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- <text id=90TT1784>
- <link 93TG0098>
- <title>
- July 09, 1990: Toward Unity
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- July 09, 1990 Abortion's Most Wrenching Questions
- The Reunification of Germany
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- GERMANY, Page 66
- Toward Unity
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>BY Otto Friedrich--Reported by James O. Jackson/Bonn and
- Jeffery C. Rubin/New York
- </p>
- <p> "The profound and icy mistrust which the German arouses
- whenever he gets any power into his hands is the aftermath of
- that vast horrible fear with which, for long centuries, Europe
- dreaded the wrath of the Teutonic blond beast."
- </p>
- <p>-- Friedrich Nietzsche
- </p>
- <p> The 16 million citizens of East Germany will be $70 billion
- richer this week, at least on paper. Even before the day of
- reckoning this past Sunday, crowds had been standing patiently
- in line to complete the paper work for converting their ostmark
- savings into deutsche marks at a rate of 1 to 1 for up to 6,000
- marks, and 2 to 1 for anything beyond that. On Sunday itself,
- cash was being handed out at some 10,000 bank branches, police
- stations and temporary disbursing points. The vast shift in
- wealth is part of the price of German unification.
- </p>
- <p> As of that day of economic union between the Federal
- Republic and the German Democratic Republic, an entire society
- will be transformed. After nearly a half-century of communism,
- East Germans are now living under West German rules on
- corporate and union activities, welfare and insurance. Although
- there is still no agreement on important details of the
- political and military future, the economic merger reflects a
- historic moment that until recently few people imagined they
- would ever live to see: the peaceful rejoining of Germany.
- Before long, the united country will take West Germany's
- official name, the Federal Republic of Germany, and the G.D.R.
- will formally be abolished.
- </p>
- <p> The merger process is not proving to be easy--and no one
- expected it to be. The most nettlesome outstanding issue is the
- military future of Central Europe, with Moscow balking at the
- West's insistence that a united Germany remain a full member
- of NATO. The West has offered substantial inducements: no NATO
- troops in East Germany, the continuance of Soviet forces there
- for a time at German expense, plus substantial German aid to
- the Soviet economy.
- </p>
- <p> On the domestic side, questions remain on how to raise the
- East to the West's level of prosperity and how to smooth the
- joining of different economic and social systems. There are
- arguments about where the new capital should be: in the
- imperial--and Nazi--capital of Berlin or in democratic but
- provincial Bonn.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the obstacles, the conservative governments of
- Chancellor Helmut Kohl in Bonn and Prime Minister Lothar de
- Maziere in East Berlin are pressing full speed ahead. Kohl in
- particular is determined, as he puts it, "not to miss the
- unification train, which may not come another time." With a
- large majority in both Germanys supporting merger--even
- though there are some reservations as to speed and cost--the
- Chancellor is planning to hold all-German elections in early
- December.
- </p>
- <p> All the economic problems can be negotiated among the
- Germans themselves, but among their neighbors, unification has
- aroused quite different concerns. Will a united Germany mean
- the rebirth of dreaded words like Lebensraum and Drang nach
- Osten? In short, will a united Germany turn nationalistic,
- threaten its neighbors and try to dominate Europe? "Today the
- Germans want to think of the future," says Fritz Stern, Seth
- Low professor of history at Columbia University, "but their
- neighbors are thinking of the past."
- </p>
- <p> On the evidence of the past two or three decades, which is
- all the evidence needed on most other political questions, such
- anxieties seem almost irrational. Germany was mostly united
- back in 1949, when the U.S., British and French zones of
- military occupation--70% of Germany's 1945 territory and 72%
- of the nation's population--were merged to form the Federal
- Republic, with its headquarters in Bonn. Economically, the
- figures are even more impressive: the East German economy that
- now has been joined to that of West Germany forms only
- one-tenth of the combined total. During those past 40 years,
- the world witnessed cruel wars in Korea, Vietnam, Algeria,
- Lebanon, Afghanistan and Nicaragua, but the mostly united
- Germans caused no trouble to anyone.
- </p>
- <p> Yet even their recent peacefulness can apparently be held
- against them. "The Federal Republic is unique among the great
- powers in [that] it came to life without a drop of blood being
- shed in its birth," Arthur Miller wrote in the New York Times.
- "No German soldier can say, `I fought for democracy'...What
- Germans lack now is the consecration by blood of their
- democratic state..." But whose blood should the Germans have
- shed in their "consecration," and what would Miller say if any
- German were foolish enough to offer such a gory theory of
- "democratic faith"?
