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- <text id=89TT2847>
- <title>
- Oct. 30, 1989: East Germany:Trading Places
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- The New USSR And Eastern Europe
- Oct. 30, 1989 San Francisco Earthquake
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 60
- EAST GERMANY
- Trading Places
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As Egon Krenz succeeds the deposed Honecker, he seems willing
- to tinker with the system but not revamp it. Will that be
- enough?
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe
- </p>
- <p> Vacationing in the northern industrial city of Rostock last
- month, Egon Krenz decided to attend a soccer match. The outing
- may have been business as much as pleasure: as the Politburo
- member who handled youth affairs, Krenz also oversaw the
- country's sports programs. Soon after Krenz settled into his
- seat, an announcement blared over the public address system that
- the politician was in the stadium. Cheers and applause? Hardly.
- The fans booed lustily.
- </p>
- <p> Those jeers apparently never reached East Berlin. Last week
- party elders demonstrated just how out of touch they are with
- the masses by awarding Krenz the country's top political trophy.
- Erich Honecker, for 18 years the country's unsmiling, unbudging
- leader, was relieved of his posts as head of state, Communist
- Party chief and chairman of the National Defense Council. Krenz,
- his protege, was elevated to all three positions. Technically,
- the 77-year-old Honecker resigned, citing the poor health that
- has plagued him since he underwent gallbladder surgery last
- August. But few East Germans doubted that Honecker had been
- pushed aside by a leadership increasingly nervous about the
- continuing exodus of refugees to the West and the growing clamor
- of the stay-behinds for reform at home. At the same time, the
- two Politburo members in charge of the economy and mass media
- also lost their posts, signaling that a more extensive
- housecleaning might be under way.
- </p>
- <p> Krenz, who had long been expected to succeed his mentor,
- will get no honeymoon, since the change at the top does not
- alter the crisis down below. Given Krenz's hard-line
- convictions, there is little expectation that he will be the
- leader who will guide East Germany along the path toward social
- and economic reform. Krenz may turn out to be only a
- transitional figure, put in place, like the Soviet Union's
- Konstantin Chernenko, to warm the chair for a more visionary
- thinker. "The real reformers will take over power in the next
- six to twelve months," predicts Wolfgang Seiffert, a former
- adviser in the East German Communist Party who now teaches at
- West Germany's Kiel University. Others see in Krenz the
- possibility of a Yuri Andropov--someone who appeals to
- conservatives but recognizes the need for change.
- </p>
- <p> Analysts were united at least in this: Krenz is no Mikhail
- Gorbachev. True, Gorbachev was no Gorbachev when he ascended to
- power almost five years ago. But while Gorbachev was aligned
- early on with reformist factions within the Communist Party,
- Krenz is indelibly marked as Honecker's creation. The son of a
- tailor, Krenz joined the Young Pioneers in his early youth and
- became a full-fledged Communist Party member by 18. He spent
- three years at the party academy in Moscow, then returned home
- to rise quickly through the party ranks. He has been a member
- of the party's Central Committee since 1973. A decade later, he
- joined the Politburo, gradually assuming responsibility for both
- youth affairs and the country's security apparatus.
- </p>
- <p> At 52, Krenz is the youngest member of the Politburo. He is
- also among the members most widely distrusted and reviled by
- citizens. Rumors circulate about both his drinking and his
- health. "This man is a technician of power, a man of the central
- party machine," said Fred Oldenburg, a senior analyst with the
- Federal Institute for East European and International Studies
- in Cologne. East Germans mockingly call Krenz a "professional
- youth" because he has continued to dabble in youth affairs
- despite his age, organizing and attending rock concerts that are
- intended to pacify restless youngsters. A West German television
- crew, interviewing East Germans at random the day of Krenz's
- appointment, turned up evidence of the popular disdain. "He's
- one of the concrete heads," said a young man. Remarked an
- elderly woman: "They should all step down and let new blood in."
- </p>
- <p> Krenz is also regarded with suspicion by many because of
- his connections with the Stasi, or secret police. Few citizens
- seem persuaded that Krenz had a true change of heart when he
- ordered police forces to stand back during the demonstrations
- that continue to spread like a brush fire, last week drawing
- 100,000 people into the streets of Leipzig. Many point instead
- to his comments on recent trips to China and West Germany,
- during which he expressed support for the Beijing leadership's
- crackdown on the pro-democracy movement.
- </p>
- <p> Krenz may face resistance within ruling circles as well.
