Daniel Cohn-Bendit

From Wikispooks
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Person.png Daniel Cohn-Bendit  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(politician, Germany/VIPaedophile, France/VIPaedophile)
Born4 April 1945
Montauban, Occitania, France
NationalityFrench, German
Founder ofSpinelli Group
Member ofBanned from Russia 2015, Justice for Kurds
PartyLes Verts, Alliance 90/The Greens, Europe Écologie–The Greens
A leading figure in both the French and German Green parties, and one of the main responsible for changing the parties from pacifist to super-militarist. Also with notable VIPaedophile writings.

Employment.png Member of the European Parliament

In office
19 July 1994 - 1 July 2014
Preceded byMaxime Verhagen
Succeeded byBrando Benifei, Andrzej Duda, Johannes Jansen, Kaja Kallas, Eva Maydell, Viviane Reding, Elly Schlein, Barbara Spinelli, Antonio Tajani
For Germany 1994-1999 and 2004-2009; for France; 1999–2004 and 2009–2014

Daniel Marc Cohn-Bendit is a French-German politician of Jewish descent. He was a student leader during the unrest of May 1968 in France. He was co-president of the group European Greens–European Free Alliance in the European Parliament. He co-chairs the Spinelli Group, a European parliament inter-group aiming at relaunching the federalist project in Europe. During the 1970s and 1980s he wrote some texts and appeared on TV-shows supporting pedophilia.[1]

Militarism

Cohn-Bendit was one of the main forces driving the German Green party from its original pacifism and anti-militarism to the most bellicose party in Europe.

In early 1991, before the Second Gulf War, Cohn-Bendit supported the peace movement and called for peaceful solutions to be sought. During the Yugoslav wars, he reversed this stance, calling for or supporting Western military intervention in some conflicts that involved mass ethnic killings.

At the special party conference of the Greens in Aachen in October 1993, he and a group of about 30 people pleaded for military means as the last resort to protect Bosnia. The proposal did not find a majority. After the false flag Markale massacre in Sarajevo, on April 20, 1994, he called for Western military intervention in the Bosnian conflict, claiming that "as withAdolf Hitler, you sometimes have to do bad things to prevent worse things from happening. This is a historical responsibility of the Germans." He was one of about 100 celebrities from 18 countries who appealed to the UN to make attacks in the entire territory of the former Yugoslavia impossible.[2]

When NATO prepared a military operation in Kosovo in 1998, Cohn-Bendit called for the deployment of ground troops from the German armed forces instead of the air raids on Serbia decided upon by NATO.[3]

As a result of the false flag attacks on September 11, 2001, Cohn-Bendit and Ralf Fücks advocated a pan-European military contribution to the US war against the Taliban government, which he described as clerical fascism, saying "Islamism is a totalitarian movement. The assassins represented neither the oppressed nor the right goals with the wrong means, but were enemies of a pluralistic, cosmopolitan, civil society". The "democratic West" should neither be inactive nor overreacting, but must stand united against this. Europe should maintain "critical solidarity" with the USA and reject all national special paths.[4]

In 2004 he declared on the civil war in Sudan (also a CIA operation) that "a military intervention to end the ongoing extermination of peoples would be legitimate".[5]


Many thanks to our Patrons who cover ~2/3 of our hosting bill. Please join them if you can.


References

  1. https://www.faz.net/aktuell/politik/inland/daniel-cohn-bendits-paedophile-aeusserungen-und-traeume-12164560.html
  2. Ulrike Ackermann, Francois Bondy: Sündenfall der Intellektuellen. Ein deutsch-französischer Streit von 1945 bis heute. Klett-Cotta, 2000
  3. Theodor Ebert: Pazifismus Band 2: Der Kosovo-Krieg aus pazifistischer Sicht. Lit Verlag, 2001,
  4. Edgar Wolfrum: Rot-Grün an der Macht: Deutschland 1998–2005. Beck, München 2013, page 202
  5. Waltraud Wara Wende: Krieg und Gedächtnis: Ein Ausnahmezustand im Spannungsfeld politischer, literarischer und filmischer Sinnkonstruktion. Königshausen & Neumann, 2005, page 4040