about building underground hospitals. Tino Sorg, the CDU/CSU’s spokesperson for health policy, told die Welt:

“For the first time since the Cold War, our healthcare system must prepare itself again for an emergency. This will also have to involve structural changes. We could learn from Israel, where hospitals and other civilian structures are relocated underground when necessary in order to be protected from airstrikes”.

Changing the mindset of the population

Recently, the Future Forum for Public Security published the “Green Paper on Civil-Military Cooperation 4.0”. Based on a hypothetical conflict between NATO and Russia in 2030, the document outlines how a comprehensive civil-military cooperation could work. The healthcare system is seen as a key component of this strategy: ensuring medical capacity and war-readiness, but also tasked with upholding the morale of society.

No war can be fought without the cooperation of the health sector. Arguably, health workers always operate, to some degree, in service of the powers in place. At the vdää congress, Debora Darabi reminded the audience that, in a capitalist society, the health system facilitates the reproduction of capital. For example, by enabling workers to return to work after an injury. This unholy cooperation becomes even more pronounced in the context of war, as health workers are essential for restoring wounded soldiers and maintaining a war-ready population.

Several other speakers at the congress pointed out that the talk of “war-ready” hospitals is also a way of winning over the German population. It gives the illusion that, in the event of war, soldiers and civilians will be cared for by a functioning system prepared for every crisis. This makes war seem more manageable and winnable. The cooperation of the health sector, then, helps the population to swallow the bitter pill of re-militarisation.

But just as in the 1980s, many health workers say that if war comes “we will not be able to help you”. 

More money for war is less money for peace

It is very clear that more money for war is less money for social causes. 

Recently, the president of the IFO (Institute for Economic Research), Clemens Fuest, mused  about the costs of militarization on a talk show, saying:

“Guns and butter — it would be nice if that were possible, but that’s a land of milk and honey; it doesn’t work.” 

This phrase echoes Rudolf Heß, deputy Führer to Adolf Hitler, who declared in 1936: »Kanonen statt Butter.« (Guns instead of butter). 

War is never just a single moment in time. Soldiers don’t simply become IT workers and forget what they went through. Families don’t forget the loved ones they lost. Weapons don’t simply disappear. Even if the war never breaks out, the country’s infrastructure has already been reshaped. The arms industry has been strengthened and now relies on actual warfare, at home or abroad. Weapons must be used, or sold to foreign nations waging their own wars. Health workers become less effective at treating civilians because they have spent more time learning to treat soldiers. Hospitals in populated areas have been closed, while new hospitals lie empty along highways to a front that will never see any combat. 

Hypocrisy, climate sabotage and the limits of global governance at G20 and COP30

Hypocrisy and inaction define G20 and COP30 as crises deepen from Gaza to climate chaos


06/12/2025

07.11.2025 – Fotografia oficial da Cúpula do Clima (COP30)

Part 2 of 2
Editor’s note:
Read Part 1 here.

From protocol indignities to ‘non-binding’ progressive policies and revealing omissions

What’s wrong with the documentation laboriously prepared in 2025 in those 130 meetings, putatively to guide G20 collective policy and action? Simply: another case of talk left, walk right.

Pretoria’s choice of three progressive theme words – solidarity, equality, sustainability – was uplifting, and were quickly recognised as the precise opposite of the new Trump regime’s agenda. As Rubio blurted out on X.com back on February 5: “I will NOT attend the G20 Summit in Johannesburg. South Africa is doing very bad things. Expropriating private property. Using G20 to promote ‘solidarity, equality, & sustainability. In other words: DEI [diversity, equity and inclusion] and climate change’.”

The provocative themes can be credited to the ‘sherpa’ guiding the process: Zane Dangor, director general of the Department of International Relations and Cooperation. Five years ago, Dangor wrote (in the country’s main ezine) of his desire to hear voices of “eco-feminists/eco-socialists,” whose “ideas are required if we are to build a new politics that can improve the well-being of all people on a healthier planet.” He represents one of the finest cases of catapulting from South Africa’s liberation tradition into civil-service realpolitik, so it was no wonder that progressive NGOs took Dangor’s leadership and the three theme words at face value, and that so many joined the various drafting processes.

Gilad Isaacs, the director of what is probably the most ambitious and effective of these, the Johannesburg-based Institute for Economic Justice, expressed optimism on November 22: “The U.S. boycott will not derail the work. The credibility of the presidency will be measured not by the presence of any one country, but by whether the agenda set in the interests of the Global South is carried through and used in other forums.”

But in reality, derailment of all progressive G20-legitimating work is inevitable. One reason is the Declaration’s continual resort to two weasel words – ‘voluntary’ and ‘non-binding’ – in vital areas where capitalism desperately needs major doses of nationalization, or at minimum tough regulation:

“we welcome the G20 Critical Minerals Framework, which is a voluntary, non-binding blueprint… we welcome the Voluntary and Non-Binding G20 High-Level Principles on Sustainable Industrial Policy for Inclusive Economic Growth, Industrialisation, Jobs and Equality… We discussed the need for improved integrity, and interoperability in carbon credit markets and note the voluntary and non-binding Common Carbon Credit Data Model… we note the South African Presidency initiative on a G20 Africa Cooperation Agenda on Trade and Investment, which is a voluntary and non-binding initiative… [and] look forward to the roadmap towards the implementation of Voluntary and Non-Binding High-Level Principles on Combating Illicit Financial Flows.”

