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- <text id=89TT3063>
- <title>
- Nov. 20, 1989: Is One Germany Better Than Two?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Nov. 20, 1989 Freedom!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 36
- Is One Germany Better Than Two?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Western leaders liked to call for reunification when they
- thought such prayers were in no danger of being answered. Now
- they must worry about keeping Europe stable
- </p>
- <p>By Walter Isaacson
- </p>
- <p> "I love Germany so much," wrote the French novelist
- Francois Mauriac, "that I am glad there are two of them." That
- phrase is cited with increasing frequency these days, but the
- sentiment is old. Clemenceau expressed it first as he wistfully
- reflected on the delicate balance of power nurtured in the 19th
- century by Austria's Prince Metternich. Since World War II the
- division of Germany has been central both to the tensions of the
- cold war and to the stability of the cold peace that accompanied
- it.
- </p>
- <p> Throughout this period West Germany's allies paid facile
- allegiance to the goal of reunification, treating with abandon
- the fact that this simple dream involved some nightmarish
- complexities. It was an easy wish to proclaim, since it did not
- seem that the gods would ever grant it. Now, amid the widespread
- Western joy over last week's freedom dance at the Brandenburg
- Gate, comes a more sobering realization: the postwar division
- of both Germany and Europe seems to be tumbling toward the ash
- heap of history faster than preparations are being made for
- whatever new order might arise in its stead.
- </p>
- <p> The two alliances that have divided Europe (and Germany)
- for 40 years seem less urgent militarily in the Gorbachev era.
- But they now must play a political role that is no less
- critical. At the beginning of 1989, way back when Hungary's
- Communist rulers were just considering whether to allow
- independent parties and Poland's were still debating whether to
- talk with Solidarity, the challenge seemed to be to find ways
- to ease Eastern Europe from the claws that had clutched it for
- four decades. In fact, Moscow seemed all too eager to remove
- those claws. So eleven amazing months later, amid the euphoria
- over headlines and live telecasts that continue to amaze, comes
- an added and even trickier challenge: steering Europe toward a
- continent free of rivalries -- with an unthreatening Germany in
- the middle and a secure U.S.S.R. on the edge.
- </p>
- <p> The foundation of the old European order was the formal
- creation of two Germanys in 1949 and the decision by Chancellor
- Konrad Adenauer a few years later to tether West Germany to the
- Atlantic Alliance. For the Soviet Union, which subjugated East
- Germany as a satellite and buffer, this meant that any war with
- the West would occur on German rather than Russian soil. For the
- other Europeans, it meant a respite from the problem of German
- militarism. For the U.S., it made possible the creation of a
- strong NATO alliance to lead the struggle for containing the
- Soviets.
- </p>
- <p> Enshrined in the constitution that established West Germany
- was the goal of reunification, but even conservative leaders
- there were privately saying as recently as six months ago that
- this was a theoretical aim, not an immediate one. In January
- East German leader Erich Honecker said he could envision the
- 100-mile barbed barrier around West Berlin that was the
- grotesque symbol of Germany's division remaining in place for
- another century. Few would have challenged that prediction.
- </p>
- <p> Honecker was off by 99 years; the Wall lasted barely three
- weeks longer than he did. Likewise, the rigid repression of his
- Stalinist system is suddenly dissipating. So, at least on the
- surface, the question of reunification has become more real.
- Stripped of its walls and barbed wire, shorn of its oppressive
- ideology, lacking history or tradition, East Germany would seem
- to have little reason to exist as a separate state. The East
- German dilemma, says Henry Kissinger, is that "liberalization
- will undermine its reason for being."
- </p>
- <p> Nevertheless, reunification of Germany into a giant that
- would overwhelm Europe the way it would dominate an Olympic
- Games is, at least in the immediate future, probably not likely
- and perhaps not wise. Beneath the surface, there are factors
- even within the Germanys that make a headlong rush to unity
- unlikely. Although 40 years may not be long enough to create the
- distinct cultural identity that distinguishes, say, Austrians
- or Swiss from their German brethren, East and West Germany have
- developed different values, styles and outlooks.
- </p>
- <p> Even apart from their ideological systems, two separate
- sets of governmental institutions have been firmly embedded.
- Though most Germans chafe at the division imposed by the loss
- of a war, not everyone in the East wants to be subsumed into the
- Federal Republic and ruled from Bonn. At an extraordinary news
- conference (both for its candor and the fact that it took place
- at all), the East German Ambassador to Washington, Gerhard
- Herder, replied when asked if he saw a unified Germany, "In my
- dreams, yes, but being a politician and standing with both my
- feet on the earth, I don't see a possibility in the foreseeable
- future."
- </p>
- <p> Significant moves toward unification would be difficult
- without the concurrence of the rest of Europe and, more
- formally, the consent of the former "occupying powers" (the
- U.S., Britain, France and the Soviet Union), which technically
- still must approve changes in the structure of the two Germanys.