- </p>
- <p> Part of this self-induced anxiety about German unification
- derives from the widespread but questionable theory that
- different nations have different national characters, that the
- Germans, because of their history or their upbringing or
- whatever, are both aggressive and docile, robot-like people who
- love order and discipline, work and war. Like the stereotypes
- of the snobbish English or the immoral French or the crass
- Americans, such caricatures are generally created by one's
- enemies, often in times of war. "There is such a thing as
- national character, but it changes," says William Manchester,
- a Wesleyan University adjunct professor of history and author
- of The Arms of Krupp. "And the German national character has
- changed. The Germans are united by language, by culture. And
- young Germany--which is most of Germany today--is also
- united by a horror of the Second and Third Reichs."
- </p>
- <p> The real origin of the suspicions about Germany's future is,
- of course, its dark past, namely the crimes committed during
- the twelve-year reign of Adolf Hitler. Hitler, after all, did
- not commit those crimes by himself; other Germans piloted the
- bombers over Warsaw, and other Germans operated the gas
- chambers at Auschwitz. Though the majority of today's Germans
- were not even born when those crimes were committed, the nation
- remains tainted by the Nazi legacy that endures in the world's
- memory.
- </p>
- <p> While millions of people know about the horrors of Hitler's
- Third Reich, it seems all too widely forgotten that German
- history did not begin in 1933. Nor did it begin in 1871, when
- Bismarck created the autocratic Second Reich. German history
- goes back more than 2,000 years, to a murky era when a variety
- of Germanic tribes lived in a land that, according to Tacitus,
- "either bristles with forests or reeks with swamps." Even then,
- German tribesmen had a reputation as fearsome fighters, and it
- was immensely important to the future history of Europe that
- they annihilated three Roman legions in the Teutoburg Forest
- in A.D. 9, leaving the Rhine as the frontier between the Roman
- and Germanic worlds. But it was the Romans who originally
- invaded those forests to "pacify" the Germans, as they had
- pacified Gaul and Britain.
- </p>
- <p> The Germanic tribes began moving into Roman territory during
- the 3rd century, not as the "barbarian" invaders of popular
- legend but as immigrants and refugees. Even the Visigoths, who
- conquered Rome in A.D. 410, subjecting it, in Gibbon's majestic
- words, to the "licentious fury of the tribes of Germany and
- Scythia," had originally entered the empire peacefully, and
- many had loyally served in the Roman army. The celebrated
- sacking of Rome was primarily a humiliation, nothing like the
- all-out Roman destruction of Carthage, Thebes and Jerusalem.
- </p>
- <p> The idea of restoring the Roman empire three centuries later
- inspired Charlemagne to voyage to Rome in A.D. 800 and have
- himself crowned by the Pope. Both Germany and France claim the
- Frankish leader, for he governed from Aachen (Aix-la-Chapelle),
- and the territory under his rule rather closely resembled what
- is today the European Community. Not long after his death,
- however, his empire was divided among three grandsons.
- </p>
- <p> While France and Britain developed centralized monarchies
- in the late Middle Ages, the German empire remained a crazy
- quilt of kingdoms, duchies, bishoprics, free cities and other
- flotsam. In the late 13th century, the imperial crown came into
- the hands of a Swiss family named Habsburg, but the Habsburgs'
- only real power and wealth came from their family possessions
- in Austria and Bohemia; the Germanic Holy Roman Empire, a
- concept that exercised a magic attraction in the Middle Ages,
- had about as much authority as the United Nations has today.
- </p>
- <p> And then in 1517, the political divisions also became
- religious--and correspondingly bloodier. An obscure monk
- named Martin Luther nailed to the church door in Wittenberg his
- 95 theses against the Roman Church's sale of indulgences,
- partial pardons for souls in purgatory. The Lutheran faith,
- subsequently known as Protestantism, spread rapidly across
- northern Germany. Then, in the fratricidal ordeal known as the
- Thirty Years' War (1618-48), the French, Swedes and other
- nations joined in playing out their political and religious
- rivalries on German soil. Much of Germany was devastated and the
- starving survivors reduced to misery. In one of his best
- plays, Mother Courage, Bertolt Brecht sketched the scene: "The
- religious war has lasted 16 years, and Germany has lost half
- its inhabitants. Those who are spared in battle die by plague.
- Over once blooming countryside, hunger rages. Towns are burned
- down. Wolves prowl the empty streets..."