Vicious U.S. politicians will inevitably make fun of this wishy-washy posturing, with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent already declaring, “We have whittled down the G20 back to basics … the G20 had become basically the G100 this past year. So it will be a concentrated group in Miami, seeing the best America has to offer, with American leadership.”

Indeed, Washington’s role in delimiting Dangor’s wordsmithing was apparently effective, as a New York Times reporter documented on November 15: U.S. functionaries “had spent much of the year drawing red lines, skipping working meetings and refusing to negotiate in the lead-up to the final gathering in Johannesburg. The moves, they said, put into stark relief Mr. Trump’s aggressive foreign policy and distaste for multilateralism, compromise and anything he considers political correctness.”

In scaling back G20 energy-access rhetoric, the Times named Argentina, Saudi Arabia and Turkey as Trump’s saboteur allies. And on public health, “The U.S. delegation said it could collaborate on fighting noncommunicable diseases like cancer, but issues of equity, universal health care and support for the World Health Organization were non-starters.”

Another example comes from a Media20 effort where a local reform leader, Michael Markovitz, wrote on FB how “we must also be honest about what was left out.” His team’s backroom support work on the M20 declaration – “endorsed by more than 70 organisations” – “set out four priorities essential to democratic resilience: information integrity, media sustainability, journalist safety, and the survival of public interest journalism.” But as a dismayed Markovitz discovered,

“None of these issues appear in the final Leaders’ Declaration at the G20 South Africa. There is no reference to information integrity. There is no acknowledgement of journalism’s role in safeguarding democracy. These are not minor omissions. In my view, it is a governance failure at the level of the G20. It is a gap that weakens the credibility of the multilateral system at the moment democracies need it most… If the information ecosystem is poisoned, every G20 goal becomes harder to achieve. Climate action, inclusive growth, digital cooperation and peaceful societies all depend on trusted information. In its absence, trust in important public institutions will continue to be eroded.”

G20 starves us of peace and food sovereignty

Even where host South Africans might have been ambitious in making demands, three other barriers arose to a serious declaration with implementation accountability: hypocrisy, a limited world view and upward-gazing elitism. On food security, for example, Ramaphosa had firmly signalled solidarity-equality-sustainability values in November 2024, at the Rio de Janeiro summit, beseeching fellow leaders that the G20 “must be capable of combating the use of hunger as a weapon of war, as we are now seeing in some parts of the world, including in Gaza and Sudan.”

Yet five days earlier, his lead minister within the SA Presidency – Khumbudzo Ntshavheni – vocally advocated systematic starvation as a weapon of class war, against thousands of underground informal-sector gold miners about two hours’ drive southwest of Johannesburg, in Stilfontein: “We are not sending help to criminals. We are going to smoke them out.” Ntshavheni knew the consequences, because two weeks before that, she had bragged to the media how the police and army “blocked communities in and around these abandoned mining shafts in Orkney from delivering food parcels, water and necessities to these illegal miners.”

As a result, starving mineworkers were forced to eat cockroaches and human flesh. It is likely that, by mid-January 2025 when courts finally ruled Ntshavheni’s murderous practice must cease, many dozens or even hundreds of mineworkers had died due to starvation or, because in a desperately weakened state, they had tried to escape by climbing up extremely steep mineshafts – falling to their deaths. 


There was much more hollow, hypocritical rhetoric in the Johannesburg Leaders’ Declaration, e.g., “We will work for a just, comprehensive, and lasting peace in Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Occupied Palestinian Territory, Ukraine, as well as ending other conflicts and wars around the globe.”

Those crafting the Declaration’s vapid phrasing were too fearful to name the aggressors and profiteers – much less arrange punishment – in the four cases, which range from capitalists within the BRICS such as Emirati gold traders and Russian (Wagner Group) soldiers in Sudan; to Chinese and Johannesburg- and London-listed mining houses in the eastern DRC; to all G20 economies’ firms which trade with Israel; to Russia killing hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian (and Russian) workers – yes, provoked initially by the G7’s eastward NATO military expansion but still inexcusable, and justifying a unified intervention to punish Putin effectively, to force him to return stolen territory (and children) and to pay reparations, in lieu of Trump’s incompetent Ukraine-surrender plan.

And speaking of Gaza, Ramaphosa’s brother-in-law Patrice Motsepe is still fueling the Israel Defense Forces with coal he co-supplies its power plants (and 18% of the genocidaires’ grid), alongside Ramaphosa’s former coal-mining partners at Glencore, dating to the late 2000s in both cases. This fuel violates an ICJ ruling in July 2024 that states must halt “aid or assistance in maintaining the situation created by Israel’s illegal presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory”, and a United Nations General Assembly resolution two months later (with a vote of 124 for, 14 against) for states to “prevent trade or investment relations that assist in the maintenance of the illegal situation” – plus Pretoria’s repeated Hague Group commitments to respect UN courts and prevent fuel from reaching the military.

Notwithstanding Palestine Solidarity Campaign protests at Motsepe’s offices and weekly demonstrations at Glencore’s Joburg headquarters, neither Ramaphosa nor the other G20 genocide collaborators had anything specific to say in the Leaders’ Declaration about the ICJ or International Criminal Court, which indeed they are actively undermining in relation both to Palestinians and climate justice, in view of an ICJ ruling in July that states (mainly G20 members) should pay their climate debt.

Other high-minded hypocritical fibs pothole the Leaders’ Declaration: “We affirm our unwavering commitment to act in accordance with international law including international humanitarian law and the Charter of the United Nations and its principle of peaceful settlement of disputes and in this regard, we condemn all attacks against civilians and infrastructure.” Yada yada.