- One source who has good Soviet connections and contacts within
- East European diplomatic circles said, "Krenz is engaged in a
- deep power struggle because some of the district party bosses
- were against him. The Central Committee was not unanimously for
- him." Still, Krenz is regarded by the other 20 members of the
- Politburo as the best they have to offer. Krenz, who is more
- animated and garrulous than Honecker, is also better attuned to
- the television age. He ordered up a camera crew to record his
- exit from the Central Committee session at which he was
- promoted, and six hours after Honecker's resignation, Krenz
- addressed the nation on live TV.
- </p>
- <p> His words gave the country's fledgling opposition little
- cause for optimism. While Krenz called for a "new course" and
- "dialogue with all the citizens of our country," he also made
- it clear that he had no intention of bringing any of the freshly
- organized reform groups into the dialogue. "Our society already
- has enough democratic forums in which different interests from
- various parts of the population can express themselves," he
- said. While Krenz acknowledged that "problems in recent months
- had not been sufficiently assessed," he stated that the party
- would maintain firm control. "Socialism," he said, "is not
- negotiable." His only conciliatory gesture was a hint that
- travel restrictions might be relaxed. At the same time, he
- encouraged East Germans to stay home, and admitted that the
- flight of 135,000 citizens this year was "a draining of a
- lifeblood" that amounted to "a human, political and economic
- loss."
- </p>
- <p> The next day, however, Krenz went on a good-guy offensive
- that favorably impressed his critics. He was shown on
- television chatting, Gorbachev-style, with factory workers in
- East Berlin. He let it be known that he had traveled to Leipzig
- on Oct. 9 to ensure personally that police forces did not
- confront demonstrators. And Krenz met with leaders of the
- Protestant Church, around which the opposition movement is
- grouped. Later, Bishop Werner Leich, head of the church, said
- the meeting left him hopeful that Krenz would open a dialogue
- with all segments of the society. Says Oldenburg: "It looks to
- me like Mr. Krenz is trying to be more flexible than we had
- expected."
- </p>
- <p> Others were not ready to give Krenz the benefit of the
- doubt. "It makes one fearful when, again, one person is taking
- on the three positions formerly held by Honecker," said Barbel
- Bohley, a co-founder of New Forum, the largest of the new reform
- groups. The night after Krenz's walkabout, more than 20,000
- people demonstrated in Dresden, signaling that the pressure for
- democratic reform would continue. West German politicians
- greeted Krenz's appointment cautiously. Chancellor Helmut Kohl
- said, "Reforms cannot be restricted to a mere replacement of
- persons." Oskar Lafontaine, a deputy chairman of the Social
- Democratic Party and Krenz's host during the East German's first
- visit to West Germany last June, was also wary. "He has a
- conciliatory approach and friendly manners, but is tough as
- nails when it comes to substance," he said.
- </p>
- <p> In Hungary the state-run newspaper Magyar Nemzet predicted
- that Krenz would be only a transitional leader. But news of
- Krenz's appointment was eclipsed by the Hungarian Parliament's
- decision, in a vote of 333 to 5, to embrace substantial
- revisions in the country's constitution. The changes include not
- only "the values of both bourgeois democracy and democratic
- socialism" but also the country's name: the People's Republic
- of Hungary is now the Republic of Hungary. The reaction from
- Moscow was more generous, as Gorbachev sent a telegram of
- congratulation to Krenz. But the news agency TASS pointedly
- noted that Gorbachev encouraged Krenz to be "sensitive to the
- demands of the times." Interestingly, beyond the quiet message
- of change that he urged upon Honecker when he visited East
- Germany three weeks ago, Gorbachev appeared to have had no
- direct hand in the shake-up.
- </p>
- <p> The most optimistic prognosis is that Krenz will navigate
- a minimalist course that will be enough to restore, at least
- temporarily, a degree of stability. But in fast-changing
- Eastern Europe, no leader can afford to tread water for too
- long. Honecker tried--and was drowned by the tidal wave of
- events. His record actually boasts some accomplishments.
- Honecker had two chief aims: to nurture his country's industry
- and to legitimate the existence of the German Democratic
- Republic. In both endeavors, Honecker largely succeeded. But
- when the situation demanded that he broaden his agenda and
- introduce political reforms as well, Honecker was too calcified
- to muster any flexibility. If Krenz aims to ensure a kinder
- legacy, he would do well to heed the cry building in the streets
- and within the party rank and file.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-