- </p>
- <p> Gordon Craig, professor emeritus of history at Stanford
- University and author of The Germans, sums up this tragic
- period: "The Germans from earliest times were a free and
- independent people, and dreadful things happened to them, which
- inhibited those qualities and induced others. After the Thirty
- Years' War, habits of authoritarianism and dependence crept
- into the behavior of average Germans. One result is what one
- German writer has called the `retarded nation.' The nation
- never did have the opportunity to get a political education, as
- in the English Enlightenment or the American Enlightenment."
- </p>
- <p> The feebleness of the Habsburg suzerainty over fragmented
- Germany inspired not only the aggressiveness of France but also
- that of a newcomer--Prussia. Originally a Baltic tribe, the
- Prussians were conquered and Christianized in a 13th century
- "crusade" by the Order of Teutonic Knights, but only in 1525
- was the remote duchy of Prussia acquired through a marriage by
- the Hohenzollerns, the family that served as electors of
- Brandenburg. Brandenburg-Prussia was a rather bleak and
- impoverished land, its capital, Berlin, little more than a
- dusty garrison town. But its ruling Hohenzollern family was
- shrewd and single-minded in building up its wealth, its
- holdings and its army. When King Frederick the Great acquired
- the throne in 1740, just as Maria Theresa became Empress of
- Austria, he ruthlessly attacked her and seized the prosperous
- province of Silesia. Maria Theresa fought two bitter and
- unsuccessful wars of revenge, then shamelessly joined Prussia
- and Russia in partitioning Poland. Frederick thus put together
- for the first time the various Hohenzollern holdings from East
- Prussia to the Rhine.
- </p>
- <p> Frederick's Prussia claimed with some justice to be a major
- power in Europe, but his successors lacked his many talents,
- and when the French once again appeared on the horizon, Prussia
- ignominiously collapsed before Napoleon on the battlefield at
- Jena. Napoleon finally abolished the moribund Holy Roman Empire
- in 1806, keeping the title Emperor for himself. He seized all
- German territory west of the Elbe and created a
- French-dominated Confederation of the Rhine, with his brother
- Jerome as King of Westphalia. As Napoleon was retreating from
- Moscow in 1812, however, the repeatedly beaten Germans rose up
- again to fight what they still call the Wars of Liberation. An
- allied army defeated Napoleon at Leipzig, drove him back to
- Paris and then into exile.
- </p>
- <p> The Europe that was reconstituted at the Congress of Vienna
- in 1815 included a new German Confederation, headed by the
- Habsburgs of Austria, but also containing 38 other kingdoms,
- duchies, free cities and such. It had a great culture--this
- was the age of Beethoven and Schubert, Goethe and Hegel--but
- it was hardly a nation. The very idea of German unification was
- nothing more than an abstract concept, a dream of liberal
- intellectuals.
- </p>
- <p> The last French invasion was the invasion of another idea:
- revolution. When Paris mobs overthrew King Louis-Philippe in
- 1848, radicals and nationalists all over Europe took heart. The
- Italians rose against their Habsburg overlords; and even in
- dormant Germany, crowds began marching through the streets of
- Berlin, Vienna, Dresden. The armies of Germany's princes
- eventually suppressed these demonstrations, but not before
- liberals organized a constituent assembly, which met in
- Frankfurt and drafted an all-German constitution. The
- legislators decided that they could put their ideas into
- practice only by offering the crown of a united Germany to King
- Frederick William IV of Prussia. But he considered himself King
- of Prussia by the grace of God, and scorned any crown offered
- him by people or parliament.
- </p>
- <p> The members of the confederation still met in Frankfurt, and
- the Habsburg delegates still exerted unofficial leadership, but
- the young Prussian delegate determined that this must be
- changed. "Before very long," Bismarck wrote back to Berlin, "we
- shall have to fight for our lives against Austria...because
- the progress of events in Germany has no other issue."
- Prussia's King William I appointed Bismarck Minister-President
- in 1862, and within four years, Bismarck was ready for a
- showdown with Austria. Prussia's chief of staff, Count Helmuth
- von Moltke, had revived the army of Frederick the Great,
- making it once again Europe's best. Moltke attacked the
- Austrians and cut them to pieces. Germany's three centuries of
- intermittent civil war between north and south, Protestant and
- Catholic, Hohenzollern and Habsburg, were now over.