When it comes to hunger crises, other important words are unmentionable in either the Declaration or G20 Food Task Force statement: multinational agribusiness, intellectual property, genetic engineering, carnivore, profiteering and speculation. These terms are not to be found, because they are assumed to be a natural part of corporate agriculture – although all undermine food sovereignty and climate sanity. Reforms like “land redistribution” and “agro-ecology” and genuine peasant empowerment are not mentioned; for they would violate the G20 Food Task Force’s commitment to “pursuing actions that are in compliance with WTO rules and obligations.” The G20 declaration pushes ‘food security’ phraseology without any concession whatsoever to the objectives of grassroots food sovereignty movements.

In addition to ignoring the content demanded by progressive anti-hunger and food-system activists, the most obvious aspect of any G20 official statement is silence about – and thus disrespect for – processes of civil society mobilisation. The G20 Food Task Force statement ignores courageous movements around the world, e.g. the Via Campesina network, whose members have struggled valiantly for land redistribution and pro-peasant policies.

So civil society should have had no expectation of being taken seriously by the G20 in Johannesburg, within a country where more than 12 million of the 62 million population is considered to be food insecure, led by a hedonistic ruling class that exudes subimperial obeisance to agricultural imperialism.

Financial imperialism

The same upward-gazing obsession could be observed in the G20’s highest-profile task force – led by the same Trevor Manuel who bailed out the IMF in 2009 – on ‘Growth, Debt and Development’, which was aimed mainly at alleviating the home continent’s worsening fiscal crises, e.g. through IMF gold sales. The mass protests and demands from so many African movements where unrest has been intense in recent months – from Madagascar and Mozambique, up to Morocco and Tunisia – are not referenced, much less acknowledged and respected.

Specifically unmentionable for G20 financial-reform bureaucrats are the clear strategies coming from Kenya’s Gen Z since mid-2024, for example, demanding ‘debt audits’ to determine whether corrupt lending for corrupt projects should be considered ‘Odious Debt’ – so that the creditor takes a haircut, not just society’s most vulnerable. The two biggest South African parastatal debtors – Eskom electricity (for the Medupi and Kusile coal-fired power plants) and Transnet (for Chinese locomotives) – are obvious cases in which the fiscal burden of corruption soared over the past two decades due to Pretoria taking on foreign loan repayment obligations, even in cases where lenders like the World Bank were obviously implicated in the Odious Debt burden due to oft-acknowledged graft or project maldesign.

Many other civil society forces across Africa argue for ‘reparations’ based on standard ‘polluter pays’ principles, to be paid as ‘climate debt’ by the big Western and BRICS greenhouse gas emitters – including China, which is owed a substantial share of Africa’s foreign debt. Such ideas dare not be mentioned by Manuel’s small-minded team, so perhaps his declaration’s sentence of greatest merit is this: “Over recent presidencies, the G20 has debated Multilateral Development Bank reform, debt sustainability, and climate finance, yet progress has been slow and credibility is waning.”

One feature of waning credibility is non-acknowledgment of conflicts of interest. For many months, debt activists have worried that if Manuel – as chair of this commission, and the most effective neoliberal politician in the country’s history – also runs institutions that have African sovereign financial instruments among their assets (e.g. Africa’s largest insurance company, and the local branch of the notorious Rothschilds), then there is little hope for South Africa’s G20 presidency.

Moving to the Leaders’ Declaration, “We continue to urge the international community to support vulnerable countries with a strong reform agenda whose debt is sustainable but are facing liquidity challenges and encourage the IMF and the World Bank to continue their work on feasible options to support these countries, which should be country-specific and voluntary.” Translation: Africa’s toughest neoliberal finance ministers – aiming to privatise and to cut social spending (i.e. that ‘strong reform agenda’) – need to load on yet more debt, to swamp current and future generations with permanent structural adjustment obligations.

Climate chaos confirmed

The Leaders’ Declaration was correct to brag about the COP30: “We highlight the successful outcomes of the 2025 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Conference COP30 in Belém.” After all, ruling classes from the G1, the other G7s and the BRICS have – since the 2009 Copenhagen Accord – resolutely lined up against everyone else, on three foundational positions:

1) do not agree to cut emissions or leave fossil fuels underground to the extent necessary to save us all from planetary catastrophe;

2) do not admit you emitted by acknowledging the ‘polluter pays’ principle because you’ll face liability claims, and have to pay ‘climate debt’ and reparations (as even the ICJ in July 2025 ruled is logical);

3) instead, do limit climate finance to loans, and ‘privatise the air’ through carbon markets, dubious offsets and other emissions-trading gimmickry.

From these three standpoints, COP30 was a roaring success for the G20 ultra-polluters. One obvious conclusion is that a ‘Global North’ (bad, villains) versus a ‘Global South’ (good, victims) is not an appropriate framing. Instead we have a configuration that allows the COP30 – like so many before it – to fuse imperial and subimperial interests. Speaking to the BBC, Li Shuo of the Asia Society remarked, “This partly reflects the power shift in the real world, the emerging power of the BASIC and BRICS countries, and the decline of the European Union.” (BASIC is Brazil, South Africa, India and China).

The BBC continued, “US President Donald Trump stayed away, but his stance emboldened his allies here. Russia, normally a relatively quiet participant, was to the fore in blocking efforts on roadmaps [to phase out oil, gas and coal]. And while Saudi Arabia and other major oil producers were predictably hostile to curbing fossil fuels, China stayed quiet and concentrated on doing deals.”