- Their support for the goal of a greater Germany will remain more
- rhetorical than real.
- </p>
- <p> Neither neighbor nor ally is eager to see Germans achieve
- through an outbreak of peace the dominance they were
- spectacularly unable to win through two world wars. There was
- something moving about the unusual and spontaneous singing of
- the national anthem -- the third verse: "Unity and justice and
- freedom/ For the German Fatherland . . ." -- in the West German
- Bundestag when the announcement was made that the Wall was being
- opened. But it was also a bit chilling to those for whom the
- famous chords of the former Deutschland uber Alles are not so
- inspiring and for whom the dream of a united German fatherland
- more closely resembles a nightmare.
- </p>
- <p> For some in the Atlantic Alliance, West Germany's urge to
- unify eastward raises the specter of neutralism, a concern
- heightened by the Gorbasms that occurred when the Soviet leader
- visited Bonn in June. For its partners in the twelve-member
- European Community, especially France, the economic threat of
- a united Germany is less worrisome than the possibility that
- Bonn will become preoccupied with pursuing its goals in Central
- Europe at the expense of strengthening unity within the E.C.
- </p>
- <p> Eastern Europe also has cause for discomfort. West German
- leaders like to speak of their nation's historic ties to the
- region; to many Poles and Czechs and Hungarians, that is as
- perverse as it is true. A side benefit of the cold war was that
- it alleviated, at least for a generation or two, the fears that
- have existed ever since the Teutonic Knights roamed Eastern
- Europe in the 13th century, taking on the Balts and the Slavs.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. and its NATO allies can play an important role in
- encouraging closer ties between the two Germanys while avoiding
- the instability this could engender. The organization serves
- both to anchor Bonn to the West and to subsume its potential
- military might into a cooperative framework. In addition, the
- continued existence of NATO and the Warsaw Pact provides a
- rationale for preserving two separate German states even as they
- converge. Chancellor Helmut Kohl's official policy calls for
- solving "the German Question" within the context of NATO and
- European economic integration. The Warsaw Pact and NATO also
- serve the purpose of defusing the nationalist rivalries that
- Europe has historically harbored.
- </p>
- <p> As the revolutionary changes in the Warsaw Pact continue,
- NATO's role will inevitably become less military and more
- political. Far fewer troops will be needed, and significant
- mutual demobilizations in Europe will be possible if both sides
- agree. Already NATO's historic mission has changed: the threat
- of an invasion from the east involves sputtering Trabants rather
- than Soviet tanks.
- </p>
- <p> The European Community is also a stabilizing influence
- because it is integrating Bonn's economy with that of its West
- European partners. "The events in Eastern Europe demand that
- there be an acceleration in the construction of the E.C.," says
- Jacques Delors, the former French Finance Minister who now heads
- the European Commission. The E.C. can help anchor the changes
- in Eastern Europe by granting economic assistance, trade
- concessions and eventually some form of associate membership.
- </p>
- <p> The West's most immediate goal should be to encourage East
- Germany to follow the path of Hungary and Poland toward a freer
- economy and a more open political process. The outcome of such
- an evolution need not be reunification. For the time being, the
- comfort and security of all concerned could be served by having
- two German states exist side by side, working in harmony the way
- West Germans now do with Austrians or, for that matter,
- Canadians with Americans. Eventually, the web of economic and
- cultural ties could justify a form of confederation in which
- people and goods could move freely between two states that
- retain sovereignty. As the concept of national autonomy becomes
- blurred in a more unified Europe, the question becomes more
- semantic than real. Secretary of State James Baker has begun
- speaking of German "reconciliation" rather than reunification.
- </p>
- <p> Ultimately, the future of Germany can be determined only by
- Germans themselves. Washington and Moscow will have a different
- opportunity as confrontation turns to cooperation between
- Eastern and Western Europe. The superpowers will want to
- negotiate the speed and terms of their withdrawal in a manner
- that enhances the stability that is in everyone's common
- interest.
- </p>
- <p> Bush and Gorbachev will begin to address these questions at
- the Saltwater Summit. What can two men in a boat do when they
- put up their feet? Primarily, they will have the chance to
- assure each other that they both are eager to avoid crackdowns
- in East bloc states. The Club Med casualness will provide the
- perfect atmosphere to discuss the beneficial roles that NATO and
- the Warsaw Pact could play during a time of exciting but
- potentially dangerous transition.
- </p>
- <p> When Gorbachev began waxing eloquent about a "common
- European home," he almost certainly did not anticipate the
- scenario that would unfold as the renovators plunged into the
- task. But unlike his predecessors, he may understand that the
- Soviet Union will be more secure with neighbors who tolerate
- free minds, free ideas, free speech, free markets and free
- movement. If handled properly, the revolution unfolding in one
- country after another opens up opportunities, unimaginable just
- a year ago, to create not just a new Europe but a new and far
- less menacing world order.
- </p>
- <p>--James O. Jackson/Bonn and Christopher Ogden/Washington
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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