- </p>
- <p> Bismarck was convinced, and probably rightly, that France
- would never permit a united Germany, so he provoked Emperor
- Napoleon III into a misguided declaration of war. Moltke
- invaded France with 300,000 men, trapped the French at Sedan
- and captured the Emperor and 100,000 of his men. When an
- improvised government in Paris proclaimed the Third Republic
- and vowed to continue the war, Moltke insisted on besieging
- Paris. By now it seemed clear to the German princes who had
- followed Prussia into the war that their future lay in a united
- Germany under Prussian leadership. Bismarck artfully arranged
- to have William crowned Kaiser (Caesar) in January of 1871 in
- the palace of Versailles, that bastion of the French kings,
- while the hungry citizens of nearby Paris endured the Prussian
- siege.
- </p>
- <p> For the next 20 years Bismarck used all his craft and guile
- to maintain the peace among Europe's constantly maneuvering
- rulers. But his Reich was deeply undemocratic: he despised the
- legislators of the Reichstag, and was not responsible to them,
- but only to the Kaiser, whom he bullied and cajoled. Everyone
- expected that when the aged William finally died, his
- relatively liberal and high-minded son Frederick would lead the
- empire into a more enlightened era. But when William did die,
- in 1888, Frederick was already mortally ill with throat cancer,
- and so the throne soon passed to his temperamental and bellicose
- son William II, then 29, of whom his own mother once said, "My
- son will be the ruin of Germany."
- </p>
- <p> Unwilling to tolerate the domination of the 73-year-old
- Bismarck, William forced him out of office, took charge of
- military and diplomatic matters and left the rest to
- underlings. When a band of pro-Serbian nationalists
- assassinated the Austrian Crown Prince Ferdinand at Sarajevo
- in 1914, all the great powers found themselves enmeshed in a
- net of commitments that almost guaranteed disaster. The
- Austrians declared war on Serbia. The Russians went to the
- defense of their fellow Slavs and the Germans to that of the
- Austrians. When the French mobilized, the Germans declared war
- on them, and when the Germans invaded Belgium, the British
- honored a commitment to defend Belgian neutrality.
- </p>
- <p> Historians of the day spent a good deal of effort trying to
- demonstrate German "war guilt," but in retrospect, it all seems
- more a tragedy of errors. The German strategy somewhat
- optimistically called for a bold sweep all the way to Paris and
- then an encirclement of the French defenders. But the French
- blocked the offensive at the Marne, within 30 miles of Paris.
- Then came the years-long horrors of trench warfare, with
- thousands of lives wasted for the capture of a few hundred feet
- of barbed wire and mud. Plus all the horrors that modern
- technology could add to the arts of combat: bombers, tanks,
- machine guns, poison gas. When it was over, four years later,
- more than 3 million German and Austro-Hungarians were dead, as
- well as 4.8 million of the Allies, including 126,000 Americans--not just numbers, but the best of a whole generation.
- </p>
- <p> The German, Austrian and Russian empires disappeared. In
- Berlin the Socialists proclaimed from the balcony of the
- imperial palace the birth of what would be known to history as
- the Weimar Republic. Though still physically united--minus
- West Prussia, which was turned over to the newly independent
- Poland to give it a corridor to the sea--Germany was still
- divided against itself. Traditionalists in the army, business,
- the judiciary and the schools never believed in the republic
- at all. Right-wing extremists, including a young Austrian
- demagogue named Adolf Hitler, attempted coups in 1920 and 1923.
- Others sabotaged the political process by assassinations. A
- powerful Communist Party periodically staged strikes and street
- battles. The punitive peace treaty imposed at Versailles forced
- Germany to pay huge war damages. Out of that came the ruinous
- inflation of 1923, when the reichsmark plummeted to 4.2
- trillion to the dollar, wiping out both the savings and the
- faith of the middle class.
- </p>
- <p> Substantial U.S. aid helped the Weimar Republic in the late
- '20s. But it was a fragile recovery, overseen by a badly
- splintered Reichstag and the octogenarian President Paul von
- Hindenburg, the losing commander in the war. When the Wall
- Street crash of 1929 set off a worldwide depression, Germany's
- new prosperity crumbled. The number of unemployed soared from
- 1.5 million to almost 2.5 million in just the month of January
- 1930.
- </p>
- <p> And a new voice was heard in the land, shouting that this
- was all the fault of the "system," of foreigners and Jews.
- "Germany, awake!" cried Adolf Hitler, and a frightened,
- impoverished and traumatized people began to listen. In
- private, the neurotic Hitler had a different view: "Brutality
- is respected. The people need wholesome fear. They want to fear
- something. They want someone to frighten them and make them
- shudderingly submissive."
- </p>
- <p> Hitler's National Socialist Party, which had only 17,000
- members in 1926, metastasized to 120,000 in 1929, to 1 million
- in 1930. Wealthy industrialists began contributing handsomely.