In addition to the U.S. – also absent from Belém due to Trump’s anti-science climate denialism – and Russia, the 24-member ‘Like Minded Group of Developing Countries’ is to blame for preventing fossil fuels from being left underground: Algeria, Bangladesh, Bolivia, China, Cuba, Ecuador, Egypt, El Salvador, India, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Malaysia, Mali, Nicaragua, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Syria, Venezuela and Vietnam. Of these, 11 are BRICS members, partners and invitees. The London Overseas Development Institute named China, India, Russia, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates as the main forces preventing even mention of a fossil fuel phase-out. The Financial Times reported that UN Secretary General António Guterres singled out the Saudis for most of the wrecking blame.

But Pretoria also helped foil COP30 climate-adaptation work because of a surreal personality battle within Ramaphosa’s centre-right co-governing party, the Democratic Alliance. The white-dominated 25%-supported party had won the right to name an environment minister in a Government of National Unity after the last election, in July 2024, and chose Dion George – whose background in corporate finance in the ultra-corrupt Sandton central business district of Johannesburg and his unashamed role as an apartheid-era soldier lowered expectations. George was sufficiently subimperialist in orientation that he was chosen as the UN’s COP29 co-chair on emissions mitigation in 2024 and COP30 co-chair of adaptation.

Those roles meant that when African delegations walked out of the COP29 in fury, he could stay behind and side with the rich climate vandals, so as not to spook the G20. Yet when it came to protecting lions and other big game from hunters, George’s traditional version of conservationism ran up against white game-farming and wildlife-trafficking interests, and so unceremoniously he was dumped as minister just as the COP30 began, replete with sleazy rumours of sexual harassment that he vows to take up in a libel suit.

But overall, as climate advocacy groups argued, the firing of George “gives the perception that the South African government is not serious about climate change or its leadership in the negotiations, despite this being a crisis that threatens the fundamental social and economic aspirations of all in South Africa.” The perception is the reality, of course, with Pretoria seeking not only to keep coal-fired power plants open much longer than promised in its Just Energy Transition Partnership fundraising, but to initiate massive new methane gas processing investments from the World Bank to better import the $12 billion in promised purchases from Trump’s U.S. oil company mates, or from local digging by Shell and Total, joined recently even by Brazil’s Petrobras.

Johannesburg’s decorative but ineffective bottom-up counter power

South African society had not been particularly well mobilised to deal with the contradictions, compared, say, to the most intense G20 counter-summit and protest, which was in Hamburg in 2017. On Friday just before the leaders’ summit began, a national Women’s Shut Down was held in at least 15 cities, protesting gender-based violence. In the centre of town from November 20-22, there was a ‘We the 99%’ festival with several thousand participants demanding global economic justice, drawing on ‘Fight Inequality Alliance’ advocacy and the local New Economy Hub.

And Johannesburg’s United Front movement mobilised 350 community activists to march nearly an hour from Soweto to the conference site on the final day. Most aesthetically appealing was the way a small artivist network, Camp, decorated some of the city’s best-known skyline buildings with a political light show.

But two other forces of dissent made more of a dent in the local news. A few dozen right-wing populist xenophobes (‘Operation Dudula’) protested the very idea of regional solidarity, alongside former president Jacob Zuma’s MK Party, on November 22, and attracted police tear gas and arrests near the conference site. Second, the main municipal trade union traded off a $235 million back-pay settlement with the mayor of Johannesburg, in exchange for a promise not to disrupt the event (an earlier threat, later denied).

The latter deal may have solved a problem for Johannesburg authorities in the short term, but also has generated awareness of the flimsy nature of municipal management, especially in a wet period that, just days before the G20 summit began, witnessed severe flooding and inadequate stormwater drainage – again revealing the country’s and city’s notorious lack of attention to climate adaptation and resilience.

And the mayor’s promise that during the G20, water would flow uninterrupted to all parts of the city – a source of sustained protest – was also broken, as predicted by the city’s lead water activist, Ferial Adam: “The contrast could not be starker: our government is spending close to R1-billion for a global summit in Sandton while nearby informal settlements and suburban residents alike cannot get a single bucket of clean water.”

These were merely indications of the way such depraved ‘North-South’ partnerships are being generated through G20 co-optation of South African elites, and indeed also within the COP process as well, as Lula’s recent role confirmed. It’s all too reminiscent of what a white-supremacist Rhodesian leader, Godfrey Huggins, described as the preferred neo-colonial arrangements he foresaw in managing racist rule (from 1933-53), in what later became Zimbabwe, South Africa’s immediate northeastern neighbour: a “partnership between a rider and a horse.”

Against the imperial threat—our American union and resistance

Let the Greater Caribbean rise!

A helicopter lands on an airstrip on a U.S. warship.

“The United States seems destined by Providence

to plague America with misery in the name of liberty.”

Simón Bolívar

“A beating so he learns that here there is honor

So he sees that in the Caribbean the shrimp doesn’t sleep

(If you see him coming, it means a beating for the shark)

Let’s hit him hard without hesitation.”

Rubén Blades

This statement is just a simple motion, one try among many, a grain of sand amidst the rage and pain. But it is in rage and pain that the most stubborn and impossible resistances have begun, the most dignified struggles of humanity against imperial and genocidal wars. A greeting towards the Sea of ​​the valiant Karib1, of the continent’s first independence movements, port of slave ships, sea of ​​trade routes of colonial plunder, tomb of pearl divers, home of maroon resistance and quilombos, sea of ​​necessary revolutions and cradle of the most beautiful corals.

