AfD course planned by the Kremlin? “Manifesto” from Moscow raises questions

Media report
Moscow’s “manifesto”: Does the Kremlin determine the course of the AfD?

The AfD politicians Björn Höcke and Tino Chrupalla at a party event

© Funke Photo Services / Imago Images

AfD politicians are under pressure because of possible connections to Russia and China. A strategy paper from Moscow now raises questions. Chrupalla and Co. claim to have known nothing about it.

According to a “Spiegel” report, the AfD’s positions are strikingly similar to those that strategists in Russia are said to have formulated regarding the AfD. The news magazine reported on Friday about an alleged “manifesto” that was drawn up in the Kremlin’s presidential administration. In September 2022, a department head is said to have been given the order at a meeting by the influential deputy head of the Kremlin administration, Sergei Kiriyenko, to “develop a new concept for the The aim is to increase the AfD’s poll numbers and achieve a majority in elections at all levels, according to the report, which cites a note from an unnamed Western secret service.

When asked on Friday, AfD leader Tino Chrupalla described the report as a “robber’s pistol”. He told the German Press Agency (DPA) that he did not know this alleged paper. Other senior party members also said they were not aware of it.

AfD politicians Chrupalla and Höcke react

The paper supposedly developed by the Kremlin reads “like a programmatic formulation aid for the AfD,” writes “Spiegel,” which claims to have it. It paints a dark picture of Germany. There is talk of deindustrialization and the migration of large companies from Germany. The German economy is dying. The document also states: “Uneducated politicians who are unable to calculate the consequences of their decisions have drawn Germany into a conflict with Russia, a natural ally of our country and our people.”

The traffic light government is described as a “government of failures” that has destroyed the efforts of great predecessors such as Willy Brandt, Helmut Schmidt and Helmut Kohl. According to “Spiegel”, the Kremlin strategists derive the following principle from this: A German politician should not have values, ideals and obligations “that are above the interests of Germany and the obligations to the German people.”

In terms of content, this is actually similar to what AfD politicians also advocate: Germany does not need a policy based on values, but rather an interest-driven policy, is what they demand. The word deindustrialization comes up again and again. Traffic light politicians are accused of being incompetent because they don’t have proper training. And Thuringia’s AfD leader Björn Höcke has spoken more than once about Russia as Germany’s natural partner. When asked by “Spiegel” about the alleged paper and the similarities, Höcke simply replied: “The same thing is not the same thing.”

Source: “Mirror” (paid content)

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