- In the Reichstag, the Nazis held an insignificant twelve seats
- until the elections of 1930. By 1932 they had 230 seats, the
- largest bloc in the Reichstag.
- </p>
- <p> Central to the question of what went wrong is the question
- of whether Hitler's rise to power was inevitable. Was there
- some fatal flaw in the history of Germany that predestined it
- to the swastika and the gas chamber? In one sense, everything
- that has happened may seem inevitable, simply because of the
- fact that it did happen. Yet it is extraordinary how narrowly
- Hitler triumphed, how many accidents and variables had to line
- up.
- </p>
- <p> He still did not have a majority in 1932, and the
- constitution permitted President Hindenburg to name any
- Chancellor he wished, authorizing him to rule by a series of
- presidential decrees. The first time Hindenburg summoned Hitler
- and asked him to support a conservative regime headed by a
- dapper courtier named Franz von Papen, Hitler demanded full
- power for himself; Hindenburg not only refused but dressed
- Hitler down for lacking "chivalry." In the last pre-Hitler
- elections in November of 1932, the Nazis lost strength, from
- 230 seats to 196. The party was an estimated $5 million in
- debt, unable to pay the storm troopers who fought its street
- battles. "The future looks dark and gloomy," the Nazi party
- chief for Berlin, Joseph Goebbels, wrote in his diary at the
- start of 1933. "All chances and hopes have quite disappeared."
- </p>
- <p> Then in the first week of January, chances and hopes almost
- miraculously returned. Hindenburg was persuaded to try the idea
- of a new conservative coalition: Hitler as Chancellor, Papen
- as Vice Chancellor, with only two other Nazis in the Cabinet.
- "In this way," said the non-Nazi Minister of Economic Affairs,
- "we will box Hitler in." A fatal misjudgment. A month later,
- the Reichstag was in flames, Hitler was persuading Hindenburg
- to suspend civil liberties, and the most terrible chapter in
- 20th century history was about to open.
- </p>
- <p> So what is the lesson for 1990?
- </p>
- <p> "There is no European country that hasn't had its moments
- of trying to swallow up its neighbors, and I don't think
- Germany is any worse than any other country," says Carl
- Schorske, Princeton professor emeritus of history and author
- of Fin de Siecle Vienna. "Since the war, Germany has become
- rather European. In fact, even in the clues of personal
- behavior--the way people walk, the way people greet you, the
- way they speak their language--in all these things, there has
- been a tremendous change in Germany since the Nazis. I don't
- see another Nazism on the horizon."
- </p>
- <p> "Germany is not a fixed concept or entity," says Gordon
- Craig. "It's something that has changed through the years. The
- history of Germany has been a long, slow, disappointed voyage
- toward the light, toward popular freedom. It started with the
- Enlightenment and was defeated. It tried to revive and was
- defeated by the way Germany was united in 1871. Finally, thanks
- to the utter destruction of Germany in 1945, it got another
- chance, and is now being realized. We should be celebrating
- reunification with at least two cheers."
- </p>
- <p> "The Germans are being given a second chance," says Stern.
- "That is the rarest of gifts, and one can only hope that they
- will do justice to it. The Germans deserve friends who feel the
- burden of the past, as so many of them do, but who have
- compassion for a people who have had so rich and terrifying a
- history."
- </p>
- <p> In Germany itself, there are still observers capable of
- taking the future a little less seriously. One of the cleverest
- is the novelist and critic Hans Magnus Enzensberger, whose
- latest book, Europe, Europe, includes a scene in which an
- American reporter visits Berlin in the year 2006. He finds
- himself in the midst of an environmental conference being
- conducted in the traditional Berlin style. "Masked demonstrators
- from the eco-anarchist milieu clashed with officers of the
- environmental police. A representative of the chemical
- industry, who made profuse ritual protestations of humility and
- reassurance, was shouted down." Going to look at the onetime
- Berlin Wall, the reporter finds that it is now a nature
- preserve. "A unique biotope," says an official. "There are wild
- rabbits here, hedgehogs, opossums." The problem is that the
- environmentalists' efforts to get rid of the Wall are being
- blocked by art historians. "They regard the Wall as a work of
- art," the official complains, "because of the graffiti." An
- expatriated Scot finally explains to the American that the
- "famous reunification" back in the 1990s was "all just coffee
- and cakes." "Do you still remember how frightened of the
- Germans everyone was in the '90s? And what's happened? Nothing
- at all. Since then the German bogeyman has very quietly been
- laid to rest. We fell for it because we didn't know the first
- thing about German history."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-