A long history of interference

It is upon this sea that the talons of the bald eagle2 once again perch. They seek to tear apart the fabric of popular resistance and our anti-imperialist spirit, forged in blood and fire by the peoples of our continent in their quest for emancipation.

This is not the first time the US empire has attempted to define our destinies to guarantee, at all costs, the exploitation of nature and the control of politics in what, in its contempt for the rest of the continent, calls its “backyard.” There are countless strategies of the US interference in our America over the last two centuries, from the Monroe Doctrine3 to the Operation Condor4. The history of the US government intervention on American soil is longstanding:

From wars and direct military interventions on the continent to economic and military support for far-right governments in the region; financial and military backing for coups against revolutionary or progressive governments; economic blockades and sanctions, and intervention in security policy; the training and funding of military and paramilitary forces for the extermination, disappearance, and torture of the civilian population; the displacement of entire communities; and the exploitation of energy resources through extractive companies. Yesterday there was the justification for the counterinsurgency and anti-communist war; today it is the excuse for the war on drugs. Yesterday it was about bananas; today, black gold.

The Caribbean has fought for its sovereignty and dignity against its predatory neighbor countless times, from the invasion and annexation of Puerto Rico in 1898; the separation of Panama and the annexation of the Canal in 1903; the military occupation of Haiti in 1994; the military occupation of the Dominican Republic with the Banana Wars in 1916 and its repeated interference in national politics in 1965; the Bay of Pigs invasion (Cuba) in 1961; the support for paramilitary forces in Colombia to the financial and political support for the coup against Hugo Chávez in 2002. Among many other attempts to forcefully and starvingly undermine the sovereignty and self-determination of the peoples of the Caribbean.

Reclaiming back “the backyard”?

In recent months, under Trump’s presidency, in his internal struggle to win the trade war with China, Abya Yala (the Americas) has once again come under the watchful eye of the imperial eagle. Under the pretext of a supposed war on drugs, they (the imperialists) attempt once again to justify their intervention in the region. Yankee imperialist capitalism rearranges its stakes in Latin America, from the imposition of military bases with the complicity of far-right governments like Noboa’s in Ecuador, passing by the indebtedness and structural adjustment policies implemented by Milei in Argentina, to the murder of more than 80 people in the Caribbean Sea, thus creating a scenario of war against Venezuela and Colombia, with the sole aim of assuring the plunder of the world’s largest oil reserves, located beneath Venezuelan soil, and halting trade agreements which benefit China.

The shaping of a narrative of a failed state and a war on drugs to justify a military intervention in Venezuela has precedents and seeks to apply the same strategy as that previously used in Guatemala, Grenada, Chile, Colombia, and Panama. Some of the actions that have contributed on creating this war scenario in the last two years include:

  • Dialogue and mediation by the United States with the Guyanese government for political and military support amidst escalating tensions over the Essequibo territory dispute. Marco Rubio’s visit5 to Guyana for political agreements and joint Guyanese-US military exercises on Guyanese territory (March 2025).
  • Strengthening of economic sanctions against Venezuelan government officials (2023).
  • Strengthening of the economic blockade against Venezuela, leading to a profound crisis, increased hardship and impoverishment of the population.
  • Launch of “Operation Safeguard” to deport Venezuelans “en masse” from the United States, accused of being criminals (January 2025).
  • Mass deportations of Venezuelan migrants in the United States to maximum security prisons in El Salvador, accused of being part of the “Tren de Aragua”6 (March 2025).
  • Arrest warrant issued for the President of Venezuela as part of a terrorist organization, “Cártel de los soles”7 (October 2025).
  • Defining of the “Tren de Aragua” as a foreign terrorist organization by the U.S. State Department (March 2025).
  • Awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to Venezuelan far-right opposition leader María Corina Machado (politically disqualified for explicitly requesting military intervention in Venezuela from various U.S. presidents—Bush, Obama, Biden).
  • Designation of the “Cártel de los soles” as a foreign terrorist organization by the U.S. State Department (November 2025).
  • Deployment of U.S. warships, aircraft carriers, nuclear submarines, bombers, and 15,000 troops to the Caribbean (August – November 2025).
  • Extrajudicial killings of more than 80 fishermen of various nationalities in international and Colombian waters, accused of drug trafficking (September – October).
  • Military exercises and deployment of US troops in Panama and use of Trinidad and Tobago’s maritime borders with Venezuela.
  • Diplomatic tension between Venezuela and Trinidad and Tobago.
  • Overflight of military aircraft a few miles from Venezuelan territory (November 2025).
  • Announcement of a new phase of military advance in Venezuela and preparation for direct ground invasion operations (late November).

No one here will surrender!

The Caribbean Sea is a battleground today. Every week the threat intensifies. A direct military intervention in Venezuela via its coasts, or the beginning of a scenario of political destabilization leading to civil war, should not only generate the strongest condemnation from the peoples of the world, but also a wave of international solidarity that could prevent a regional massacre, the loss of sovereignty, and the complete surrender of our land to the most unsavory face of US imperialism.

The guarantee of peace today in Venezuela and Colombia implies the guarantee of peace on a continent once again ablaze with injustice, inequality, repression, and hunger. Our gaze must be attentive and fair. Also, we must understand the magnitude of what is happening. We cannot remain passive, clinging to purist positions that only speak out (and rightly so) against the abuses of a government disguised as revolutionary that betrayed the political project of socialism; we must be consistent with our continent’s history of resistance and speak out against a new imperialist threat. Our struggle is from and with the people.

We are children of a continent which forged its identity in resistance against colonialism, against bourgeoisie, against imperialism. A continent that has learned to shape its destiny when it has raised the banners of dignity and struggle. This time will be no exception. The voices of those of us who are unwilling to allow the armies of power to continue oppressing and threatening the peoples of the Americas with the sword of war in their imperialist expansion plans are already being heard.

From the Latin American Bloc we call for the urgent task of uniting forces, speaking out, and weaving networks of resistance against imperialism, beyond the differences we may have regarding Venezuelan politics in recent years, beyond our fragmentation. Just as we raised the Palestinian flag in the streets of the world and wore keffiyehs around our necks as a cry for justice and rebellion against Zionism, let us raise today the flag of Our American unity, let us reclaim the Gran Colombian dream, let us recognize ourselves today more than ever as part of a shared history, as brothers and sisters of the same land. Therein lies our strength and our tenderness. Let us not allow war on our land; let us resist once again the talons of the bald eagle.

From Palestine to Abya Yala, the struggle continues!

Before the imperial boot, we will triumph!

This article first appeared in Spanish on the Bloque Latinoamericano website on 29.11.2025. Translation: Ana Ferreira. Reproduced with permission.


  1. In Taíno, the term Karib means “strong,” “brave,” “valiant.” Caribe was used to name the indigenous peoples inhabiting the Antilles during colonisation.
  2. In 1782, the bald eagle was chosen as the official emblem of the United States.
  3. The United States’ foreign policy in dispute with European colonialism in the Western Hemisphere. It considers any intervention in the political affairs of the Americas by foreign powers from other continents as a potentially hostile act against the United States. (James Monroe, 1893).
  4. Campaign of political repression and state terrorism carried out from 1975 onward by several Latin American dictatorships with the backing of the United States government, which encompassed intelligence operations and the murder, torture, and disappearance of thousands of people across the continent.
  5. United States of America Secretary of State and National Security Advisor, from the Republican Party.
  6. Drug trafficking group from the state of Aragua in Venezuela.
  7. Alleged criminal organization from Venezuela.

G20 at a crossroads: The failure of multilateralism from 2008 to Johannesburg

Global crises expose the G20’s dysfunction as South Africa’s presidency collides with Trump’s sabotage


05/12/2025

2025 G20 Johannesburg summit Family photo

Part 1 of 2
Editor’s note: Read Part 2 here.

The third weekend in November offered the world two disastrous days for solving polycrisis problems, starting in the Brazilian Amazon city of Belém at the United Nations climate summit (‘COP30’) on November 22, just as South African President Cyril Ramaphosa hosted (most of) the Group of 20 leaders in Johannesburg. The G20 comprises 19 of the world’s major economies plus the European Union and, in 2023, the African Union was added (tokenistically).

The body was formed in 1999 as a finance ministers’ club at a Berlin meeting, at a time of nervousness about economic crises in several middle-income countries, including South Africa. But it was in 2008 that the G20 graduated to a heads-of-state annual meeting, due to deregulated U.S. banking rapidly degenerating, starting with real estate speculation, leading to Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers collapsing. U.S. President George W. Bush was told by his financial managers that the coming global meltdown would urgently require new funding sources, especially from middle-income countries with large surplus dollar reserves.

As the G20’s first major act, South African finance minister Trevor Manuel led a committee to grant the International Monetary Fund (IMF) nearly $1 trillion worth of new funding, approved by the G20 in an April 2009 London emergency meeting. That session also coordinated central banks’ low interest rates and money printing, termed Quantitative Easing (‘QE’), so as to flood liquidity into financial markets and thus avoid a repeat of the 1930s Great Depression.

And again in 2020 during the Covid-19 crisis, G20 leaders agreed that their capitalist self-interest was sufficiently threatened by widespread pandemic-prevention lockdowns and economic seizures that further QE and much lower interest rates were needed. In addition, a brief pause on the poorest countries’ foreign debt repayments was offered. But that didn’t prevent three African economies that were among the 2010s fastest-growing in the world – Zambia, Ghana and Ethiopia – from defaulting on foreign debt repayments between 2020-23, and terrible fiscal pressure mounted across the continent.

These two financial bailouts were G20 interventions that suggest, in a time of peril, imperial-subimperial fusion can be achieved. On the other hand, intra-capitalist divisions over handling Covid-19 vaccines and treatment were not solved within the G20 from 2020-22: British and German leaders vetoed efforts by South Africa and India wanting an Intellectual Property waiver (the way AIDS drugs were made generic in 2001, saving millions of lives). Ramaphosa was at his best appealing for health justice, allied with India’s Narendra Modi; but Boris Johnson and Angela Merkel were too intent on defending their own Big Pharma firms.

Since then, the world’s crises – climate and biodiversity catastrophes, brutal wars, economic volatility, the threat of rampant Artificial Intelligence, extreme inequality and others – have multiplied, and their causes now extend well beyond the greed and irresponsibility of the traditional Western imperial powers. In 2010, when the Brazil-Russia-India-China-South Africa BRICS emerged as a counterpart to the G7, the G20’s responsibilities for global economic management were codified, but other crises were added to the workload. And the recent G20 presidencies of Indonesia (2022), India (2023) and Brazil (2024) – all BRICS members (Jakarta having joined in 2025) – highlighted the subimperial powers’ newly-significant roles, not in providing alternatives, but instead in legitimising status quo multilateralism.

Indeed, with the advent of far-right Western rulers (Trump from 2017-21 and again since January this year, and in Italy, Giorgia Meloni since 2022), and three more neo-fascist parties currently leading in European polls – Reform in the United Kingdom (which hosts the 2027 G20), the Alternative for Germany, and the French National Front – there arises the threat and reality of fast-spreading ‘paleo-conservative’, economically-isolationist, xenophobic and socially-reactionary politics.

In this ominous period, the African continent’s first hosting of the G20 was meant to build upon Lula Ignacio da Silva’s November 2024 Rio de Janeiro summit, by taking the baton on coordinated international taxation of the ultra-rich and on food security, adding ‘disaster resilience and response,’ African debt relief, climate financing for a ‘just energy transition’ and ‘harnessing critical minerals for inclusive growth and sustainable development.’ The likes of Joe Stiglitz and other progressives were even drawn into a major inequality commission – albeit one which did not have the grace to recognise any social activists’ initiatives.

From the beginning of 2025, more than 130 official meetings were held in various glamorous South African sites. Not only did G20 civil servants labour over phraseology, but so did a myriad of allied groups Ramaphosa’s team had gathered: B20 for business (guided by McKinsey and Bain in spite of being told by Ramaphosa to fire those particular consultants), L20 for workers, W20 for women, C20 for civil society, Ch20 for children, M20 for media, etc. But as the dust settles, it all appears for naught.

Rebuffed by Trump

In Johannesburg on November 22-23, the Nasrec setting for G20 leaders – minus Donald Trump, Xi Jinping, Vladimir Putin, Claudia Sheinbaum, Mohammed bin Salman and Prabowo Subianto – was very different from what Ramaphosa must have anticipated when taking over management of the bloc last December. At that point, in Ramaphosa’s most obsequious mode – so different than in mid-2018 when he scathingly criticised Trump for interfering in local land reform politics – South Africa’s leader hurriedly invited the U.S. president-elect for a formal state visit and especially for a round of golf, replete with characteristic elite chuckling about taking time off to improve his game.

The invitation was repeated as late as the disastrous Oval Office meeting on May 22, when Ramaphosa handed over a R10 000, 14-kg golf course book, and his sidekick golf pro Ernie Els thanked Trump for the CIA’s empowerment of Pretoria’s apartheid-era army during its 1970s-80s invasion of Angola plus sponsorship of right-wing UNITA guerrillas – “you guys helped us“ – which killed up to a million black Angolans.

The South African elites’ sickening sweet-talk had begun soon after SA Ambassador Ebrahim Rasool was fired in March by U.S. foreign minister Marco Rubio for remarks about Washington’s new orientation to [white] ‘supremacy.’ The first reconciliation effort was made in April by special envoy Mcebisi Jonas – but failed since he was not even allowed into the U.S. by Rubio, due to similar (truthful) insults that he’d made in 2020 about Trump’s racism and narcissism. (Jonas also chairs the huge MTN cellphone company which is under attack in the U.S. courts for dubious activities in Afghanistan and Iran, when Ramaphosa was the firm’s board chair.)

The task of Trump-whispering then fell to ultra-neoliberal trade minister Parks Tau and Ramaphosa’s investment advisor Alistair Ruiters. Trump first imposed tariffs in February, on steel, aluminium and autos, which in subsequent weeks proved devastating to South African exports. The tariffs were expanded in April and again in August, when Trump also killed the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act, which since 2000 made many goods tariff-free. At that point, three new agriculture-sector victims – citrus (later retracted), nuts and vineyard products – were hit with a 30% tariff, mainly hurting the very Afrikaner farmers Trump had pretended to support through his bizarre, unsuccessful refugee recruitment gimmick, given his presumption the Afrikaners were suffering ‘genocide’.

Trump’s on-and-off ally Elon Musk – very badly raised in South Africa, “nearly beaten to death,” as he described his Johannesburg high school’s bullying culture, which his deranged father supported – and other U.S. capitalists also insisted that Ramaphosa drop Black Economic Empowerment policy, i.e., enforced sharing of investment assets. And powerful U.S. Zionists persuaded Trump to demand Ramaphosa retract the December 2023 case Pretoria filed at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) against Israel’s Gaza genocide. While failing to change Pretoria’s policy, Washington is still contemplating a messy, apparently inadequate offer by Tau to buy $12 billion worth of U.S. methane gas plus adulterated poultry, in turn threatening extreme damage via greenhouse gas emissions and local chicken factory-farm bankruptcies.

Trump’s rejection of U.S. participation contributed to the superficial, blindly-nationalistic character of commentary within South Africa. In his last pre-summit comment, on November 7, Trump announced, “It is a total disgrace that the G20 will be held in South Africa. Afrikaners (people who are descended from Dutch settlers, and also French and German immigrants) are being killed and slaughtered, and their land and farms are being illegally confiscated. No U.S. Government Official will attend as long as these Human Rights abuses continue. I look forward to hosting the 2026 G20 in Miami, Florida!”

Miami is about 370 km south of the famous Disney World resort, where Mickey Mouse frolics. The souring of G20 diplomacy was witnessed in Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana’s (quite realistic) scenario for late 2026: “If the U.S. does not want us to participate, the only way they can do it is to decline us a visa.”

Also reflecting Washington’s cartoonish arrogance, a last-minute request was made by the U.S. State Department to allow a deputy ambassador in Pretoria to formally receive the official G20 handover on November 23. Ramaphosa demurred, for this would violate his own conservative proceduralist mentality, which in turn led Trump’s jejune (28-year-old) press secretary Karoline Leavitt to claim on November 20 that the South African president was “running his mouth a little bit against the United States”. More such insults will no doubt come from the newly-approved U.S. Ambassador to Pretoria, far-right media activist Brent Bozell, who during the 1980s regularly denounced Nelson Mandela as a terrorist. Indignity upon indignity will continue to rain on South Africa from Yankee perches.

Instead of pushing for the U.S. to be expelled from the body due to Trump’s multiple attacks on multilateralism (climate, public health, trade, aid, fascistic abuse of refugees and immigrants, genocide facilitation and other acts of geopolitical insanity including repeated invasion threats such as against Nigeria this month), Ramaphosa replied with a merely bureaucratic rationale: “America chose to boycott this summit. That’s their prerogative to do so. But what cannot happen is breach of protocol being forced down our throats.”The White House reacted on November 23 with a banal claim that Ramaphosa was “refusing to facilitate a smooth transition of the G20 presidency. This, coupled with South Africa’s push to issue a G20 leaders’ declaration, despite consistent and robust U.S. objections, underscores the fact that they have weaponised their G20 presidency to undermine the G20’s founding principles.” Indeed, Ramaphosa’s main victory was getting an 11,000-word collective Declaration out of the group, instead of merely a (self-delegitimising) ‘Chair’s Statement’. But the devils in the details soon became clear to critics.

Red Flag: Generation Antifa blocks the Far Right

In his weekly column, Nathaniel Flakin looks at the protests against the AfD in Gießen.


03/12/2025

Gießen Demo

Last weekend, 50,000 people gathered in Gießen, a German town north of Frankfurt, to protest against the Alternative für Deutschland (AfD). The far-right party was trying to found a new youth organization, “Generation Deutschland,” after the previous one, “Junge Alternative,” had been ruled extremist by the domestic intelligence service.

Starting in the early morning, antifascists set up 19 blockades on all the roads leading into Gießen. The conference, scheduled for 10am, could only start after noon, with just a fraction of the 2,000 delegates in the hall. The meeting could only take place thanks to vast resources provided by the state apparatus.

Police violence

AfD leaders like Alice Weidel and Timo Chrupalla were brought in with a massive police convoy, as if they were foreign dignitaries. The cops not only rolled out the red carpet for the Far Right—they beat a path through the blockades for them. Police attacked demonstrators with pepper spray, water cannons, and baton charges.

The bourgeois media repeated whatever ridiculous claims the cops made, such as: “more than 50 injured officers.” The conservative interior minister of the state of Hesse reported that numerous police suffered “broken hands,” making it sound like they injured themselves while punching people. His boss, the Hessian prime minister Boris Rhein (CDU), noted, without evidence, that there were “a thousand demonstrators prepared for violence.” The German interior minister Alexander Dobrindt (CSU) said there is “no basic right that justifies violent action against our security forces,” again without evidence that such a thing happened. 

Anyone with social media, meanwhile, could watch endless scenes of police violence, such as heavily armed cops racing down the highway to beat people peacefully forming a blockade.

Rechtsruck

“Generation Deutschland” is supposed to be more professional than its predecessor, but it is no less racist or authoritarian. The main change is organizational: the new youth group will be a component part of the AfD, rather than an independent association, making it easier for the party leadership to control.

From the stage in Gießen, far-right youth leaders called for “deportations, deportations, deportations”—or more professionally, for “remigration,” which means the same thing. Jean-Pascal Hohm, elected leader of the youth wing, maintains close contacts to the “New Right,” figures like Götz Kubitschek and the Identitarian Movement, who form a link between the AfD and full-on Nazi groups.

But it’s not only the AfD and its youth that are radicalizing. The main parties of the German bourgeoisie are all in fundamental agreement that the way to fight the AfD is to adopt most of its demands. So while chancellor Friedrich Merz (CDU) says that the AfD is antidemocratic, he is implementing the AfD’s proposals for closed borders and mass deportations.

Merz’s rearmament programs — with over a trillion euros for new weapons in the next decade, paid for by cutting funding for health care, education, and pensions — are a stimulus program for the Far Right. This isn’t just about the huge number of Nazis in the Bundeswehr, or the huge number of army officers in the AfD. Fundamentally, the militarization of society will strengthen the most authoritarian factions. As social services deteriorate, racist demagogues will have an easy time blaming “Ausländer” for crumbling schools (this is shown not just by German history, but also by recent studies).

The unprecedented repression against the Palestine solidarity movement, undermining longstanding democratic norms, paved the way for the violence in Gießen. The police could have decided that the violence needed to facilitate the AfD meeting was not “proportional”—but thanks to pro-Zionist Staatsräson (reason of state), police violence is more accepted that at any time in decades. 

Hope

Yet the images from Gießen show there is an alternative to the ruling class’s shift to the right. We don’t see young people adopting far-right and fascist ideas. Instead of a “Generation Deutschland” longing for a white homeland, we instead saw a “Generation Antifa” putting their bodies on the line to stop the Far Right. (The gender divide was hard to overlook too: the AfD meeting was an almost entirely male affair, while women and queers outnumbered at the blockades.)

Better yet, we see a “Generation Class Struggle”: there were lots of workers and unions in the protests in Gießen, which drew the ire of AfD leaders and right-wing publications. They like to present themselves as a party of “little guys,” but in reality, billionaires make up the backbone of the Far Right.

Young people in Gießen showed that we are the ones who can stop the AfD. Politicians of the “extreme center” claim to oppose the AfD even as they support genocide, attack our living standards, and prepare for new wars. Government policies are grist to the Far Right’s mill. It’s only by fighting against militarism and against the authoritarian turn that we can stop the AfD.

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